Progressive Charlestown
a fresh, sharp look at news, life and politics in Charlestown, Rhode Island
Friday, December 5, 2025
Donald J. Trump Puts His Name on ‘US Institute of Peace’ while waging illegal wars and killing civilians
Latest chapter in Trump's quest for the Nobel Peace Prize
The signs on the building of the United States Institute of Peace were changed overnight to include “Donald J. Trump,” adding the name of the sitting US president who, among other examples of warmongering and war-making, has openly supported the Israeli genocide in Gaza, bombed Iran, sent an aircraft carrier strike group to threaten Venezuela, and ordered the extrajudicial killings of over 80 people aboard boats in the Caribbean and Pacific in recent months.The building’s name change preceded a meeting on Thursday
between leaders of Rwanda and
the Democratic Republic of Congo, where a proposed peace deal between the two
warring nations is set to be signed. It also came amid an ongoing clamoring by
the president to be recognized as a great maker of peace despite his record of
violence, thuggery, racism,
and human rights violations.
Critics of the move were swift in their condemnation of
Trump, known more for being possibly the most famous narcissist in the history
of humanity than for waging anything that remotely looks like a just and
lasting peace.
“This is pathetic, like a little boy running around putting
‘Property of Donald’ stickers on everything in the house,” said Tom
Nichols, a staff writer at The Atlantic magazine. “It’s not
the Trump institute of peace, it’s the US Institute of Peace.”
Thursday, December 4, 2025
Trump's ugly Thanksgiving meltdown
It's getting so bad that even Republicans are starting to notice.
Thanksgiving is supposedly a holiday devoted to welcoming family, friends, and guests to eat together. So of course, Trump used it to indulge in a bizarre orgy of xenophobia and hate, culminating in a gutter attack on Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, who he referred to as “seriously retarded.”
Trump’s decision to “give thanks” by spewing bigotry and
slurs is not a surprise. Even by his standards, though, his harangue was
despicable. It was also a disgusting effort to leverage for partisan ends the
shooting of National Guard members in Washington DC.
As his popularity and influence slips, Trump seems more and
more desperate. That makes him more reckless and in many ways more dangerous.
It also opens up opportunities for opposition, though — sometimes from
unexpected quarters.
Not even Kim Il Jun has this power
If you walk in RI woods between Dec. 6 and Jan. 2, beware of shotgun-toting hunters
DEM requires you to wear orange to keep from getting killed
Orange hats and vests are so chic this season – shotgun deer season, that is. The Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (DEM) reminds the public that starting this weekend on Saturday, Dec. 6, it’s time to make a bold fashion statement in hunting areas by adding plenty of orange into your winter wardrobe.
EDITOR'S NOTE: "bold fashion statement" my ass. DEM wrote this cutesy news release, not me. While I have no problem with subsistence hunting, I am no fan of killing such magnificent creatures for sport. Unless the deer are armed so they can shoot back. - Will Collette
Anyone in state management areas and undeveloped state parks during shotgun deer season must wear 500 square inches of solid, fluorescent orange, such as an orange vest and hat worn above the waist, through Friday, Jan. 2.
Wonder what Bobby Jr. thinks of this
Garlic shows promise as a mouthwash alternative to standard chemical compounds
Edited by Sadie Harley, reviewed
by Robert Egan
Garlic extract demonstrates antimicrobial efficacy comparable to other widely used antiseptics and disinfectants, such as chlorhexidine, according to University of Sharjah medical scientists.
Published in the Journal of Herbal Medicine, the study suggests that
while garlic-based
mouthwash may cause more discomfort than chlorhexidine, it offers
longer-lasting residual effects.
"Chlorhexidine is widely used as a gold standard
mouthwash but is associated with side effects and concerns over antimicrobial
resistance," the authors note. "Garlic (Allium sativum), known
for (its) natural antimicrobial properties, has emerged as a potential
alternative."
Rhode Islanders worry about winter energy costs
As winter heating costs rise, so does consumer anxiety in Rhode Island, poll finds
By Alexander Castro, Rhode Island Current
Feeling anxious about how to pay for your winter heating bill? You’re not alone, according to the latest Ocean State Poll from the University of New Hampshire Survey Center, which found roughly 78% of Rhode Islanders feel the same way about their upcoming winter heating bills.
Unease over heating prices has risen since last November, when UNH researchers found 70% of residents were worried about their winter energy bills. Among the anxious, 40% said they were “very worried,” while 37% were “worried.”
And that worry was expressed across each of the three voter affiliations used in the survey released Nov. 25 — Democrat, Republican and independent — expressed being “worried” or “very worried.” That included 88% of independents, 83% of Democrats, and 61% of Republicans.
Independents, or unaffiliated voters, comprised the overall survey’s largest share at about 51% of the total of 711 residents surveyed. The survey was conducted online between Nov. 13 and 17.
The worries are not abstract, as evidenced by Federal Energy Information Administration data which shows Rhode Island home heating oil prices at about $3.88 a gallon in the last week of November 2025. That’s up from the same time last year, when a gallon of oil cost about $3.52. It’s also significantly above pandemic-era November 2020, when heating oil cost about $2.31 a gallon in Rhode Island.
Heating oil is, however, still below the heights achieved in the fall of 2022, when October and November oil prices regularly soared above $5 a gallon, almost reaching $5.89 in the last week of October 2022.
Propane has been similarly expensive in recent years, with federal data showing residential propane averages about $3.56 a gallon on Nov. 24, 2025, comparable to the $3.61 per gallon recorded in the same time period in November 2024, but still above the high-$2.80s of late 2020. Like oil, propane prices spiked in fall 2022, regularly reaching the $3.80s in October and November of that year.
The day after the poll was released, Rhode Island Energy submitted a request to increase service charges for gas and electric customers in an application submitted to the Rhode Island Public Utilities Commission. If approved, the proposed new distribution rates which would take effect in September 2026 would increase the average residential electric bill by about $7.78 a month, while a typical gas customer would pay $343.53 more annually, a 20.6% jump.
Wednesday, December 3, 2025
Rhode Island federal lawsuit challenges HUD move to defund evidence-based approach to reducing homelessness
Trump regime pushes "incomprehensible" policy change
By Christopher Shea, Rhode Island Current
Two Rhode Island nonprofits joined a federal lawsuit filed Monday by a coalition of municipal governments and nonprofit organizations challenging the Trump administration’s push to overhaul a key federal homelessness and housing grant program.
The 85-page lawsuit filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Rhode Island seeks to stop the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s (HUD) from slashing the amount of grant funds that can be spent on permanent housing, or subsidized units that provide a stable residence for formerly homeless people, often those who have experienced mental illness or spent years on the streets.
Lead plaintiffs include the National Alliance to End Homelessness and the National Low Income Housing Coalition, along with Providence-based nonprofits Crossroads Rhode Island and Youth Pride Inc. — among other groups and cities across the country.
The plaintiffs are challenging changes to HUD’s Continuum of Care grant program announced Nov. 13 that shift over two-thirds of the $3.9 billion program toward transitional housing and other short-term interventions for people without shelter. The lawsuit claims the new policy is contrary to “well-established and proven strategies that reduce homelessness” and jeopardize the housing of more than 170,000 people across the nation.
The so-called “housing first” model prioritizes stable housing before offering case management, mental health treatment, substance use services, and supported employment services. Research has shown this approach leads to more long-term housing stability than programs that require residents to consent to treatment and abstain from using substances before receiving housing.
CRMC settles one beach access dispute in Westerly
Weekapaug fake fire district road blocks still unresolved.
By Rob Smith / ecoRI News staff
The matter had technically been before the Coastal Resources
Management Council, the state agency that oversees coastal access, since the
late 1970s. According to a report and recommendation authored by CRMC counsel
Anthony DeSisto, the agency’s right of way subcommittee held hearings in the
fall and winter of 1978 and early 1979.
“The town has made representations that it’s a public
street, it’s in the harbor management plan as a public right of way to the
shore,” DeSisto said. “You have your dedication and acceptance as subcommittee
members heard, the two elements indicating it’s a public right of way.”
During the hearings, the town and members of the public
indicated the access point was used as a public right of way (ROW) by local
residents, but the full council voted in 1980 to put its designation process on
hold to allow abutters opposing the designation process to provide evidence to
the contrary. That evidence never materialized, and the ROW issue lay dormant
until brought to CRMC’s attention by a town solicitor in Westerly in February.
ICE Sent 600 Immigrant Kids to Detention in Federal Shelters This Year. It’s a New Record.
Trump reinstates "Kids in Cages" policy
by Mica Rosenberg, Mario Ariza, McKenzie Funk, Jeff Ernsthausen and Gabriel Sandoval for ProPublica
It was Friday, June 6, and the rent was due. As soon as she finished an errand, Imelda Carreto planned on joining her family as they gathered scrap metal to earn a little extra cash. Her fiancé, Julio Matias, and 15-year-old nephew, Carlos, had set out early, hitching a trailer to the back of their beat-up gray truck.Shortly after 8 a.m., Carreto’s phone rang. It was Carlos, telling her an officer with the Florida Highway Patrol had pulled over the truck on Interstate 4 near Tampa. The stated reason: cracks in their windshield. But Carreto was worried. She knew Florida police were collaborating with federal immigration authorities. Her fiancé was undocumented. She says she rushed to the scene and made it there just before the immigration officers.
As she feared, Matias had been detained. But to her surprise, so had Carlos. He was just a kid. (ProPublica is only identifying Carlos by his first name because he is a minor.) Carlos was in high school. He’d been living in the United States for over two years and was working toward applying for legal status to stay long term. The government had given her, a legal resident, custody of him. Now he was in handcuffs. Why would they take him too?
Carreto didn’t carry any proof that she had custody of the boy. She had left it in another car in her rush. She recalls officers saying her nephew would likely be released to her in a few days once she presented the proper documents. Before they drove him away, Carlos started to tear up. Carreto told him, “Don’t cry. I don’t know how, but I’ll get you back. Understand?”
A cracked windshield, a waiting officer, a forgotten document: The new family separations often start in the most mundane ways.
Seven years ago, during the first administration of President Donald Trump, children were taken from their families the moment they crossed the border into the United States. Under a policy of zero tolerance for illegal crossing, Customs and Border Protection officers detained adults while children were sent into the federal shelter system. The aim: to deter other families from following. But after widespread public outcry and a lawsuit, the administration ended it.
Today, family separations are back, only now they are happening all across the country. The lawsuit against the zero tolerance policy resulted in a 2023 settlement that limits separations at the border, but it does not address those that occur inside the country after encounters with Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE. Advocates fear the administration is conducting the new separations for the same reasons as before: to deter new immigrants from coming and to terrify those who are here into leaving.
Since the start of this year, some 600 immigrant children have been placed in government shelters by ICE, according to government data. That figure, which has not been previously reported, is already higher than the tally for the previous four years combined. And it is the highest number since recordkeeping began a decade ago.
Tuesday, December 2, 2025
Van Slyke wins 3-way Town Council special election with less than 40% of the vote
Three-way races are always hard to call
By Will Collette
Unfortunately, the CCA's candidate, Bonnita B. Van Slyke, gets another chance to see how badly she can screw up again after pulling a win out of a tight race.
She beat second-place finisher and political newcomer, Democrat Jill Fonnemann, by only 42 votes. Jill was my choice and I hope she will try again next year after this strong showing in her first election campaign.
I had expected this election to draw fewer than 1000 voters, but to my surprise that 1,459 Charlestown residents turned out. Still, that's far fewer than the number who typically vote in general elections.
More than 60% of them cast their votes against the CCA so Van Slyke returns with no mandate.
Republican Laura Rom ran a distant third with less than a quarter of the vote. That's pretty much in line with the way elections in 2025 have turned out for Republicans nationwide.





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