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Tuesday, August 19, 2025

What a difference a continent (and government) makes

Carmen’s Broken Arm

By Richard Schweid

It happened less than a month after we arrived from home in Barcelona to our cottage in neighboring Green Hill in South Kingstown to begin our annual four-month summer stay, fugitives from the Mediterranean heat. Just before dawn, on her way to the bathroom, Carmen tripped and fell. She heard something crack and knew instantly that she had broken her right arm.

I threw a robe over her shoulders and we headed to the nearest emergency room. There, they took an x-ray, put her arm in a sling, gave her a prescription for Tramadol, and told us the humerus bone was broken, and she needed to see an orthopedist right away. The sling helped to hold the arm still, but if she moved it in the slightest, the pain was excruciating. The hospital receptionist declined to tell us how much we would be billed for the visit. It turned out to be $5,196.94.

I called the nearest orthopedist. His secretary said he did not normally accept visits from ”self-pay” patients who were without North American insurance plans. After consulting the doctor, she told me he would make an exception and allow one consultation, as long as we paid what seemed a reasonable $160 in advance.  She made us an appointment for two days in the future.

We showed up early after Carmen had spent two painful, sleepless nights, eager for relief. She winced every time she sat, stood, or moved her arm. In the doctor’s waiting room, I read the news on my phone.

At a París NATO meeting, Spain’s Socialist Party prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, was the only head-of-state who did not bow to Donald Trump’s demands that NATO members increase their defense spending to five percent of their nation’s gross domestic product. Sánchez said that he considered Spain’s defense spending of two percent as "sufficient, realistic, and compatible with the welfare state." An increase, he pointed out, would have to come from funds earmarked for Spain’s social programs, including its public health system, and this was unacceptable.

The Rhode Island orthopedist was good. Thorough and sympathetic, ready to operate in a few days, and confident that he could insert a spike that would join her broken humerus back together, and that her arm would heal completely. He said he would send us a more exact cost estimate later, but figured the 40-minute, in-house operation would run about $20,000, and Carmen would be sent home the same day.

The doctor belonged to an orthopedic group practice with a “surgery center” and fifteen offices across New England. His estimated bill included about $3,000 for his services, and $17,000 for “the facility.” This would not include physical therapy, or the costs of any complications that might arise during surgery requiring hospitalization, or further operations.

Four days later, Carmen was still in pain, and we were on a flight back to Barcelona. Twenty thousand dollars would have been a chunk of our savings, and there would have been no guarantee that we would not have to spend more. On arrival we went to the emergency room at the public hospital, where, after a three-hour wait, the Rhode Island orthopedist’s diagnosis was confirmed by x-ray and consultation with an orthopedic specialist. An operation was scheduled for the following week. It would be free, along with everything connected to it, including medication and physical therapy.

Carmen’s broken arm, in the context of Pedro Sánchez’s insistence on protecting the programs that make life easier for Spaniards, was a stark example of why NATO might have chosen to stand up to Trump’s bluster.

Instead, they chose to placate him, caving to his demands. As wars rage across the globe, do we really want to spend even more of our resources on the notion that they are inevitable, and we must prepare for them?

Or is providing everyone with the basics for maintaining a decent life a more effective way to keep the peace? Shelter, food,  health care, work, and a basic education? Are these things more potent than bombs for discouraging territorial or ideological aggression?

Once Carmen’s arm was set and healed, we would not have a substantial debt, a financial catastrophe looming over our lives should circumstances prevent us from paying it. The broken arm put an end to our summer plans, but there were no vulturous collection agencies waiting in the wings to swoop down if we were unable to pay for its repair.

Spain’s citizenry is by no means unanimously supportive of Pedro Sanchez’s decision to target spending on social programs rather than on weapons. The strident voice of a xenophobic, Trump-ish extreme right wing (the Vox Party), counseled by the likes of Steve Bannon, is frequently heard in opposition, and the traditional conservative party (the Popular Party) is constantly nipping at the heels of the Socialists.

In addition to the opposition voices from outside the Socialist party, former ministers of Pedro Sánchez’s own government are currently embroiled in various corruption investigations, which are providing the right-wing parties plenty of ammunition, and have the potential to force elections. Will Spain’s welfare state hold, or will it be swamped by the Trumpists loose in the world?

At the same time as Carmen came home from an overnight stay in the hospital following the surgery, the U. S. Congress finished putting its stamp of approval on a budget that will reduce or eliminate health care assistance for some seventeen million Americans. The money saved will be used to help offset tax cuts for the wealthiest citizens among us. They are people who will never have to decide whether to bring an ill child to a doctor and go deeper into debt, or skip the doctor’s visit. They will never have to think twice before seeking medical attention.

Meanwhile, Carmen’s humerus is healing.

Heil

Trump's federalized crime-fighting in DC posts biggest accomplishment

Rounding Up Food Delivery Bikes in DC

Sarah Rumpf

A photo posted by an editor at Reason that appeared to show officers with multiple federal agencies loading mopeds into a truck sparked backlash Monday as a waste of tax dollars and distraction from higher priority issues in Washington, D.C.

Natalię Dowzicky, Reason’s managing editor of video and podcasts, shared a photo Monday afternoon that she identified as happening “in Dupont Circle, right outside of the @reason office.”

In the photo, several law enforcement officers can be seen, including one with a D.C. Metropolitan Police uniform and several with “HSI,” or Homeland Security Investigations, a division of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. 

In the back of a truck that appeared to have a government logo on the door, multiple mopeds or motorized bikes could be seen.

Dowzicky posted several follow-up tweets noting that the timing of the bike roundup was “even more ridiculous given the security that should be at the White House for world leaders,” happening “[l]iterally while European leaders were 6 blocks away and probably needed security of some sort,” referring to Trump’s meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and European leaders to discuss Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Several others, including some of Dowzicky’s colleagues at Reason, posted reactions to the photo, with some including additional criticism of Trump deploying federal agents in D.C. 

Mediaite is pleased to make its original content available under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License for non-commercial reproduction with credit to the source site.




Help kids with special needs enjoy summer camp

Volunteers needed for next week

Debra Tanner, SRIV

Southern Rhode Island Volunteers in Charlestown received a request for volunteers to help at the Down Syndrome Camp at Camp Watchaug for Monday, August 25th through Wednesday, August 27th.  Camp is 8:30 am to 3 pm each of those 3 days.

Volunteers could help with the following activities:

Rock climbing and other activities--they have counselors

Kayaking on Watchaug Pond--they have some counselors (please - you must be able to swim to do this)

Watching over campers in water (2 ft of water,-not deep water) 

Watching over campers on Monday with Goats (there are keepers with this activity)

Watching over campers on Tuesday (drummers activity from 11-1 lunch time)

There are 22 campers; 9 of these campers are high-functioning and will be in group settings.

Other campers need one-on-one and are covered with parents, relatives and others.

Please, anyone with an interest in helping contact the SRIV office by Thursday, noon on August 21st at 401-552-7661.  Thanks for considering!

Next: Resolving management issues at South County Hospital

It's Over: Butler Hospital caregivers overwhelmingly ratify new four-year contract

Steve Ahlquist


The 99% of Butler Hospital workers who participated in the vote, overwhelmingly ratified a new four-year contract, thus ending the state's longest hospital strike.

“We are proud to stand together to have an agreement that allows us to move forward with our shared goal of helping patients and caring for one another,” said Clinical Social Worker Brooke Huminiski. 

“In this agreement, there are lasting impactful changes that will impact workers, patients, and the larger community. This resolution is a sign of true unity that brings the hospital and its mission forward. We are incredibly thankful for the support of so many in our community as well as elected leaders, especially House Speaker Shekarchi, who helped us find a pathway forward toward resolution.”

Yesterday, before workers ratified the new contracts, the Hospital and the union, SEIU 1199NE released the following statement:

“On behalf of both Butler Hospital and members of the bargaining committee representing all job classifications of the hospital, we are pleased to share that a tentative agreement has been reached. More details will be forthcoming in the coming days.”

Here are some of those details:

  • Wages: The first year of the contract full time employees will have an increase of at least $6,000. And by the end of the four year contract no employee will earn less than $20 an hour.
  • Healthcare: Maintained benefits and controlled the costs for the HSA healthcare plan.
  • Workplace Safety: Financial support for workers injured by workplace violence (a new workplace violence time bank seeded by the hospital and members. Injured workers can draw from it to supplement their own workplace compensation).
  • Retirement: Secured affordable retirement for current and future workers through the whole agreement.
  • Training: Educational benefit worth $600,00 over four years, administered by the SEIU 1199NE Training and Education Fund.
  • Equity and Inclusion: Employer will provide and share costs of tri-lingual translation of medical and retirement benefits as well the union contract.

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‘Maddening’ Proof Plastics Industry Knew Recycling Was False Solution in 1974, New Document Shows

They knew plastics recycling was a sham from the start

By Rebecca John

This work was supported by a grant from the Fund for Investigative Journalism

With international treaty negotiations aimed at addressing the plastic pollution crisis resuming in Switzerland this week, a new document reveals that one of the world’s largest plastic producers, DuPont, acknowledged as early as 1974 that recycling its plastic products was not possible. 

This new discovery also comes against the backdrop of two pending lawsuits alleging that U.S. plastic producers have deceived the public about the feasibility of recycling since the 1980s.

For decades, the plastics industry has publicly advocated recycling as a strategy for managing plastic waste. But the document, a letter written in May 1974 by Charles Brelsford McCoy, a president and board chairman of DuPont, represents the earliest evidence to date of a top-level industry insider admitting that many commonly used plastic products cannot be recycled due to their complex chemical structures.

The letter contains DuPont’s response to an invitation asking the company to join a pilot recycling scheme in honor of the U.S.’s 1976 bicentennial celebrations. DuPont refused. The reason: recycling DuPont’s plastic products was simply “not feasible.”

Found by DeSmog, the correspondence proves that by the early 1970s the plastic industry’s knowledge regarding the limitations of recycling existed at the highest level, not only in the lab but also the C-suite. 

The discovery also casts new light on the plastic industry’s decades-long promotion of recycling as a viable solution to the global plastic waste crisis. 

Monday, August 18, 2025

Chronically Ill? In Bobby Junior’s View, It Might Be Your Own Fault

How can you doubt a guy who swims in raw sewage?

 

On a recent weekday evening, Ashly Richards helped her 13-year-old son, Case, with homework. He did math problems and some reading, underscoring how much he’s accomplished at his school for children with autism.

Richards has heard Trump administration officials suggest that food dyes and pediatric vaccines cause autism and ADHD. That stance, she said, unfairly blames parents.

“There’s no evidence to support it,” said Richards, 44, a marketing director in Richmond, Virginia. “As a parent, it’s infuriating.”

In their zeal to “Make America Healthy Again,” Trump administration officials are making statements that some advocacy and medical groups say depict patients and the doctors who treat them as partly responsible for whatever ails them.

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and agency leaders have attributed a panoply of chronic diseases and other medical issues — such as autism, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, depression, diabetes, and obesity — to consumers and their lifestyle choices, according to a review of 15 hours of recorded interviews, social media statements, and federal reports.

He said at a news conference on April 16 that autism is preventable and that rates are rising because of toxic substances in the environment, despite a lack of evidence there is any link.

“These are kids who will never pay taxes. They’ll never hold a job. They’ll never play baseball. They’ll never write a poem. They’ll never go out on a date,” he said. “Many of them will never use a toilet unassisted.”

The vast majority of people on the spectrum do not have those severe challenges.

The statements are more than rhetoric. These attitudes, ranging from judgments about individual behaviors to criticism of the chronically poor, are shaping policies that affect millions of people. 

The sentiments have been a factor behind decisions to cut Medicaid, keep federal insurance programs from covering anti-obesity drugs, and impose new barriers to covid vaccines for healthy people, say public health leaders and doctors. 

GOP lawmakers and federal health officials, they say, hold a reproachful stance toward chronic illnesses and the estimated 129 million people in the U.S. affected by them.

MAGA!

He may not get the Peace Prize, but he did achieve this

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