Progressive Charlestown
a fresh, sharp look at news, life and politics in Charlestown, Rhode Island
Thursday, April 16, 2026
Want help with your garden?
URI Master Gardeners awaiting your call (or email)
| The URI Gardening & Environmental Hotline is now open and in full operation through Nov. 1. (URI Photos / Cooperative Extension) |
Have a garden quandary or need some advice before you start planting your 2026 garden? Ready to celebrate spring but don’t know where to start?
The University of Rhode Island Gardening &
Environmental Hotline is now open and in full operation through Nov.
1.
Southern New Englanders are welcome to send an email and
photos to the University’s Master Gardener volunteer
educators or call for science based-answers to their gardening and
environmental questions. In-person visits are also available by appointment at
URI’s Mallon Outreach Center on the Kingston Campus. Just call 401-874-4836 or
email gardener@uri.edu.
Food Companies Backslide on Promises to Reduce Pesticides
Raise your hand if you are surprised
By Lisa Held
Article Summary
• In an annual report, As You Sow awarded lower scores to 10
out of 17 major food companies on their approach to mitigating pesticide risks.
• Companies are making little progress in reducing the volume of pesticides
used in the U.S. food system, despite the increase in public awareness.
• An increase in consumer pressure could push companies to improve; many
companies that scored poorly in the report are also seeing their stock prices
decrease.
In 2019, food giant General Mills debuted a
three-point strategy to reduce synthetic pesticide use within its supply
chains. The plan was to implement regenerative agriculture practices on 1
million acres of farmland by 2030, increase the use of integrated pest
management (IPM) on farms, and expand organic acreage.
More than six years later, the webpage that outlined that
plan redirects visitors to a
page on regenerative agriculture, where the word “pesticide” does not
appear.
“They are no longer aligning their regenerative agriculture
program with pesticide reduction at all, which is obviously concerning, because
what the soil science points to is that regenerative without significant
pesticide reduction is not regenerating soil health,” said Cailin Dendas, the
senior coordinator of As You Sow’s Environmental
Health Program.
Dendas is the author of a new report that found General Mills is not alone: It’s one of several food companies moving away from earlier promises to reduce pesticide use.
Thanks to Trump’s Iran War, Big Oil Raking in $30 Million Per Hour in Windfall Profits
Making Trump's friends richer
Donald Trump’s unprovoked war of choice in Iran has been a goldmine for the fossil fuels industry, which is earning massive windfall profits thanks to the rise in the price of petroleum.
An analysis published by The Guardian estimated that the 100 biggest oil and gas companies have
collectively raked in an extra $30 million per hour since Trump launched his
war with Iran without any congressional authorization in late February.
In just the first month of the conflict, The Guardian
reported, Big Oil made
$23 billion in windfall profits, and the industry is projected to haul in an
additional $234 billion in windfall profits by the end of the year if the price
of oil stays in the $100 range.
The top beneficiaries of the Iran conflict are Saudi Aramco,
which is projected to earn $25.5 billion in windfall profits by the end of the
year; Kuwait Petroleum Corp., which is projected to earn $12.1 billion;
and ExxonMobil,
which is projected to earn $11 billion.
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
Five top psychiatric specialists warn Congress about Trump’s instability and danger
They cite the “Dark Triad” of personality traits: narcissism, Machiavellianism, and psychopathy.
Jeffrey D. Sach, sBandy X. Lee, James Gilligan, Prudence L. Gourguechon and James R. Merikangas in Common Dreams
Editor’s note: The following letter was sent to the bipartisan leadership of Congress on Monday, April 13, 2026 in regard to recent rhetoric and actions taken by US President Donald J. Trump.
Senator John Thune
Senate Majority Leader, US Senate
Senator Charles E. Schumer
Senate Minority Leader, US Senate
Representative Mike
Johnson
Speaker of the House, US House of Representatives
Representative Hakeem Jeffries
House Minority Leader, US
House of Representatives
Dear Senate Majority Leader Thune, Senate Minority Leader Schumer, Speaker
Johnson, and House Minority Leader Jeffries:
We write to you today with a sense of urgency that we do not use lightly. The
behavior and rhetoric of President Donald Trump have
crossed a threshold that demands the immediate and bipartisan attention of
Congress. This is not a partisan assessment. It is a judgment grounded in
observable fact, consistent professional assessment, and the constitutional
responsibilities that your offices carry.
What makes this more than an academic matter is what
predictably happens when this personality structure collides with immovable
obstacles. The clinical literature is clear: individuals with Dark Triad
profiles, when confronted with situations they cannot control or escape, do not
recalibrate. They escalate. The psychological imperative to relieve
narcissistic collapse overrides strategic calculation, concern for
consequences, and ordinary self-restraint. Rage surges to domination.
Impulsivity overrides caution. The urgent need to extinguish psychological pain
eclipses every other consideration.
We are watching this dynamic unfold in real time.
The President’s recent public communications have been, by
any normal standard of political discourse, alarming. His posts demanding that
Iran “open the fuckin’ strait, you crazy bastards” and his threat to bomb Iran
“back to the stone ages,” adding that “a whole civilization will die tonight,
never to be brought back again,” are not the rhetoric of calculated
geopolitical pressure. They are the expressions of a man in profound
psychological distress who is reaching for the most extreme retaliatory threats
available to him. That these statements were addressed to an adversary in the
context of an active military confrontation makes them not merely shocking but
profoundly dangerous.
President Trump has now ordered a US naval blockade of Iran
— an action that has sent world oil prices soaring and
placed the United
States in direct opposition to the international community. His
ongoing actions carry the potential to trigger a global economic catastrophe,
draw in regional and great powers, and ignite a wider conflict with
consequences that no one can bound. These orders are being issued without
adequate deliberation, without congressional authorization, and in a context in
which the President’s judgment is, by every visible measure, severely
compromised.
We urge three specific actions.
Two new studies could change critics’ opinions about how many birds die from wind turbines
Trump, wrong again
By Diana Resnik, EuroNews
Critics say wind turbines endanger birds but two new studies have now analysed the risk in more detail. What they have found could change the debate.
The energy company Vattenfall and the tech company Spoor
have analyzed the extent to which wind turbines endanger birds at the offshore
wind farm in Aberdeen. Over a period of 19 months - from June 2023 to December
2024 - video recordings of a wind turbine were made with the help of
AI-supported analyses. A total of 2,007 bird flight paths near the monitored
turbine were examined.
"By combining AI-powered detection and detailed expert
analysis, we can replace assumptions with concrete observations and measure
actual behavior in the immediate vicinity of wind turbines," says Ask
Helseth, Chief Executive Officer and co-founder of Spoor.
The study found that there was not a single collision,
"The results from Aberdeen Bay show that modern offshore wind farms can be
operated with low risk to wildlife," says Dr Eva Julius-Philipp, Director
Environment and Sustainability BU Wind at Vattenfall.
German Offshore Wind Energy Association (BWO) study: Over 99 per cent of migratory birds avoid wind turbines
New Study Reveals a Simple Life Is the Real Secret to Happiness
You don’t need to be rich although poverty is not fun
Not to mention, life in New Zealand is different than here
By University of Otago
At a time when displays of extreme wealth dominate headlines and social media feeds, a new study suggests that more consumption does not necessarily translate into a better life.
Research from the University of Otago indicates
that stepping away from material excess may be linked to greater day-to-day
satisfaction and stronger social connections.
The team set out to examine how consumption relates to
well-being. Their findings indicate that people report higher levels of
happiness and life satisfaction when they adopt more sustainable lifestyles and
resist consumer-driven habits.
The researchers analyzed data from a representative sample
of more than 1,000 New Zealanders. The group included 51 percent men and 49
percent women, with a median age of 45 and a median annual household income of
$50,000.
They found that embracing simple living, formally known as
‘voluntary simplicity,’ supports well-being by creating more opportunities for
social interaction and meaningful connection. These benefits often arise in
settings such as community gardens, shared resource systems, and peer-to-peer
lending platforms, which differ from traditional market exchanges.
Tax the Corporations Cashing in on War
The least war profiteers can do is pay taxes
By Meghan Schneider, Cass DiPaola
This dynamic has been on full display since Donald Trump’s attack on Iran.
Trump’s invasion of one of the world’s most oil-rich regions
jolted energy markets, sending gas prices soaring to the highest
level in either of his terms. In 2024 he campaigned on cutting them in
half. Instead, Americans are now on track to pay roughly $720 more for gasoline this
year.
The full cost to working families will be much steeper as
high gas prices drive up prices on consumer goods across the board. We’re
already seeing that ripple effect take hold, as the U.S. Postal Service has
proposed a temporary
8 percent fuel surcharge on package deliveries to offset rising
transportation costs tied directly to the war-driven spike in oil prices.
At the same time, the oil and gas companies that
invested at
least $75 million in Trump’s reelection are cashing in on this
instability. A recent Financial Times analysis estimates that
U.S. oil companies could collect an additional
$63 billion in revenue this year if crude prices remain at these
wartime levels. In March alone, the industry is expected to generate $5
billion in extra cash flow.
This type of windfall isn’t a fluke. We’ve seen this pattern
for decades.
Oil has a way of appearing in the background of every
chapter of U.S. military intervention in the Middle East and beyond. Iran
nationalized its oil industry in the 1950s and a CIA-backed coup followed.
Iraq, sitting on some of the world’s largest reserves, was invaded in 2003. And
earlier this year, the U.S. invaded Venezuela and immediately began plans for
a taxpayer-backed oil
industry takeover.
Tuesday, April 14, 2026
Surprising truths about America’s tax history
"The Price of Democracy"
By Gerald Scorse
Now comes a groundbreaking book that looks back not just
decades but centuries. It’s Vanessa A. Williamson’s The Price of Democracy: The
Revolutionary Power of Taxation in American History. The surprises never stop
coming.
Surprise No. 1, the Boston Tea Party. We’ve been brainwashed
into believing that taxes were the cause. Not so; the Sons of Liberty were
actually opposing the bailout of the “too big to fail” East India Company. As
Samuel Adams warned, the bailout was “introductive to Monopolies.”
Williamson says the colonists never objected to paying
taxes. “To the extent the American Revolution was about taxation,” she writes,
“it was about the desire of Americans to tax themselves…"
Come 1787, the new America had to decide what its own tax
policies would be. Next surprise, the framers of the Constitution agreed that
the wealthy few had to be protected from the masses. Listen to this from
Alexander Hamilton:
“All communities divide themselves into the few and the
many. The first are the rich and well-born, the other the mass of the people.”
As Hamilton saw it, the people “seldom judge or determine right.”
Thomas Paine saw things the other way around.
Everybody knows that Paine helped ignite the American
Revolution. Not many know that he wanted a tax revolution as well. Paine
worried about the “overgrown influence” of wealth, calling it “one of the
principal sources of corruption at elections.” He wanted marginal income tax
rates, topping out at 100%. Echoing Paine, an early New York newspaper
proposed that “men should by every fair means be legally prevented from
becoming exorbitantly rich”.





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