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Saturday, January 31, 2026

US Catholic bishops draw the line: ‘We ask — for the love of God and the love of human beings, which can’t be separated — vote against renewing funding for such a lawless organization’

Tipping point: ICE murders and kidnapping of children

Aleja Hertzler-McCain, Religious News Service

(RNS) — After immigration enforcement officials shot several people and killed two U.S. citizens, U.S. Catholic bishops have used increasingly urgent language in opposing the Trump administration’s immigration policies in recent days.

Cardinal Joseph Tobin of Newark, New Jersey, called on U.S. members of Congress to oppose a funding bill that includes money for the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

“We ask — for the love of God and the love of human beings, which can’t be separated — vote against renewing funding for such a lawless organization,” Tobin said in a webinar hosted by Faith in Action on Sunday (Jan. 25). 

Tobin also used stark language to describe immigration enforcement actions, saying, “We mourn for our world, for our country, that allows 5-year-olds to be legally kidnapped and protesters to be slaughtered.”

Right here

News Flash!

"What's that smell?"

Thousands of Rhode Island students walk out as part of a nationwide shutdown and general strike

Good turn-out for Rhode Island protest

Steve Ahlquist

Over two thousand people, mostly students from Rhode Island universities, colleges and high schools, rallied and marched outside the Rhode Island State House on Friday as part of a nationwide shutdown, walk-out, and general strike called by the Somali Student Association of the University of Minnesota in response to the Customs and Border Protection (CBP) murder of Alex Pretti and the escalating campaign of ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) terror.

Participating schools included, among many others, Brown University, the University of Rhode Island (URI), the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD), Johnson & Wales University, Roger Williams University, Rhode Island College (RIC), and the Community College of Rhode Island (CCRI), The Wheeler School, Moses Brown School, Lincoln School and Providence, East Greenwich, and Barrington Public Schools.

The event began with a short speaking program before marching through downtown Providence and returning to the State House. For more information, see: ICE Out! National Day of Action: Protest in Providence as part of the national shutdown to stop ICE’s reign of terror

Here’s the video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I9zdPTB_94M

Science does not support Bobby Jr. and Trump on rollback of childhood vaccines

No link found between routine childhood vaccines, aluminum adjuvants, and epilepsy risk

Laine Bergeson

Routine childhood vaccinations, nor the aluminum used as vaccine adjuvants, are not associated with an increased risk of epilepsy in young children, according to a new case-control study published this week in The Journal of Pediatrics. 

The study, led by a team from the Marshfield Clinic Research Institute in Marshfield, Wisconsin, examined whether being up to date on recommended vaccines or having higher cumulative exposure to vaccine-related aluminum was linked to the development of epilepsy in children under age four. 

Analyzing a decade of pediatric health data from the Vaccine Safety Datalink, which is a collaboration between the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and several health care sites that monitor vaccine safety, the team identified 2,089 children diagnosed as having epilepsy from age 1 year to less than 4 years and matched them with 20,139 children without epilepsy based on age, sex, and health care site. 

Most participants were boys (54%) and between the ages of 1 year and 23 months (69%). White non-Hispanics composed the largest ethnicity group in the study (40%).

Raimondo in name only

Republican Robert Raimondo announces gubernatorial campaign

By Nancy Lavin, Rhode Island Current

Republican Robert Raimondo, 58, of North Kingstown, announces his gubernatorial bid at a sparsely attended campaign kickoff at Brewed Awakenings Coffee House in Warwick on Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026. (Photo by Laura Paton/Rhode Island Current)

Is Rhode Island ready for another Governor Raimondo?

Robert Raimondo hopes so. The North Kingstown Republican formalized his bid for the governor’s seat in a kickoff event at Brewed Awakenings Coffee House in Warwick Thursday morning. Aside from regular coffeehouse customers, the event drew two attendees, a Rhode Island Current photographer and a cameraperson for WPRI-TV 12.

Unlike former Gov. Gina Raimondo, who Robert said is a distant cousin, Robert Raimondo is a political newcomer. He’s never run for office before, and moved back to Rhode Island in October with the express purpose of fulfilling his lifelong dream to serve as state governor, he said in an interview Thursday.

The 58-year-old had not even registered to vote in the state at the time he filed his campaign paperwork in November, the Providence Journal reported. He has since registered. 

Friday, January 30, 2026

Trump’s DOJ admits DOGE Employees May Have Improperly Accessed Social Security Data With Aim to ‘Overturn Election Results’

The only surprise is that they are admitting it

Brad Reed for Common Dreams

The US Department of Justice acknowledged last week that two members of the Department of Government Efficiency may have improperly accessed Social Security data at the request of an unidentified organization whose goal is challenging US election results.

In a court filing dated January 16, the DOJ revealed that the unidentified organization last March reached out to two DOGE employees, who were working at the Social Security Administration (SSA), and requested that they “analyze state voter rolls that the advocacy group had acquired.”

“The advocacy group’s stated aim was to find evidence of voter fraud and to overturn election results in certain states,” the DOJ wrote. “In connection with these communications, one of the DOGE team members signed a ‘Voter Data Agreement,’ in his capacity as an SSA employee, with the advocacy group.”

The filing said that SSA has “not yet seen evidence that SSA data were shared with the advocacy group,” but that it had reviewed emails indicating that “DOGE team members could have been asked to assist the advocacy group by accessing SSA data to match to the voter rolls.”

Steven Miller's neighborhood

Wow! Trump takes a beating in new poll

Majority feels Trump is dishonest, incompetent as well as mentally and physically unfit

Will Trump sue the Pew Research Center for $10 billion or just have Kristi Noem arrest the staff?

Read the report here: Confidence in Trump Dips [in 2026], and Fewer Now Say They Support His Policies and Plans | Pew Research Center

Make it $50,000 and then maybe...if I can throw stuff at the screen

 

How swearing makes you stronger

Always worked for me

By American Psychological Association

edited by Stephanie Baum, reviewed by Robert Egan

Letting out a swear word in a moment of frustration can feel good. Now, research suggests that it can be good for you, too: Swearing can boost people's physical performance by helping them overcome their inhibitions and push themselves harder on tests of strength and endurance, according to research published by the American Psychological Association.

"In many situations, people hold themselves back—consciously or unconsciously—from using their full strength," said study author Richard Stephens, Ph.D., of Keele University in the U.K. "Swearing is an easily available way to help yourself feel focused, confident and less distracted, and 'go for it' a little more."

The article appears in the journal American Psychologist.

How swearing impacts physical performance

Previous research by Stephens and others has found when people swear, they perform better on many physical challenges, including how long they can keep their hand in ice water and how long they can support their body weight during a chair push-up exercise.

"That is now a well replicated, reliable finding," Stephens said. "But the question is—how is swearing helping us? What's the psychological mechanism?"

He and his colleagues believed that it might be that swearing puts people in a disinhibited state of mind.

"By swearing, we throw off social constraint and allow ourselves to push harder in different situations," he said.

How bad will Charlestown's weekend weather be?

Most likely not as bad as last week.

But the cold can be deadly - Providence man dies in the cold

By Will Collette

Compared to the foot of snow that fell on Charlestown last week, this weekend's supposed "Bomb Cyclone" is almost certainly going to be mild. But the deep freeze continues. 

The National Weather Service forecast shows that we will not reach the freezing mark until Monday or Tuesday when the daily high temperatures are expected to top out at 32 and 33 degrees respectively. It will continue to be cold through next week, bad news for heating bills.

The 10 AM NOAA snow forecast is for a range of zero to three inches in Westerly through Monday, though it is theoretically possible (6-15%) we could match last weekend. Unless there is a major shift in the storm track, I like our odds.



Cold kills man in Providence

Statement from the Rhode Island Council of Churches

The Rhode Island State Council of Churches is deeply saddened to learn of the death of a man found on a sidewalk in downtown Providence early Wednesday morning. Our condolences are with his loved ones and community. According to police, first responders were called to Washington Street just before 5 am after a report of concern for an individual outside during freezing temperatures. They located an unresponsive man who was pronounced dead at the scene.

We are told that the greatest commandment is to “Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind,” and that the second is like it, “to love your neighbor as yourself.” This has been the key principle of faith guiding our service to our communities and to one another.

Rhode Island continues to lack the essential infrastructure and coordinated response needed to ensure that no one in our community freezes to death on the coldest nights of the year. In response to this ongoing crisis, Operation No One Dies is putting out a call for immediate, concrete collaboration.

No single organization can solve this alone. It is only through committed partnership and shared accountability that we can build a system strong enough to prevent future deaths. We urge every sector partner to join us in a commitment to working collaboratively to implement these lifesaving measures.

“Truly I tell you, just as you did not do it to one of the least of these, you did not do it to me.” To take God seriously is to take God’s concerns seriously.

- From SteveAhlquist.news

Filming ICE is legal but exposes you to digital tracking (or DEATH) – here’s how to minimize the risk

ICE Barbie Kristi Noem calls video a form of "domestic terrorism" after ICE agents murder Alex Pretti 

That's unconstitutional

Nicole M. Bennett, Indiana University

In Minneapolis, 37-year-old Alex Pretti,
a VA nurse, moments before being knocked
to the ground by ICE agents and executed 
When an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent shot and killed Renee Nicole Good in south Minneapolis on Jan. 7, 2026, what happened next looked familiar, at least on the surface. 

Within hours, cellphone footage spread online and eyewitness accounts contradicted official statements, while video analysts slowed the clip down frame by frame to answer a basic question: Did she pose the threat federal officials claimed?

What’s changed since Minneapolis became a global reference point for bystander video in 2020 in the wake of George Floyd’s murder is how thoroughly camera systems, especially smartphones, are now entangled with the wider surveillance ecosystem.

I am a researcher who studies the intersection of data governance, digital technologies and the U.S. federal government. The hard truth for anyone filming law enforcement today is that the same technologies that can hold the state accountable can also make ordinary people more visible to the state.

Recording is often protected speech. But recording, and especially sharing, creates data that can be searched, linked, purchased and reused.

Video can challenge power. It can also attract it.

Targeting the watchers

Documentation can be the difference between an official narrative and an evidence-based public record. Courts in much of the U.S. have recognized a First Amendment right to record police in public while they perform official duties, subject to reasonable restrictions. For example, you can’t physically interfere with police.

However, that right is uneven across jurisdictions and vulnerable in practice, especially when police claim someone is interfering, or when state laws impose distances people must maintain from law enforcement actions – practices that chill filming.

While the legal landscape of recording law enforcement is important to understand, your safety is also a major consideration. In the days after Good’s killing, Minneapolis saw other viral clips documenting immigration enforcement and protests, along with agents’ forceful engagement with people near those scenes, including photographers.

It’s difficult to know how many people have been targeted by agents for recording. In Illinois in late 2025, the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker, operated by advocacy group Freedom of the Press Foundation, documented multiple incidents in which journalists covering ICE-facility protests reported being shot with crowd-control munitions or tackled and arrested while filming.

These incidents underscore that documentation isn’t risk-free. There is an additional layer of safety beyond the physical to take into account: your increased risk of digital exposure. The legal right to record doesn’t prevent your recording from becoming data that others can use.

Thursday, January 29, 2026

Charlestown Citizens Alliance has another phony issue

Platner has a million dollar grievance…it’s about her million dollar grift

By Will Collette

After a period of quiet, the Charlestown Citizens Alliance (CCA) de facto leader Ruth Platner has gotten around to complaining about a November vote by the Town Council to issue a $1.05 million bond drawn from the voter-approved 2015 $2 million open space bond fund.

Platner has been kvetching about this matter for the past few months indicating that only she has the right to make any decisions about this bond funding.

That bond referendum was approved by the narrowest of margins - 11 votes. Rather than use the bond authority for the purpose voters intended, Planning Commissar Platner went on a buying spree, spending more than a million dollars in CASH from the town's General Fund to shop for land usually at inflated prices and often as a favor to a CCA client.

Around 60% of Charlestown is already protected
Platner’s actions were contrary to what the bond referendum actually said. However, that didn’t matter since the CCA-controlled Town Council gave Platner anything she wanted from the town's deliberately bloated surplus, essentially Platner's slush fund.

In 2022, CCA financial mismanagement – which included Ruth’s slush fund and shady land deals – led voters to strip the CCA of Town Council control. No more blank checks. Voters completed the CCA’s ouster in 2024.

The winners of the 2022 and 2024 elections, Charlestown Residents United (CRU), worked diligently to repair the financial damage caused by 10 years of CCA reign. According to data from the RI Auditor General, they succeeded.

However, there was a remaining piece of unresolved business - the over a million in cash taken from the town’s General Fund for land deals, instead of using the bond as intended by Charlestown voters in 2015.

Town Council President Deb Carney (CRU) sought to redress these improper purchases by pushing for the town to issue a million-dollar bond from the 2015 open space bond authorization to pay back the town’s General Fund. Her resolution passed by a 3-1 vote.

Platner (left) giving former Town Council President
Tom Gentz his instructions. Photo by Will Collette
Contrary to the foggy claims made by Platner (and dissenting Council member Stephen Stokes), this is NOT new spending. It balances the books and corrects the CCA’s mistake, putting the money back where it belongs.

Platner says – with no evidence - the CRU majority has some nefarious scheme in mind for the $1.05 million.

This latest CCA-concocted phony issue is entirely of Ruth Platner’s creation. She was the one who decided after the 2015 bond passed not to use it and instead draw cash for her land grabs. 

Her motive? Clearly, she wants to keep that $2 million bond authority untouched as a future source of cash for her shady land deals.

Each time between 2015 and 2022 that Platner came up with a new land deal, she proclaimed voters had given her a mandate (by 11 votes) to buy land regardless of need or, most tellingly, the price. Leaving the bond authority untouched permitted Platner to use it as her excuse for more land deals, provided of course that the CCA held a Town Council majority.

Just about everyone in Charlestown loves open space. I know I do. That's why Charlestown has so much of it - about 60% of all land in town. See the town map, above.

But few, other than the CCA, want to continue to add more land blindly and stupidly. Opponents of Platner's open space Über Alles approach want future town land deals to be strategic and priced right.

Platner pines for the days when the CCA controlled the Council because that meant that SHE controlled the Council. In this year’s election, she hopes to get that control back.

She just managed to get her stooge, Bonnita Van Slyke, back onto the Council by getting 39% of the vote in Charlestown’s December 2 Special Election.

Consider this the opening salvo for the 2026 Charlestown municipal election. As they have during their history in Charlestown, expect the CCA to fire off more lies and concoct more fake issues to retake power. Let’s not let them get away with it.