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Monday, February 24, 2020

Scared of coronavirus?

Get your flu shot
Source: Daily Kos
I’ve met two people whose relatives got struck by lightning. While I take proper safety precautions when I go camping, I’m not afraid of lightning.

A high school friend was killed when she was hit by a train. While I look both ways before crossing the tracks, I’m not afraid of trains.

The week before my first trip to Yellowstone, a grizzly bear ate a guy. So I carry bear spray and make noise in grizzly country. But I’m not afraid of grizzly bears.

don’t know anybody infected by the coronavirus, but I take the same general precautions I’ve taken my entire life to avoid getting sick. Mostly that’s just washing my hands. I also wouldn’t make out with someone who was coughing and sneezing. 

So, I’m not paranoid about the coronavirus either. Why should I be?


GOP wants to make 2020 the best election ever

Today's progressive comic.

Some words of wisdom from Trump's mom

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Cruising for chicks at Mystic

Penguin chick from endangered species born at Aquarium

There’s nothing like a fuzzy penguin chick to illicit the #FeelGoodFriday vibe.  Mystic Aquarium is proud to introduce the newest member of the Mystic Aquarium African penguin colony.

On Monday, February 3, Mystic Aquarium’s African penguin colony grew by one with the hatching of a penguin chick. 

Weighing in at 94 grams at hatching, the chick is developing nicely under the watchful eye of its parents Green/Pink and Blue/Red (and Mystic Aquarium’s animal care professionals, too!).

After almost three weeks, the chick now weighs in at 820 grams (or 1.8 lbs.).

The gender of the chick is unknown at present as there are no external characteristics to distinguish between males and females.  A DNA test will be conducted later to determine the chick’s gender.

Visitors to Mystic Aquarium may catch a glimpse of the new chick’s progress via live stream located in the underwater viewing area of the Roger Torey Petersen Penguin Pavilion.

The African penguin, one of the Aquarium’s most beloved animals, is also at the highest risk of extinction amongst Mystic Aquarium’s various animal collections.


Better access to groceries could reduce food waste, emissions

More grocery stores offer benefits
By James Dean |

shopping fruit GIF by CBCThe spoiled milk, moldy vegetables and expired meat we discard when cleaning out the fridge make a surprisingly large contribution to global warming.

One-third of all food produced is wasted, a problem responsible for carbon emissions equivalent to all road transportation, said Elena Belavina, associate professor at the School of Hotel Administration in the Cornell SC Johnson College of Business.

Her newly published research suggests one strategy for reducing food waste’s environmental impact: Open more grocery stores.

“The more stores you have, the lower food waste is going to be,” said Belavina, an expert in operations management and supply chains. “Very small increases in store density can have a very high impact.”


Surprise! Trump picks corruption-tainted hack as his new intelligence director

Trump’s New Spy Chief Used to Work for a Foreign Politician the U.S. Accused of Corruption
By Isaac Arnsdorf for ProPublica

Image result for Richard Grenell and moldova
Trump appoints another ethically-challenged loser with lies to former
USSR republic to highest intelligence post. 
President Donald Trump’s new acting intelligence director, Richard Grenell, used to do consulting work on behalf of an Eastern European oligarch who is now a fugitive and was recently barred from entering the U.S. under anti-corruption sanctions imposed last month by the State Department.

In 2016, Grenell wrote several articles defending the oligarch, a Moldovan politician named Vladimir Plahotniuc, but did not disclose that he was being paid, according to records and interviews.

Grenell also did not register under the Foreign Agents Registration Act, which generally requires people to disclose work in the U.S. on behalf of foreign politicians.

FARA is the same law that Trump’s former campaign manager Paul Manafort and former deputy campaign manager Rick Gates were convicted of violating. (Manafort went to trial. Gates pleaded guilty.)


Sunday, February 23, 2020

Trump carries on Nixon's legacy

Why Trump Justice is an Oxymoron
Image result for trump meets nixon
March 11, 1989 (Houston Chronicle)
“History doesn’t repeat itself, but it sometimes rhymes,” Mark Twain is reputed to have said. 

My first job after law school was as an attorney at the U.S. Department of Justice. I reported for work September 1974, just weeks after Richard Nixon resigned. 

In the years leading up to his resignation, Nixon turned the Justice Department and FBI into his personal fiefdom, enlisting his political appointees to reward his friends and penalize his enemies. 

Reports about how compromised the Justice Department had become generated enough public outrage to force the appointment of the first Watergate special prosecutor, Archibald Cox.

Before Nixon’s mayhem was over, his first two attorneys general were deep in legal trouble — John Mitchell eventually served 19 months in prison — and his third resigned rather than carry out Nixon’s demand to fire Cox. 

Watergate also ushered into politics a young man named Roger Stone, who, under the Committee for the Re-election of the President (known then and forevermore as CREEP), helped devise lies and conspiracy theories to harm Democrats.

After Nixon resigned, the entire slimy mess of Watergate spawned a series of reforms. During the years I worked at the Justice Department, regulations were put into place to insulate the FBI and DOJ from political interference. 

“Our law is not an instrument of partisan purpose,” said Edward Levi, Gerald Ford’s attorney general. 


Helpful who's who graphic

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Support Trump or die

Pic of the Moment

Money, markets and the politics of energy

By TIM FAULKNER/ecoRI News staff

solar energy mirror GIF by Sandia National LabsISO New England, the operator of the six-state power grid, sees the drop in capacity supply obligation price as a win for ratepayers.

The latest auction price for the ISO New England electricity contracts dropped to a historic low, signaling an uncertain future for power plants that run on fossil fuels.

The cost of $2 per kilowatt-month marks the steady decline of wholesale electricity since it reached a peak of $17.73 per unit in 2015. The price has been in free fall ever since, dropping to $4.63 in 2018 and $3.80 per unit last year.

Rhode Islanders learned about forward capacity auctions during the contentious permitting hearings for the Clear River Energy Center (CREC) proposed for the woods of Burrillville. In 2016, the developer, Invenergy Thermal Development LLC, was awarded an electricity purchase agreement from ISO New England for $7.03.

The capacity supply obligation, or CSO, became a point of debate as Invenergy argued that earning the contract from ISO New England proved the power plant was vital to the region’s energy needs and therefore the project deserved a license to operate.


Saving whales complicated by their own habits

By TODD McLEISH/ecoRI News contributor

awesome netflix GIF by Our PlanetRecent advances in technology have allowed scientists to learn so much more about wildlife during times when the animals are inaccessible to human observation. 

Songbirds are now capable of wearing tiny backpacks equipped with sensors and satellite technology that are revealing insights into their migratory behavior. 

Butterflies and dragonflies are being tagged to track their movements.

In the marine environment, scientists are using suction cups to temporarily attach whales with a variety of devices that capture video and audio and the depth and location of their underwater activities. That information is being used to better understand how and why whales are at risk of being struck by large ships or becoming entangled in fishing gear.


Yes, Puerto Ricans are American citizens

Let's afford them with the rights and respect they deserve
Charles R. Venator-Santiago, University of Connecticut


U.S. warships under command of Rear Admiral Sampson
bombarding San Juan, Puerto Rico, May 12, 1898. Library of Congress
More than a century after the United States acquired Puerto Rico, a 2017 Morning Consult poll conducted after the devastation of hurricane Maria revealed that only 54% of Americans knew Puerto Ricans were citizens.

Today, being born in Puerto Rico is tantamount to being born in the United States. But it wasn’t always that way, and a lot of ambiguity still remains.

Contrary to what many people believe, the Jones Act of 1917, which Congress more than passed 100 years ago, was neither the first nor last citizenship statute for Puerto Ricans. 

Since 1898, Congress has debated more than 100 bills containing citizenship provisions for Puerto Rico and enacted 11 overlapping citizenship laws. Over time, these bills have conferred three different types of citizenship to people born in Puerto Rico.


Saturday, February 22, 2020

Trump supporters have little trust in societal institutions

...So instead they trust a compulsive liar and Fox News
Miriam Boon, University of Amsterdam; Andreu Casas Salleras, University of Amsterdam; Ericka Menchen-Trevino, American University School of Communication, and Magdalena Wojcieszak, University of California, Davis


Image result for in trump we trustPresident Donald Trump has a history of disregarding advice from experts, including diplomats, military leaders, trade experts and scientists.

Trump is not alone in his distrust. Our unpublished research shows that people who support Trump have lower trust in societal institutions, when compared with supporters of leading Democratic candidates Elizabeth Warren, Bernie Sanders and Joe Biden.

Trust ratings
We asked 930 U.S. residents via an online survey how much they trust six institutions that are key to a working democracy.

We chose three institutions that Americans perceive as liberal – journalists, professors and scientists – and three that conservatives either traditionally support or currently control – the police, the Supreme Court and the federal government. Each institution fulfills an essential role within a democratic society, but depends on the others to function properly.

We also asked participants to report how warm or cold they felt toward Trump, Warren, Sanders and Biden on a scale from 0 to 100.

Even when we controlled for age, education, gender, ethnicity and ideology, Trump supporters had the lowest trust in the six institutions, at 3.75 out of 7 – at least 11.4% lower than anyone else we surveyed.

That means that the patterns we are seeing aren’t caused by fitting a particular demographic profile or having conservative beliefs. In fact, conservatives who do not support Trump had the highest trust in these institutions.

This suggests that there’s something about supporting Trump that shapes how much trust Americans have in the country’s core social and political institutions.



Thinly veiled metaphor

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Get tickets now for April event for animal shelter


Diamond in the Ruff 2020

At The Towers, 35 Ocean Road, Narragansett, RI 02882

Friday, April 24th, 2020
6:00 pm to 9:00 pm

Please join us for cocktails and local cuisine as we present our Golden Paw awards!  Be part of our raffle, auctions and more!
Tickets: $70 per person
All proceeds from this event will go to supporting our animals as we search for their forever homes.
(Click HERE to buy tickets)
Event volunteers, please click HERE to be taken to the Diamond in the Ruff 2020 Volunteer page.