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Thursday, March 3, 2016

VIDEO: 10 Reasons Marco Rubio is no Moderate

Only the packaging is different


Watch this video on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iPtRJ8-hzdI

Marco Rubio is being positioned as a moderate alternative to Ted Cruz or Donald Trump.  Baloney.  His positions are extreme right.  Consider these 10 facts about Rubio:  

1. Rubio wants to repeal Obama’s executive order to expand background checks and close gun sale loopholes.

2. When asked about closing down mosques, Rubio said he wants to shutdown “any place radicals are inspired.”  

3. He denies humans are responsible for climate change.

4. His tax plan gives the top 1 percent over $200,000 in tax cuts every year. That’s as bad as Donald Trump’s tax plan.

5. He wants to cut $4.3 trillion in spending, including funds from Medicare and other programs, essentially freeze federal spending at 2008 levels for everything except the Pentagon.  

6. He wants a permanent U.S. presence in Iraq, and would end the nuclear deal with Iran, putting us on a path to war.

7. We have no way to know where he is on immigration because he’s flip-flopped — first working on legislation to regularize citizenship for undocumented immigrants, and now firmly anti-legalization.
8. He wants to repeal Obamacare.  

9. He’s against a woman’s right to choose, even in cases of rape and incest.

10. Although elected to the Senate as a Tea Party favorite, he’s now the establishment’s favorite Republican. Among his donors are hedge-fund billionaire Paul Singer and the executives and PACs of Goldman Sachs, Wells Fargo, and Koch Industries.

ROBERT B. REICH is Chancellor’s Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley and Senior Fellow at the Blum Center for Developing Economies. He served as Secretary of Labor in the Clinton administration, for which Time Magazine named him one of the ten most effective cabinet secretaries of the twentieth century. He has written fourteen books, including the best sellers “Aftershock, “The Work of Nations," and "Beyond Outrage," and, his most recent, "Saving Capitalism." He is also a founding editor of the American Prospect magazine, chairman of Common Cause, a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and co-creator of the award-winning documentary, INEQUALITY FOR ALL. 

Giving families positive choices for their college savings

Investment lineup will avoid fossil fuels, tobacco, firearms and other products that cause social concern


PROVIDENCE, RI -- Rhode Island's CollegeBoundfund will begin offering a socially responsible investment option that eliminates exposure to fossil fuels when the 529 Plan college savings program transitions to new management this summer.

"Climate change, human rights and a range of other issues are coming to the forefront as factors that can impact investment value," said General Treasurer Seth Magaziner, whose office oversees Rhode Island's $7 billion CollegeBoundfund 529 plan. 

"CollegeBoundfund's socially responsible investment option will eliminate exposure to fossil fuels and address societal ills while seeking to produce competitive returns for those who choose this option."

The socially responsible investment lineup will draw from a globally diversified portfolio of stocks that do not include oil, coal and gas producers, or utilities that use fossil fuels. It will also reduce exposure to investments in companies that produce tobacco, firearms and other products that cause social concern.


'Widespread Flu' in Rhode Island

Health Department issues order for unvaccinated health workers to wear surgical masks

The Rhode Island Department of Health (RIDOH) announced that the flu is "widespread" in Rhode Island, triggering the state's requirement for unvaccinated healthcare workers in hospitals and many other types of healthcare facilities to wear surgical masks.

"The masking requirement is critical in protecting healthcare workers from catching the flu, and also in protecting patients who are often dealing with other serious health issues," said Director of Health Nicole Alexander-Scott, MD, MPH. 

"For people who have not been vaccinated yet, it is not too late. Flu vaccine is the best way to keep yourself and the people you love safe from the flu."


Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Never

Can someone please tell me when exactly does the Republican Party have to finally take responsibility for unleashing these lunatics on the American people? 

Margaret, they are about to vote in my state honey, and then they’re coming for you.  Get ready. 

Can someone please tell me when exactly does the Republican Party  have to finally  take responsibility for unleashing these lunatics on the American people? I mean they gave us Sarah Palin and now this?  

After years of pandering to uneducated, racist, gun-loving, women hating,  born again and again and again asshats, the Republican Party is finally reaping their reward – Donald Trump. And they don’t seem very happy with their harvest.

I saw an interview with a gay, black Republican congressman from Georgia who is supporting Rubio. I think that makes him a unicorn.  But anyway…  The reporter pointed out that Rubio doesn’t recognize the congressman’s relationship with his same-sex partner. The congressman responded by saying that was ok because neither did his mother.  Now if that ain’t the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard.  Well it was, at least until I watched that debate.

Now look what you've done

Mike Luckovich
For more cartoons from Mike Luckovich, CLICK HERE

Obama's firsts

Pic of the Moment

Climate cover-up comes undone

Will Big Oil Survive Long Enough to Pay for Its Climate Sins?
By Phil Mattera in Dirt Diggers Digest

“Times are tough, you’d almost call them brutal right now. But we will adapt. We will make it.” So insisted the deputy chief executive of BP at a conference in Houston where industry leaders put on a brave face amid a worsening crisis for the petroleum sector.

Other speakers were even more explicit about the Darwinian environment. “We will be one of the last guys standing,” declared the CEO of Suncor Energy, which once prospered from the tar sands boom in Alberta and is now selling off assets.

Several dozen oil and gas producers have had to file for bankruptcy protection since the beginning of last year. More such moves are expected. The business consulting firm Deloitte has issued a report estimating that more than one-third of all petroleum exploration and production companies are in precarious financial condition, with dozens likely to make the trip to bankruptcy court.

Even the oil majors are in trouble. Chevron reported a fourth-quarter loss of $588 million, while BP lost over $2 billion in the quarter and more than $5 billion for 2015 as a whole. Exxon Mobil and Shell are still in the black but their profits are down sharply. 

PRIVACY: Issues are murky in the Apple iPhone terrorist case

What's Really at Stake in the Apple Encryption Debate
by Julia Angwin in ProPublica




The FBI's much-discussed request to Apple can seem innocuous: Help us extract six weeks of encrypted data from the locked iPhone of Syed Farook, an employee of San Bernardino's health department who spearheaded an attack that killed 14 people. 

Most people believe Apple should comply.

But the FBI is demanding a lot more than the data on a single phone. It has obtained a court order requiring Apple to build custom surveillance software for the FBI – which computer security expert Dan Guido cleverly dubs an FBiOS.

Once that software exists, it is inevitable that other law enforcement agencies will approach Apple seeking to get it to use the FBiOS to unlock iPhones in other investigations. Already, Apple says it has received U.S. court orders, under the same legal authority, seeking to get it to unlock 12 other devices.

In effect, the FBI is asking for Apple to write software that will provide something the government has sought without success for more than a decade: A "backdoor" that cracks the increasingly sophisticated encryption on consumers' phones.


The beginning of what?



Step back from the campaign fray for just a moment and consider the enormity of what’s already occurred.

A 74-year-old Jew from Vermont who describes himself as a democratic socialist, who wasn’t even a Democrat until recently, has come within a whisker of beating Hillary Clinton in the Iowa caucus, routed her in the New Hampshire primary, and garnered over 47 percent of the caucus-goers in Nevada, of all places.

And a 69-year-old billionaire who has never held elective office or had anything to do with the Republican Party has taken a commanding lead in the Republican primaries.

Something very big has happened, and it’s not due to Bernie Sanders’ magnetism or Donald Trump’s likeability.

It’s a rebellion against the establishment.


Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Gambian national helps those beginning a new life rebuild in a foreign land

By FRANK CARINI/ecoRI News staff

 Omar Bah, with son Samba, was so overwhelmed by the kindness he enjoyed upon this arrival in Rhode Island that he’s committed to helping other refugees build a home here. (Joanna Detz/ecoRI News photos)
Omar Bah, with son Samba, was so overwhelmed by the kindness he enjoyed upon this arrival in Rhode Island that he’s committed to helping other refugees build a home here. (Joanna Detz/ecoRI News photos)

PROVIDENCE — Omar Bah likes to say he fled the smallest country in Africa to be saved by the smallest state in America. His journey was grueling.

When he landed in Rhode Island, in 2007, he didn’t know a soul. Not surprising, since he didn’t know anyone anywhere in the entire United States. He hadn’t even heard of Providence or Rhode Island until the day before he arrived.

Less than a decade later, Bah is a pillar in the local community, especially when it comes to helping those who share a similar experience.

While many of our presidential candidates and elected “leaders” have spent the past several years vilifying refugees and immigrants as terrorists, drug mules, rapists and murderers, Bah has been helping men, women and children from war-torn countries and the tyrannical oppression of dictators reclaim control of their lives. He understands the trauma and challenges refugees face. He still lives it.

Omar Bah was forced to flee Gambia in the mid-2000s.

Bah, a journalist in Gambia in his previous life, was forced to flee his native land when he was 26. The country’s dictatorial government didn’t appreciate his brand of political reporting, nor did its officials like the fact Bah wrote about the many problems associated with the dumping of rubbish in an open pit in the center of the country’s capital.

He was arrested by government officials — luckily for him, his arrest was witnessed by human-rights workers and fellow journalists. He was held for a day, much of it spent being tortured. If not for the witnesses, Bah would have “disappeared.”

Bah wrote a book titled “Africa’s Hell on Earth: The Ordeal of an African Journalist.” Published in 2014, the book details his experiences living and working in Africa’s smallest country.

He describes Gambian life as: “If you are hungry, you die hungry. If you are sick, you die sick. If you are hopeless, you die without hope.” There is one TV station, a propaganda arm of the government. 

The military shoots protesters. He once witnessed a pregnant woman in need of medical attention taken to the hospital in a donkey cart, where she and her newborn died screaming in the waiting room.

The book’s title “Africa's Hell on Earth” refers to the nickname of the infamous Gambian prisons where many people have disappeared. The prisons are overcrowded, and there is much disease, torture, killing and suffering.

On the back cover of Bah’s 230-page memoir is this line: “Now, with a gun pointed at me, a torch light flashing into my face, I stood up and raised my arms up in surrender.”

After his release from Gambian custody, and after several more run-ins with government officials who feared his intelligence, Bah fled to neighboring Senegal, without his wife, whom he had recently married. His path to freedom led him to Ghana and eventual resettlement in the United States.

Once in Rhode Island, Bah found work, earned undergraduate and graduate degrees, and founded a refugee advocacy and assistance organization. He said he was able to accomplish those things because he was embraced by the community.

“People cared for me and about me,” Bah said. They gave him a home, hope and encouragement. They believed in him.

For three years, during his time in Senegal, Ghana and his beginnings in the United States, Bah was separated from his wife, Teddi Jallow. The couple had only been married for two months before Bah was forced to, literally, run for his life. Jallow was constantly threatened and harassed by Gambia’s corrupt police, until she was able to be reunited here with her husband.

Bah now represents the state of Rhode Island at the Refugee Congress, which is hosted by the United Nations high commissioner for refugees in Washington, D.C. He earned a bachelor’s degree in communication studies with a minor in political science from the University of Rhode Island, and a master’s degree in public administration from Roger Williams University. He also has completed a trauma treatment certification program at Harvard University through the Harvard Program in Refugee Trauma. He has led workshops at Brown University.

Most importantly, he and Jallow are the parents of two sons — Barry who turns 6 next month and 4-year-old Samba.

The nonprofit Refugee Dream Center was established by Bah and his wife to bridge the gap between the services refugees receive from the Dorcas International Institute of Rhode Island and the Diocese of Providence and living on their own in a new country with a different language and culture.

During ecoRI News’ recent Friday afternoon visit, the center’s space on Lockwood Street was buzzing with kids, a group of women was being taught English and several recent refugees were working with a staffer.

“We don’t bring refugees here; we help continue services,” Bah said. “Six months isn’t a long time for refugees to get acclimated to a new culture. There’s a huge gap in services. Every refugee is dealing with trauma — PTSD, depression. In the 1980s the U.S. government used to fund services for three years."

The center currently is working with about 50 refugees. Its work is largely funded by grants and donations. “People have been generous,” Bah said.

Center staff and volunteers help refugees get referrals and assistance, and they provide health-care education and cultural orientation, mental-health support services, after-school programs, tutoring and mentoring for youth, and English language and job skills development. The center gives refugees the chance to integrate into the larger U.S. society by providing them the means to interact and share their unique cultures and skills.

Basically, Bah and his staff provide society with the opposite of what a Feb. 22 political stunt at the Statehouse was offering: ignorance and fear.

Former Congressman Pete Hoekstra, R-Michigan, a former chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, came to Rhode Island to join Rep. Mike Chippendale, R-Foster, and Charles Jacobs, president of Americans for Peace and Tolerance, to call on Gov. Gina Raimondo to reconsider the welcoming of Syrian refugees. Chippendale, originally advertised to be part of the circus, didn't show up.

In a press release touting the stunt, Jacobs peddled: “We are a country of immigrants that welcomes people who come to join us and bolster our way of life. We sympathize with people fleeing war. But an influx of Syrian refugees may pose significant dangers to Rhode Islanders, especially to the Jewish community here.

“Throughout the national discussion, few have raised the question of deeply ingrained hatred of the West, especially of Jews, inculcated through Syrian educational intuitions — starting from childhood. 

Yet studies of Syrian school curricula and culture show that practically every Syrian will have been taught these hatreds.”

Rhode Island welcomes about 200 refugees annually, as it has for decades. Many have come from Syria, Iraq and Rwanda, countries that, like the United States, feature segments of the population known to preach hate.


The Ocean State needs more people like Bah, his wife and the people who help them run the Refugee Dream Center, no matter where they’re from or how they got here.

The results are in

Trouble for the GOP

Pic of the Moment

War crimes and profit for Rhode Island company

By Bob Plain in Rhode Island’s Future


Rhode Island-based Textron sold to Saudi Arabia cluster bombs that, according to a new Human Rights Watch report, “are being used in civilian areas contrary to US export requirements and also appear to be failing to meet the reliability standard required for US export of the weapons.”

The CBU-105 Sensor Fuzed Weapons produced by Textron, according to HRW, have been deployed dangerously close to civilian populations as Saudi-led military strikes have targeted Yemen in 2015 and 2016. 

According to a recent New York Times story, “If confirmed, the report could put new pressure on the United States over support for its ally Saudi Arabia in the Yemen conflict.”

The report alleges several Yemeni civilians have been injured by malfunctioning cluster bombs. HRW and 118 nations oppose any use of cluster bombs in general, but the report says these weapons in particular are malfunctioning.

“While any use of any type of cluster munition should be condemned, there are two additional disturbing aspects to the use of CBU-105 Sensor Fuzed Weapons in Yemen,” says the report. 

“First, US export law prohibits recipients of cluster munitions from using them in populated areas, as the Saudi coalition has clearly been doing. Second, US export law only allows the transfer of cluster munitions with a failure rate of less than 1 percent. But it appears that Sensor Fuzed Weapons used in Yemen are not functioning in ways that meet that reliability standard.”

Textron spokesman David Sylvestre confirmed that Textron produced the CBU-105 Sensor Fuzed Weapons.


Afraid, very afraid



As Donald Trump continues to hold steady at number one and win primary after primary, the GOP establishment is getting really nervous that he may actually be their 2016 candidate. 

They are so scared that a group of high-ranking Republican governors held an emergency conference call to discuss it on Monday.

“Trump’s march to the nomination has set off a wave of anxiety across the Republican Party establishment as top officials weigh whether to endorse him — or denounce him as anathema to the party’s values. Reflecting that angst, on Monday morning, New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, the heads of the Republican Governors Association, convened fellow governors for an unusual conference call to discuss how the primary was unfolding — and Trump was a central topic of conversation.”
Apparently during the conference call, Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin asked New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie why he was supporting Trump. Christie, who has a long history of slamming Trump, claimed that he know believes Donald is the best man for the job. This is nonsense, of course; he just wanted to share some of Trump’s limelight because like Trump, he is an opportunist and a liar.



The Unelectibility Winning Streak

John Kasich does well when he can sit next to you in a diner and ask about your grandkids, but this country is too big for that kind of campaigning.


To use a phrase that doesn’t come readily to my lips: “Well I’ll be danged.”

New Hampshire, that bastion of sensible conservatism and rectitude, gave us not one unelectable candidate, but two — Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders. Trumpmentum has only edged up since then while the Bern has started to flicker.

How anyone expects either one of these guys to be elected president is beyond me.

We’ve had some real eight-balls in the Oval Office, I’ll grant you. Warren Harding comes to mind, as does James Buchanan. I’d even throw George W. Bush in there.

But we’ve never had a foul-mouthed ignoramus who insults, women, Latinos, Muslims, war heroes, the disabled, and poor, downtrodden journalists.

That’s Trump. That’s presidential?

Well, I guess so. Veteran observers of the political scene, who are hardly ever wrong (ha), say that his smashing first-place finishes in New Hampshire, South Carolina, and Nevada have put him on a trajectory that will be tough to interrupt.