On WNRI 1380 AM/95.1 FM, John DePetro and Justin Katz discuss: McKee and the unions fail state workers What Xay misses about Trump Media silence about the radical trans, socialist, Islamic-radical-supporting General Assembly candidate Media silence about unconstitutional lying to parents Costly tolling system Featured image by Justin Katz using DALL-E and Photoshop AI.
Rhode Island’s truck-only toll program is set to resume some time in the first half of 2027, four years after the gantries went dark. Anchor Rising has undertaken an analysis of the program. Observers of state politics will recall that RhodeWorks truck tolls were implemented in June, 2018 as an infrastructure funding program; more specifically,…
John DePetro and Justin Katz follow the latest political news in Rhode Island
John DePetro and Justin Katz discuss storm prep and political craziness.
John DePetro and Justin Katz discuss the insanity gripping Rhode Island.
Mike Stenhouse testified in front of the Commission to Study the Successful Implementation of the Act on Climate as the “loyal opposition” on February 4. Important excerpt below. RI and New England are already suffering from an energy affordability crisis – and the Act On Climate is only going to make it worse. … We’ve…
John DePetro and Justin Katz discuss the growing insanity of the American Left.
John DePetro and Justin Katz discuss the obvious realities in Minnesota and Rhode Island.
Attacks in many forms on churches should prompt us to do what our co-religionists have sometimes failed to do.
Senator Sam Zurier was a guest on “In the Dugout” with Mike Stenhouse last week. The topic of their conversation was Rhode Island’s Act on Climate and, more specifically, the charge of the Special Legislative Commission to Study the Successful Implementation of the Act of Climate, of which Senator Zurier is Chairman. Mike Stenhouse noted…
John DePetro and Justin Katz dive into the madness the modern left is escalating in RI and the U.S.
A look at different forms of voting by age group and party suggests there are, indeed, issues worth watching.
John DePetro and Justin Katz review local and national reactions to the shooting in Minneapolis and other stories.
What the RIGOP needs in a chairperson may not be obvious… or possible.
In my social media stream earlier today I saw somebody comment that the greatest trick of the last century was convincing Western liberals that humanity had evolved into a new era. We’d figured out objective truth, and now all cultures on the planet accepted the same basic premises. Invasions were a fading relic in a few remaining regions that had evolved insufficiently. Certainly, nobody would invade the West! All we want to do is get along and trade with others, helping them to advance, themselves. During the Clinton Era, people seriously used the term, “The End of History.”
The comment reminded me of another post I read recently, by Michael McNair:
China looked at the lessons of 20th century great power conflict and drew the conclusion that military power alone doesn’t determine outcomes, upstream industrial capacity does.
The Allies won because of overwhelming industrial might. Japan and Germany lost because they lacked critical industrial inputs. Starved of oil, they were forced into gambles that cost them the war…Japan attacking Pearl Harbor to seize the oil in the Dutch East Indies, Germany marching to the Caucasus to take the Baku oil fields. Input scarcity doesn’t just weaken you. It steers your decisions. It pulls decisions away from the optimal plan and toward the necessary plan.
China learned this lesson and decided to be the one holding the chokepoints. By embedding itself so deeply into the upstream supply chains that feed American military production, a conflict would trigger Western industrial paralysis and neuter its ability to fight a long war.
McNair goes on to apply this insight to current events with the Trump administration. My narrow purpose in this space, however, is to point out that history has not ended. China, for instance, certainly studied the lessons of the last half millennium (the period of the Great Powers), which are freely available to anybody with a library card, Amazon account, or audiobook subscription. Very probably the leaders of radical Islamic regimes did, too.
Westerners need to return to school, themselves, and stop electing people who sell us out in service of their greed and ignorance.
I see a lot of dollar amounts mentioned in Nancy Lavin’s article on Rhode Island Current about the abrupt departure of the CEO of the inchoate “quasi-public” that’s supposed to do something to advance the life sciences industry in Rhode Island.
Mark Turco was only one year into a three-year contract paying him $400,000 per year. Federal taxpayers apparently provided $45 million in pandemic relief that expires at the end of the year. McKee wants Rhode Island taxpayers to accept another $115 million in debt to add to the funding.
What isn’t clear is what Rhode Islanders are getting for all this money. We certainly didn’t get economic relief during the pandemic from money that isn’t spent, yet. It sounds like we got some bylaws for the new “hub.” What else?
A November article in the Providence Journal suggests a good chunk of the money the hub has given out has gone to out-of-state and out-of-country businesses. An “impact report” on the organization’s website appears to take credit for all life science spending in the state, which arguably points to the lack of necessity for a hub.
As we’re seeing with another government “.com” — HealthSourceRI — Rhode Island government should stop dabbling in business and wasting our state’s money and attention. In that case, various news organizations have reported a steep drop in plans purchased through the healthcare exchange as if that means people have stopped receiving healthcare. I dropped a dental plan through HealthSource a year ago not because my family didn’t expect to continue receiving dental care, but because we could get it directly from an insurer for less money. Buying directly also allows us to avoid problems like we experienced a year before, when one of our claims was rejected because HealthSource had taken so long to transfer paperwork to the insurer.
In short, these “quasi-public” agencies are turning out to be unnecessary layers to justify government involvement, and they only get in the way. Enough, already.
Supporting this legislation (in the Rhode Island Senate and House) is simply wrong, and any legislators who do should be considered disqualified from public office:
A law enforcement agency, as defined by § 42-164-2, shall not employ any individual who was hired as a sworn officer of the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency on or after January 20, 2025.
Shameful, shameful. Entirely apart from one’s position on immigration enforcement, this policy is wrong on pure principle. Besides the fact that it offers no due process or individual consideration — indicating a belief in political factions in line with totalitarian dictators — it’s treasonous. On the other hand, the policy is perfectly in line with the reality that Democrats will destroy your life whenever they can, if they disagree with your politics.
Here are the named sponsors of the bills, some of them surprising (especially in the Senate). We should flush them out of our political system.
House:
- Karen Alzate, District 60, Pawtucket and Central Falls
- Jennifer Stewart, District 59, Pawtucket
- José Batista, District 12, Providence
- Teresa Tanzi, District 34, South Kingstown and Narragansett
- Kathleen Fogarty, District 35, South Kingstown
- Rebecca Kislak, District 4, Providence
- Edith Ajello, District 1, Providence
Senate:
- Meghan Kallman, District 15, Pawtucket and Providence
- Tiara Mack, District 6, Providence
- Jonathan Acosta, District 16, Central Falls and Pawtucket
- Ana Quezada, District 2, Providence
- Dawn Euer, District 13, Newport and Jamestown
- Walter Felag, District 10, Warren, Bristol, and Tiverton
- Louis DiPalma, District 12, Middletown, Little Compton, Newport, and Tiverton
- Victoria Gu, District 38, Charlestown, Westerly, and South Kingstown
- Pamela Lauria, District 32, Barrington, Bristol, and East Providence
- Alana DiMario, District 36, Narragansett, North Kingstown, and New Shoreham
It’s easy to be distracted by the fact that she is a he who in every picture wears an emblem of radical Islam that will obviously turn on and crush radical Leftism the moment their alliance seizes power:
Perhaps more important than the identity politics, however, are the economic ones. A statewide rent freeze would destroy housing availability. A $30 minimum wage would destroy employment. Applying a similar approach to heathcare would destroy the medical system.
This isn’t merely a difference of opinion. One cannot understand basic economics and review the record of related policies and think they will do otherwise than destroy. That means the DSA is made up of people who want to destroy our state and country and/or don’t care to understand the policies they would impose by force.
Anybody who’s been reading this site for any length of time will know why I got a good laugh from this result from a Harvard public opinion poll:
Maybe it wasn’t always so, but being involved in political issues is teacher unions’ reason for being. They’re radical activist groups that use member services as a means of raising money and gaining influence. Saying unions shouldn’t be involved in politics is like saying television news networks should stop generating content and focus on advertising.
We’re supposed to live in a representative democracy, right? Why, then, is legislation with such a clear majority of support proving so hard to pass when the federal government is fully dominated by the party whose members support the legislation at a 91% margin?
Even the opposition party is evenly split on the issue, which is why, one suspects, the news media isn’t taking its common “politicians aren’t listening to the people” stance. The politicians in Washington know that mainstream journalists will do what they can to keep people from knowing how many other Americans agree with them.
This is indicative of the process that brought us Donald Trump as President. Republicans kept voting for policy platforms that never materialized. It was like pushing a button over and over and getting no result, so we pushed harder (Tea Party) and harder (Trump).
One can predict the importance with which such polling results are treated by whether they make progressive Democrats or conservative Republicans feel dominant or isolated, because making progressive Democrats feel dominant and conservative Republicans feel isolated is one of the central objectives of media spin.
My perspective on January 6, 2021, is a bit different from the mainstream norm because of the freedom and nature of my job at the time.
Within days of the event, I watched hours of raw video, and the “complicated” reality Chip J. described in this article was absolutely evident. You don’t have to be a trained police officer to wonder why in the world police would shoot tear gas canisters deep into a crowd — over the heads of the people in the thickest part whom authorities presumably wanted to disperse. It didn’t take deep investigation to come across videos of police opening entrances and waving protesters into the building.
You could trace individuals as they moved through the building… like the guy who appeared from behind Capitol police and proceeded to instigate a riotous lunge forward when just moments before the protesters at the front of a crowd had negotiated a peaceful walk through an area of the capitol. Then the same person smashed the window through which Ashley Babbit climbed only to be shot.
Almost immediately, you could find other videos, too, if you looked. In one I remember, activists were changing surreptitiously out of their Trump gear in the bushes. The person filming that one could tell something strange was going on. (I haven’t explored this, but I’ve heard one of them was the same radical whom a terrorist threw a bomb over in NYC.)
Because of this early inoculation with reality, I never took the reporting quite seriously. I may have underestimated how well the Democrats’ reframing worked.
To be sure, readers of Chip J.’s article should keep in mind he’s a family friend and neighbor of one of the convicted-and-pardoned participants, Todd Henderson. Chip watched those same hours of videos to help his friend and also to convince himself that it really was true that the FBI and news media were distorting reality in order to persecute him and others.
He reached the same conclusion I did, and it’s one about which Americans have a civic obligation to be curious.
Nicole Solas highlights one out of Westerly:
At this point, kids, young adults, and maybe not-so-young adults think dark and cynical is just the way art is supposed to be. It can be otherwise. We once had a canon with a wide variety of content — from child-appropriate to mature, from beloved to relatively obscure — that students could perform without requiring age restrictions for the audience or amplifying psychological dysfunction.
We’ve been deconstructing our culture for so long multiple generations may not even know what it means to be constructive. That’s suicidal at the cultural level.
Specifically, Rhode Island has the 13th highest property taxes in the country, according to WalletHub:
Rhode Island residents have the 13th-highest property tax burden in the nation, according to WalletHub.
The personal finance website compared the 50 states and the District of Columbia by using U.S. Census Bureau data to determine which states had the highest and lowest property and car taxes. Rhode Island is among 25 states in the nation that doesn’t have a car tax, according to the study.
I should note that I’m a bit of a contrarian on this issue. I apply two principles to the question of taxation:
- The tax should be as closely aligned with the definition of the government collecting it.
- As much as possible, taxes should be collected locally and flow upwards, not the other way around.
Governments are not defined by industry or marketplace, but by geography, and local taxes tend to be mostly property taxes. This suggests that the best system would rely more on property taxes, not less.
The problem in Rhode Island is that every tax is high. New Hampshire, for instance, has the 4th highest property taxes, but the state’s other taxes are low or nonexistent. That’s a recipe Rhode Island should emulate.
I’ve found people get emotional, seeing property taxes as a statement that people are only really renting their homes, but I find the alternatives even worse. By the same reasoning, the income tax means we’re all ultimately slaves, and I’d rather be a renter than a slave.
Rules governing auxiliary dwelling units (ADUs) have been too strict in many RI communities for a long time. When I looked into the possibility of making a portion of my prior house an apartment for my father, for example, Tiverton would have required the floorplan design to incorporate a foyer so the house would still appear to have a single entrance. In a tiny ranch, a foyer would have been ridiculously wasteful of limited space.
That does not mean, however, that this outcome after the state forcibly loosened the rules is surprising:
Just 82 COs were issued statewide in all of 2025.
The report revealed that the number of COs for ADUs decreased in Providence in 2025 compared to 2024.
In 2024, Providence issued 10 COs for ADUs, but that number fell to just 5 in 2025.
Across the state, the total number of COs increased only marginally— from 73 in 2024 to 82 in 2025.
ADUs still have to make sense for the property owners. Nowadays, we’ve been pondering the possibility of an ADU for our children as they become adults. But a lack of sewers and regulations related to our septic system mean a big chunk of our property is a leach field. Meanwhile, any additional building will require modifications of the whole septic system. Financially, the project might present some savings versus simply helping the kids to find and buy houses, but our family’s resources might be find better returns spread across separate properties.
This is a small example why carefully tailored, top-down plans to affect things like housing affordability are unlikely to succeed. At some point, the on-paper plan has to interact with lived reality, and as most business managers know, lived reality is difficult to predict because it’s so individual. The best public policy can do is create an environment of freedom and opportunity and allow people to figure out what makes sense for them.
Of course, that might not often be what makes sense for politicians and insiders, wherein lies the dysfunction of Rhode Island’s approach to solving problems..
I’m tempted to post this every day. Even as our local news media continues to behave as if the biggest possible story is a decades’ old scandal in the Catholic Church, which even the hostile attorney general’s report says was resolved, at least as a matter of reporting, in 2016, they’re ignoring the fact that this unconstitutional policy of deception is still official policy in our state.
I’m beginning to wonder how much of the continuing support for Democrats relies on the fact that their supporters literally cannot believe their politicians stand for the things they stand for.
Yes, I know the rhyme in the title mispronounces his name, but I’m saving “say ‘goodbye’ to Xay” for later.
It’s a couple weeks old, but I watched his online announcement video again, and I’m still struck by how slimy it is:
ICYMI: I’m running for LG because I believe in the promise of R.I. but that promise is fading away because government has failed to adapt to change and people like Trump are pitting us against one another.
It’s time for a new generation of leadership with bold ideas. Join us. pic.twitter.com/4OBQycdRfV
— Xay Khamsyvoravong (@XayForRI) March 2, 2026
By “slimy,” I mean he raises things that are worthy of discussion and makes them slippery and staining. Most egregiously, he mentions his parents’ having fled communism and warns that we’re losing the America we love, but the only villain he names is… Donald Trump:
My father came here as a refugee, escaping war and communism, and through hard work, my family achieved the American Dream. But today that promise is slipping away. Government has failed to adapt to change, and now Donald Trump is pitting us against one another.
Maybe it’s just the way my ear is tuned, but the sentiment that “government failed to adapt to change” sounds communistic to me.
And what’s Donald Trump got to do with it? First of all, Xay is running for lieutenant governor of Rhode Island. More importantly, no politician in my lifetime has done more specifically to loosen the corrosion that locks in fiefdoms and prevents government from adapting than Donald Trump. Rhode Island’s unique challenge is that we’re likely to be the last bastion of the forces he’s fighting.
The text of his post makes matters worse. As if he realizes writing things down requires more nuance than speaking them, Xay adds “people like” Trump. Whom does he mean? Name names, Xay.
He doesn’t name names, though, because like a divisive communist, he wants to benefit from people’s eagerness to fill in their own gaps for the evil Other.
Tom Ianniti has this right, about Helena Foulkes’s “tax the rich to build housing” plan:
The point requires an important addendum, however. In an environment of complete one-party dominance, the incentives lock in such that the worse the government makes things for residents, the more insiders benefit. Politics ceases to be a competition forcing performance and, instead, becomes an exercise in finding excuses to take more money and power. That is the essence of what Tom calls a “downward spiral.”
The things that ought to be congratulated too often aren’t in mainstream public talk, so I want to take a moment to spotlight something that would have been made more of a couple weeks ago if Rhode Island valued education. Sandy Hall reports for NRI Now:
While many districts in Rhode Island cancelled classes through the end of the week following a storm that dumped more than two feet of snow on the region, Burrillville schools were up and running Thursday morning, with students finally returning from an extended winter break.
On Thursday morning, a listing of school closings published by RI Broadcasters showed 40 districts in Rhode Island that had either cancelled classes or moved to distance learning for the day. Many districts had also made the decision for Friday, Feb. 27, putting hundreds of Rhode Island students on track for a two week winter break.
Teacher unions prioritize their members. School districts prioritize their employees. Parents prioritize their convenience. None of this is good enough.
Education is so important, we ought to be hand-shoveling paths from our homes to our children’s schools if need be. This may seem unrelated, but I’ve been seeing academic papers on the adverse effects of AI use on creativity and personality, and they all miss the point.
It’s not that AI is a brain-damaging drug; it’s that using it correctly requires a particular approach, and that approach must be deliberate. The slogan I’ve been promoting on this topic is that, in every way, people must intentionally use AI to enhance themselves, not to replace themselves. Doing so takes education, intellectual self-confidence, and organized habits of thought.
Maybe this is somewhat exaggerated, but we could see use of AI as dividing a line between sliding back down the evolutionary curve or shooting straight up it. Prioritizing education will be a prerequisite to being in the latter group — not least because whether you prioritize education will, itself, influence how you use technology.
At this point, it’s just another log on the fire burning down media credibility that public opinion is only ever treated as if it matters when it reinforces mainstream journalists’ progressive Democrat positions. The meaning and use of poll data is still worth being aware of.
Naturally, when large majorities support something journalists oppose, like voter ID, the public opinion doesn’t matter and polls showing it are not cited. But then flip the weight of public opinion in Democrats’ direct and…
I don’t doubt that this is accurate, and in any event, I’d put this matter in the category of “sometimes you gotta do what you gotta do.” Nonetheless, it’s worth remembering what the words in Politico’s post actually mean.
Americans are not going about their daily lives contemplating the nuances of international relations and war. Rather, what the poll found, specifically, was that when you call people out of nowhere — and they consent to answering random questions from you — and then you ask them whether they support or oppose “military action in Iran,” half will say, “support,” less than a third will say, “oppose,” and 20% will say they don’t know.
Of course, another way to phrase “just half” is “a plurality” (maybe even “a majority”), but that’s merely another marker of Politico’s biased framing. War is horrible. I would hope at least a large portion of people called randomly and asked about an international situation about which they’re almost certainly poorly informed (and often deliberately misled) will oppose military action. But that’s not a comment on any particular military action so much as it’s an indictment of the media for its manipulation of the public.
John DePetro is reporting that a Scituate parent was brushed aside when she complained that a science teacher hostile to Christianity has been making “dirty looks” at her son and told him “God does not exist.” The administration allegedly responded that the teacher is “entitled to his beliefs.”
I used to be sympathetic to that position, and I’d still like to be, but the past decade has exposed just how one-sided our nation’s supposedly liberal principles are. The guiding rule is not “tolerance.” It’s simply hostility to the traditional values of the United States of America. It’s really not more complicated than that.
Yes, progressives will insist that questioning traditions and challenging others’ beliefs with free speech are traditional American values, and there I agree with them. Their trick is that they then exclude questioning and challenging anything but those that used to be held by the large majority of Americans.
We know as certainly as is possible for a hypothetical that administrative tolerance of this teacher would end if he ever targeted Muslim students or began espousing Christianity to his students. Tolerance is preferable to intolerance, but it can’t exclude tolerance for the beliefs that factually constitute the heritage of our country.
In recent years, dozens (maybe hundreds) of Christian churches have burned down in Canada. Right now, my social media feed is full of images of “feminists” attacking and burning down churches for “International Women’s Day.” These acts are not expressions of tolerance, they’re targeted destruction that will lead only to misery that should not have localized echoes in government-run schools.
The point is only made stronger when we notice that Scituate High School (for example) is only managing to make 36.5% of its students proficient in science and even fewer in math (falling in both cases). Success might be some protection for claims that the values of the school are drifting. Under the current circumstances, parents should wonder what the schools’ values actually are.
In typical fashion, Providence Journal reporter Katherine Gregg returns more than once to the question of how a proposal to reduce Rhode Island’s income tax would compensate for the “loss” in state revenue. Paragraph four from the article:
[Republican Senate Minority Leader Jessica de la Cruz (North Smithfield, Burrillville, Glocester)] has not yet responded to questions about which government services she would favor cutting, if necessary, to make up for an anticipated $231 million in foregone state revenue by the end of the five-year run.
This isn’t hard. The state budget is nearing about $15 billion. The cited $231 million for modest tax relief, is less than 2% of that amount. The governor’s proposed increase of the budget is 3.6%. In fairness, spending from the General Fund was “only” about $6 billion, and the governor is “only” proposing to increase it by 2.5%, but de la Cruz’s proposal is to phase in the income tax reduction over five years.
In other words, if the state just relaxed its increases slightly each year, the income tax could be reduced. Rhode Island could have a little more incentive for people to work here and to create jobs here.
The fact that it should be easy, however, shows that de la Cruz and the bill’s supporters in the Chamber of Commerce should have done the work to find something in the governor’s budget to offer as an examples. Reducing state revenue is always a long shot, so such proposals shouldn’t miss the opportunity to put a spotlight on out-of-control spending. Indeed, when the RI Center for Freedom & Prosperity proposed reducing the sales tax in 2014, our associated report was titled “Spotlight on Spending.”
That’s where the focus has to be so the question isn’t “how will you pay for that,” but “why do we need that money in the first place.”
Maybe it’s a small thing — a minor oversight because his mind was elsewhere — but something has nagged at me about the opening item of Ted Nesi’s weekly roundup on February 28:
If there’s one thing I think we can all agree on right now, it’s this: Rhode Island has had a brutal winter. More snow has fallen in Greater Providence than in Anchorage, Alaska, capped off by a storm that topped the Blizzard of ’78 for all-time accumulation. It’s been unusually cold, too, with average temperatures below 30 for the last two months. But the weather isn’t the only reason this winter has felt so brutal. Rhode Islanders have been shaken by not one but two horrific public shootings, first at Brown and then at Lynch Arena — very different in their particulars, but each one all-consuming in the moment and traumatic for a state consistently ranked among the safest in the country.
Nesi goes on to show that he’s thinking more in terms of political malaise, and on that score, I’m inclined to say I’m actually feeling somewhat upbeat and optimistic. But the thing that really jumped out at me in the above quotation is something that’s missing.
Between the two shootings Nesi mentions, on January 18, four children (literally children) beat a man to death with their feet and fists in Providence. How would that not make the cut for inclusion on the “violence” list for a local journalist describing how bleak the winter has been?
It’s a strange omission worthy of contemplation. Was that example so horrific Nesi doesn’t even want to think about it, or is the problem that it raises uncomfortable political topics rather than the easy crowd-pleaser of gun control?
Making the most emotionally appealing case you can for your preferred policy is just part of politics, but we in the public have to bear the responsibility of thinking the claims through. Here’s Democrat Speaker of the House Joseph Shekarchi making an argument for his latest package of housing-development legislation:
While Rhode Island is “relatively affordable” for people moving here from other states, “Our own residents are too often priced out of the neighborhoods they grew up in,” he said.
For my own context, I’m not reactive in either direction on this issue. I was a builder, and I’m also an advocate for letting people do what they want with their own property. Of course, there’s a line at which what you do with your property affects the value and enjoyability of mine, and I believe people should have right to self-governance at the local level so they can draw that line differently. In short, I view housing as a layered issue, and trite appeals to emotion tend to benefit corrupt interests when it comes to layered issues.
A basic reality we can expect is that young adults may very well be “priced out” of their childhood neighborhoods. They’re just starting out! It isn’t possible or desirable for every neighborhood to accommodate the entire human lifecycle.
Moreover, a neighborhood can change by different means. Just because a house is within the same geographic area as a childhood home doesn’t mean it’s the same “neighborhood.” Put up a dozen skyscraper apartments in a quiet suburban neighborhood, and all its adult children will be able to afford to live there, but it won’t be the neighborhood they grew up in any more than any other neighborhood with high-rise apartments.
In fact, by forcing neighborhoods to adjust to his nostalgia, Speaker Shekarchi is ensuring that nobody can live in the neighborhood that residents grew up in; it won’t exist anymore. Personally, I’m a fan of change when it adjusts to reality in a framework of individual rights, but I wouldn’t insist that everybody in the state conform to my preferences.
P.S. — I don’t want to miss the opportunity to chuckle, here, that I’m the “conservative” in the local contexts because I want to conserve your right to change your community!
Boston Globe columnist Dan McGowan picked a fight with Democrat Congressman Seth Magaziner because the congressman could have been a decisive vote passing legislation McGowan liked but skipped the opportunity:
As willing as I’d be to pile on Magaziner, I’ve paused on this one because I haven’t reviewed the referenced legislation (which had to do with preventing airline crashes), and there may, indeed, have been reasons not to support it. Of course, that doesn’t excuse Magaziner for failing to be present and taking a stand one way or another. Instead, he made videos of himself helping neighbors dig out of the blizzard in the district in which he lives, not the one he pretends to represent in Congress.
The interesting part, however, is McGowan’s success making Magaziner’s failure a story and thereby making it a problem for the Democrat. That’s interesting because it’s so rare.
Imagine if Rhode Island journalists habitually called out our elected officials and held them accountable for their actions, their decisions, and their rhetoric. They don’t do that because they’re generally in agreement with the Democrats who run the state, and it’s more important to the journalists to keep the party in power than to generate news about its effectiveness.
Rather, they should make us seethe with anger at what government officials did to our children in response to COVID. The first line of RI News Today‘s summary of RIPEC’s report on the state absenteeism program captured the general tone:
Attendance Matters RI appears to have helped drive a sharp improvement in student attendance, reducing chronic absenteeism from its post-pandemic peak and producing one of the largest declines nationwide.
Yes, chronic absenteeism has gone down, and yes, the drop was one of the steepest in the country, but Rhode Island still hasn’t returned to pre-pandemic levels and Rhode Island slipped well below the national average in 2021-22. This doesn’t look like successful government action to me. It looks like failure.
As proven by the urge to cheat students out of education because we had heavier snow than expected, Rhode Island does not prioritize education. Children pick up on such statements of value, and if we don’t care about cutting the school year, why should they care about showing up?
If that’s how Rhode Islanders feel about education, I guess it is what it is, but we should at least muster some scorn for politicians and government satellites that try to make their failure sound like success.
Our culture has systematically undermined the most-important quality of a prosperous society.
In the 1970s and ’80s, Stephen King led the way in making monsters out of the ordinary. The teen’s beloved car (Christine)… the family dog (Cujo)… the quiet Christian teen in school (Carrie)… the innocent little girl (Firestarter)… the peaceful New England town (multiple, but especially Salem’s Lot and It)… anything or anyone could be…
The reason for Rhode Island’s bad roads is hidden in plain sight.
The most shocking thing about Ted Nesi’s recent article about Rhode Island’s high-cost and worst-in-the-country roads is not the first-order findings: Target 12 reviewed 10 years of mandatory reports on…
There’s a selfishness to expats who leach off their home democracy.
People should go wherever on the planet makes sense for them. As a consultant, I’ve had several clients who can be described (borrowing a term from one of them) as…
Deferred property taxes would be another way government makes homeowners renters.
One might think it an unintended consequence, except it’s so consistently part of progressive policy: the proposals to help (that is, to mitigate the harm of progressive policies with more…
The energy-environment balance desperately needs reasonable people to pay attention.
Reading a commentary piece from Rhode Island Energy’s president, Greg Cornett, one question emerges: Rhode Island Energy has never said that renewable energy is the cause of high bills. Clean…
The reason for Rhode Island’s bad roads is hidden in plain sight.
The most shocking thing about Ted Nesi’s recent article about Rhode Island’s high-cost and worst-in-the-country roads is not the first-order findings: Target 12 reviewed 10 years of mandatory reports on road conditions that RIDOT submitted to the Federal Highway Administration. The data shows 32% of Rhode Island’s state roads were classified as in poor condition…
There’s a selfishness to expats who leach off their home democracy.
People should go wherever on the planet makes sense for them. As a consultant, I’ve had several clients who can be described (borrowing a term from one of them) as “digital nomads.” Their work is in the United States, but they can live anywhere. So, as parts of the world become cleaner, safer, and offering…
Deferred property taxes would be another way government makes homeowners renters.
One might think it an unintended consequence, except it’s so consistently part of progressive policy: the proposals to help (that is, to mitigate the harm of progressive policies with more progressive policies) implicitly take your property and rights away from you. Every time. I have in mind legislation from Democrat State Representative Megan Cotter (Exeter)…
The energy-environment balance desperately needs reasonable people to pay attention.
Reading a commentary piece from Rhode Island Energy’s president, Greg Cornett, one question emerges: Rhode Island Energy has never said that renewable energy is the cause of high bills. Clean energy is a critical and growing part of our region’s energy supply mix, and we are proud to support that transition. Much of the progress…
The RI Foundation definitely benefits from a soft-focus lens in media.
Even after a vitriolic Democrat partisan, David Cicilline (the son of a mob lawyer, let’s not forget), left his secure seat in Congress to become its chief executive, the Rhode Island Foundation has enjoyed gauzy treatment as a snow-pure charity in the local media. Here’s an example from Jack Perry, recently published by the Providence Journal:…
Fading literacy is coming at the worst time.
Jody Baldwin Stone flags a report about declines in student literacy: With such findings, it’s very important to keep in mind what results actually show. This is the percentage of the total across the country. Some areas may be doing fine, while others are in steeper decline. The same is true of groups of students. …
In my social media stream earlier today I saw somebody comment that the greatest trick of the last century was convincing Western liberals that humanity had evolved into a new era. We’d figured out objective truth, and now all cultures on the planet accepted the same basic premises. Invasions were a fading relic in a few remaining regions that had evolved insufficiently. Certainly, nobody would invade the West! All we want to do is get along and trade with others, helping them to advance, themselves. During the Clinton Era, people seriously used the term, “The End of History.”
The comment reminded me of another post I read recently, by Michael McNair:
China looked at the lessons of 20th century great power conflict and drew the conclusion that military power alone doesn’t determine outcomes, upstream industrial capacity does.
The Allies won because of overwhelming industrial might. Japan and Germany lost because they lacked critical industrial inputs. Starved of oil, they were forced into gambles that cost them the war…Japan attacking Pearl Harbor to seize the oil in the Dutch East Indies, Germany marching to the Caucasus to take the Baku oil fields. Input scarcity doesn’t just weaken you. It steers your decisions. It pulls decisions away from the optimal plan and toward the necessary plan.
China learned this lesson and decided to be the one holding the chokepoints. By embedding itself so deeply into the upstream supply chains that feed American military production, a conflict would trigger Western industrial paralysis and neuter its ability to fight a long war.
McNair goes on to apply this insight to current events with the Trump administration. My narrow purpose in this space, however, is to point out that history has not ended. China, for instance, certainly studied the lessons of the last half millennium (the period of the Great Powers), which are freely available to anybody with a library card, Amazon account, or audiobook subscription. Very probably the leaders of radical Islamic regimes did, too.
Westerners need to return to school, themselves, and stop electing people who sell us out in service of their greed and ignorance.
I see a lot of dollar amounts mentioned in Nancy Lavin’s article on Rhode Island Current about the abrupt departure of the CEO of the inchoate “quasi-public” that’s supposed to do something to advance the life sciences industry in Rhode Island.
Mark Turco was only one year into a three-year contract paying him $400,000 per year. Federal taxpayers apparently provided $45 million in pandemic relief that expires at the end of the year. McKee wants Rhode Island taxpayers to accept another $115 million in debt to add to the funding.
What isn’t clear is what Rhode Islanders are getting for all this money. We certainly didn’t get economic relief during the pandemic from money that isn’t spent, yet. It sounds like we got some bylaws for the new “hub.” What else?
A November article in the Providence Journal suggests a good chunk of the money the hub has given out has gone to out-of-state and out-of-country businesses. An “impact report” on the organization’s website appears to take credit for all life science spending in the state, which arguably points to the lack of necessity for a hub.
As we’re seeing with another government “.com” — HealthSourceRI — Rhode Island government should stop dabbling in business and wasting our state’s money and attention. In that case, various news organizations have reported a steep drop in plans purchased through the healthcare exchange as if that means people have stopped receiving healthcare. I dropped a dental plan through HealthSource a year ago not because my family didn’t expect to continue receiving dental care, but because we could get it directly from an insurer for less money. Buying directly also allows us to avoid problems like we experienced a year before, when one of our claims was rejected because HealthSource had taken so long to transfer paperwork to the insurer.
In short, these “quasi-public” agencies are turning out to be unnecessary layers to justify government involvement, and they only get in the way. Enough, already.
Supporting this legislation (in the Rhode Island Senate and House) is simply wrong, and any legislators who do should be considered disqualified from public office:
A law enforcement agency, as defined by § 42-164-2, shall not employ any individual who was hired as a sworn officer of the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency on or after January 20, 2025.
Shameful, shameful. Entirely apart from one’s position on immigration enforcement, this policy is wrong on pure principle. Besides the fact that it offers no due process or individual consideration — indicating a belief in political factions in line with totalitarian dictators — it’s treasonous. On the other hand, the policy is perfectly in line with the reality that Democrats will destroy your life whenever they can, if they disagree with your politics.
Here are the named sponsors of the bills, some of them surprising (especially in the Senate). We should flush them out of our political system.
House:
- Karen Alzate, District 60, Pawtucket and Central Falls
- Jennifer Stewart, District 59, Pawtucket
- José Batista, District 12, Providence
- Teresa Tanzi, District 34, South Kingstown and Narragansett
- Kathleen Fogarty, District 35, South Kingstown
- Rebecca Kislak, District 4, Providence
- Edith Ajello, District 1, Providence
Senate:
- Meghan Kallman, District 15, Pawtucket and Providence
- Tiara Mack, District 6, Providence
- Jonathan Acosta, District 16, Central Falls and Pawtucket
- Ana Quezada, District 2, Providence
- Dawn Euer, District 13, Newport and Jamestown
- Walter Felag, District 10, Warren, Bristol, and Tiverton
- Louis DiPalma, District 12, Middletown, Little Compton, Newport, and Tiverton
- Victoria Gu, District 38, Charlestown, Westerly, and South Kingstown
- Pamela Lauria, District 32, Barrington, Bristol, and East Providence
- Alana DiMario, District 36, Narragansett, North Kingstown, and New Shoreham
It’s easy to be distracted by the fact that she is a he who in every picture wears an emblem of radical Islam that will obviously turn on and crush radical Leftism the moment their alliance seizes power:
Perhaps more important than the identity politics, however, are the economic ones. A statewide rent freeze would destroy housing availability. A $30 minimum wage would destroy employment. Applying a similar approach to heathcare would destroy the medical system.
This isn’t merely a difference of opinion. One cannot understand basic economics and review the record of related policies and think they will do otherwise than destroy. That means the DSA is made up of people who want to destroy our state and country and/or don’t care to understand the policies they would impose by force.
Anybody who’s been reading this site for any length of time will know why I got a good laugh from this result from a Harvard public opinion poll:
Maybe it wasn’t always so, but being involved in political issues is teacher unions’ reason for being. They’re radical activist groups that use member services as a means of raising money and gaining influence. Saying unions shouldn’t be involved in politics is like saying television news networks should stop generating content and focus on advertising.
































