Progressive Charlestown
a fresh, sharp look at news, life and politics in Charlestown, Rhode Island
Tuesday, December 30, 2025
Travelling abroad?
How to avoid trouble with ICE upon return whether or not you are a citizen
National Immigration Law Center
We should all be able to travel to visit our loved ones and explore new places. But right now, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is going after immigrants in new and harmful ways. Traveling through U.S. airports can be risky, even if you have active or pending legal immigration status and/or have traveled without issues in the past. That’s why it’s more important than ever to know your rights and how to prepare for risks as you travel.
This resource gives travel safety
tips and other resources on how to understand the
risks and prepare yourself and your family.
Disclaimer: This resource provides general information.
It is not legal advice specific to your situation. We recommend that community
members exercise caution and speak to an immigration lawyer about their
individual cases.
What’s Happening
The Transportation Security Administration (TSA), the government agency that handles airport security, is giving passenger information to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). This means people who don’t have legal immigration status or whose status is uncertain could be arrested or deported when they go through airport security in the United States.
- How
does it happen? A few times each week, TSA sends
ICE lists of people flying through U.S. airports. These lists
include names,
photos, and other details. ICE checks these lists against its own
records. If ICE finds someone they want to target, they can send officers
to arrest that person at the airport.
- Isn’t
my private information protected? Normally,
government agencies have rules
about sharing private information. But TSA and ICE are both part of
the same department – the Department of Homeland Security – so those rules
don’t apply here.
- Is ICE already arresting people at airports? Yes. The New York Times reported on December 12, 2025, that TSA is sharing this information with ICE. Before that, there were already reports of ICE arrests at airports. For example, on November 20, ICE arrested college student Ana Luccía López Belloza at Boston’s Logan Airport while she was waiting to board a flight to visit family for Thanksgiving. She had an old deportation order, though she didn’t know it.
RFK Jr. wants to scrutinize the vaccine schedule – but its safety record is already decades long
"Fixing" what's not broken with a sledge hammer
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| We now have vaccines for many diseases that once ravaged the population. That's not a problem, but a cause for celebration. |
The U.S. childhood immunization schedule, the grid of colored bars pediatricians share with parents, recommends a set of vaccines given from birth through adolescence to prevent a range of serious infections. The basic structure has been in place since 1995, when federal health officials and medical organizations first issued a unified national standard, though new vaccines have been added regularly as science advanced.
Vaccines on the childhood schedule have been tested in controlled trials involving millions of participants, and they are continuously monitored for safety after being rolled out. The schedule represents the accumulated knowledge of decades of research. It has made the diseases it targets so rare that many parents have never seen them.
But the schedule is now under scrutiny.
On Dec. 16, 2025, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention adopted its first major change to the childhood immunization schedule, under Kennedy’s leadership. The agency accepted an advisory committee’s vote to drop a long-held recommendation that all newborns be vaccinated against hepatitis B, despite no new evidence that questions the vaccine’s long-standing safety record.
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who has cast doubt on vaccine safety for decades, has said he plans to further scrutinize the vaccines children receive.
I’m an infectious disease physician who treats vaccine-preventable diseases and reviews the clinical trial evidence behind immunization recommendations. The vaccine schedule wasn’t designed in a single stroke. It was built gradually over decades, shaped by disease outbreaks, technological breakthroughs and hard-won lessons about reducing childhood illness and death.
With federal officials now casting doubt on its foundations, it’s helpful to know how it came about.
The early years
For the first half of the 20th century, smallpox vaccination was common, required by most states for school entry. But there was no unified national schedule. The combination vaccine against diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis, known as the DTP vaccine, emerged in 1948, and the Salk polio vaccine arrived in 1955, but recommendations for when and how to give them varied by state, by physician and even by neighborhood.
Trump’s Tariffs Are Killing Small Businesses
Trump's national sales tax puts a heavy burden on US small businesses
Seth
Sandronsky for Common Dreams
According to the Pew Research Center, Americans have big trust in small businesses versus big corporations.
Mom-and-pop shops will need that positive vibe and more as they approach the make-or-break year end business season. While small business owners can’t compete on prices with larger companies, there are other factors in play such as personal service.
Nevertheless, prices of goods and services do
matter, so the rising costs that small business owners are paying for imports
due to Donald Trump’s trade tariffs, a tax on American
consumers and businesses, is roiling mom-and-pop shops across the US.
On April 2, 2025, Trump announced that he was via tariffs
“enacting fair trade policies that will restore our workforce, rebuild our
economy, and finally put America First.” According to Small Business Administration
Administrator Kelly Loeffler, mom-and-pop shops would reap a bounty of benefits
from tariffs on imports from global trading partners: “Small businesses will no
longer be crushed by foreign governments and unfair trade deals. Instead, we
will put American industry, workers, and strength
FIRST.”
How are these claims working out on Main Street? We turn to
Fabrice Moschetti, owner of Moschetti Artisan Roasters, in Vallejo, California.
Imported coffee he buys from Brazil was tariff-free until the president imposed a baseline “reciprocal tariff” of 10% on imported goods globally, then increased tariffs on Brazilian imports another 40% in July because the government of Brazil was prosecuting its past President Jair Bolsonaro, awaiting a 27-year prison sentence on appeal currently after conviction for planning a military coup against his successor, Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.
It’s been a struggle to find an adequate supply of coffee,
according to Moschetti, forcing him to truck it in from cities such as Seattle
versus the nearby Port of Oakland. “It’s been difficult to tell the mom-and-pop
owner-operators who we work with that our prices are increasing 40%,” he says.
Monday, December 29, 2025
If everything is "national security," then nothing is.
The legal "defense" for Trump's ballroom is a joke

But according to the administration, construction can’t be
halted for even the briefest moment — or our national security will be
imperiled.
How does putting a pause on the Big Gilded Ballroom
compromise national security? Well, the administration can’t say … because it
would compromise national security.
It’s kind of a fool’s game to treat the administration’s
court filings as legitimate legal arguments. That’s not only because Department
of Justice attorneys are distressingly
comfortable with deceiving judges and defying orders. It’s also
because the administration doesn’t genuinely believe it should be required to
justify or defend its actions, so instead of legal arguments, we just get
assertions of raw, unchecked power.
The most blatant version of this is the administration’s
favorite one to raise — namely, that Trump gets to do what he wants
because he is president. But the vague, fact-free invocation of national
security is in the same category, albeit less obviously so. One is basically
“you can’t tell us what to do,” while the other is more “we don’t have to tell
you what we’re doing or why we are doing it.”
Priorities, again
Meet Trump's pick to be Rhode Island's "interim" US Attorney
Senator Whitehouse describes him as a MAGA stooge with neither the qualifications nor temperament for this position
Read Katherine Gregg's story on him: Charles Calenda to be sworn in as interim US Attorney for RI.Calenda's appointment is opposed by both of Rhode Island's Senators, with Sen. Whitehouse describing Calenda's appointment like this:
“Despite good-faith efforts at a bipartisan nomination process with the Trump White House, the MAGA Department of Justice insisted on a MAGA stooge with neither the qualifications nor temperament for this position. There will be no blue slip and we will be rid of him soon enough.”
Scientists reveal a powerful heart boost hidden in everyday foods
Tasty and good for your heart
King's College London
Regular consumption of polyphenol-rich foods like tea, coffee, berries, nuts, and whole grains may significantly support long-term heart health. A decade-long study of more than 3,100 adults found that those who consistently ate polyphenol-packed diets had healthier blood pressure and cholesterol levels, as well as lower predicted cardiovascular risk.
Higher intake of polyphenol-rich foods was linked to better
heart health and slower increases in cardiovascular risk during aging.
Metabolite analysis confirmed the protective effects of key plant compounds
like flavonoids and phenolic acids. Credit: Shutterstock
People who frequently include foods and beverages rich in
polyphenols, such as tea, coffee, berries, cocoa, nuts, whole grains and olive
oil, may experience better heart health over time.
Trump and Bobby Jr. are gunning for trans kids
Ayurella Horn-Muller, Staff Writer
This story was originally reported by Grace Panetta of The 19th. Meet Grace and read more of their reporting on gender, politics and policy.
Even the NRA thinks this is stupid
Trump administration officials announced new proposed regulations targeting gender-affirming care for youth, part of a larger push from the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to restrict such care.
One of the new proposed rules would ban hospitals that provide gender affirming care to youth under 18 from receiving Medicaid and Medicare funds. Another proposed rule would bar Medicaid from covering gender-affirming care for youth under 18 and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) from covering such care for youth under 19.
HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., along with other officials, formally announced the proposed rules at an event on Thursday morning. In his remarks, Kennedy cast gender affirming care as “sex-rejecting” procedures that impose “lasting harm” on children.“This is not medicine. It is malpractice,” Kennedy said. “We're done with junk science driven by ideological pursuits, not the well-being of children.”
Gender-affirming care for youth, backed by major medical organizations to treat gender dysphoria, varies depending on the patient’s age and circumstances. For those entering adolescence, providers can prescribe puberty blockers, which temporarily halt hormones causing puberty and are also prescribed to cisgender youth who undergo early puberty. Research has shown that puberty blockers significantly reduce depression and risk of suicide in trans and non-binary youth and that gender-affirming care also reduces depression in transgender adults.
Sunday, December 28, 2025
Trump Cabinet Officials Re-Name Themselves
“Good enough for a battleship, it’s good enough for me,” said Homeland Security chief Kristi Trump-Noem.
Mitchell Zimmerman in Common Dreams
Secretary of War Pete Trump-Hegseth and Secretary of State Marco Trump-Rubio were the first to announce that they were changing their names in a display of loyalty to the president, but they were swiftly followed by the remaining cabinet members.A rush of orders for new business cards and government IDs is expected, but key officials are likely to be the first to see their new names recognized on repainted doors and Trump accoutrements.
Priority is
expected to be given to Attorney General Pam Trump-Bondi, Secretary of the
Homeland Security Kristi Trump-Noem, and Secretary of Health and
Human Services Robert F. Trump-Kennedy Jr.
Although Trump-Hegseth and Trump-Rubio were first out of the
box, insiders believe that the changes were inspired by former Secretary
Kennedy, who reportedly mused that if the center honoring his uncle was to be
renamed The Donald J. Trump and the John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the
Performing Arts, maybe he would change his own name too.
The renaming of the Performing Arts Center followed a renaming that created the Donald J. Trump Institute for Peace and precedes the naming of a proposed group of guided-missile battleships of the United States Navy as the Trump class.
“Kinetically lethal,” said War Secretary Trump-Hegseth.
Legal observers expect their request will be rejected by Chief Justice John G.
Trump-Roberts and Associate Justices Clarence Trump-Thomas, Samuel A.
Trump-Alito, Neil M. Trump-Gorsuch, Brett M. Trump-Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney
Trump-Barrett.
Mitchell Zimmerman Zimmerman is an attorney, longtime social activist, and author of the anti-racism thriller "Mississippi Reckoning" (2019).
The Gavle Goat is dead. Long live the Charlestown New Year's Eve bonfire!
After several safe Christmas seasons, world's favorite goat finds a new way to die
By Will Collette
I first started writing about Sweden's Gavle goat in 2011, the year Tom Ferrio and I launched Progressive Charlestown.A proud holiday tradition in the Swedish town of Gavle since 1966, local resident build a giant goat (Gävlebocken) made of straw that stands in the town square through the Advent season.
Except when it doesn't.
While a majority of town residents love the goat, a sizeable minority don't. They make it their business every year to burn the goat down. It does make a pretty spectacular bonfire. There's a lively betting pool on whether the goat will survive and, if so, how long. And as the saying goes, a certain amount of alcohol is involved.
Vandals caught in the act usually do three months of jail time. Metro.UK reports "of the 58 Gävle goats in history, 42 have been destroyed."
Each year I wrote about the Gävlebocken, usually in the context of publicizing Charlestown's own New Year's Eve bonfire. Some year's, the goat made it; other years, it didn't.
Due largely to dramatically heightened security, the Gävlebocken made it through the past several years uncharred.
But this year, its luck ran out.
Yesterday, December 27, the Gävlebocken was busted up by high winds from Atlantic Storm Johannes.
Hopefully, the weather will be kind on Wednesday night for Charlestown's annual New Year's Eve bonfire at Ninigret Park. Currently, the National Weather Service is forecasting a cold (20 degrees) and cloudy for Charlestown.Charlestown's bonfire was started as volunteer effort by Frank Glista who hustled up the lumber (usually from Arnold Lumber) and hand-crafted it himself. Frank carried on this work for years until recently handing it off to former Engineers union leader and current Charlestown Residents United chair Tim Quillen.
The Charlestown bonfire has had its own share of troubles. In 2013, an undisclosed complainant to DEM asked that the bonfire be banned because it created an illegal "municipal waste disposal site." DEM issued a "Notice of Intent to Enforce" which was promptly appealed by then Charlestown Treasurer Pat Anderson.
DEM rejected Pat's appeal and then former Charlestown state Representative Donna Walsh got to work, ultimately getting DEM to rescind its intended enforcement action.
There was a lot going on in Charlestown at that time. Bradford residents were hammering at DEM for its failure to enforce the law on the infamous Copar Quarry on the Charlestown-Westerly line. Town Councilor Deputy Dan Slattery was going on a tear about Ninigret Park, "phantom properties," state acquisition of properties to protect water resources after just completed his campaign to destroy former town administrator Bill DiLibero's career. Planning Commissar Ruth Platner was cranking up her effort to micromanage every business, residence and land parcel in town.
Banning the bonfire was someone's bright idea, someone who has never stepped forward to take the "credit." But if you study the history, you can make a pretty good guess.














