
Politics This Week: With None to Slay the Lazy Dragon
John DePetro and Justin Katz discuss the unjustified apathy in the Ocean State.
Politics This Week: Messaging in a Trustless World
John DePetro and Justin Katz review the latest in Rhode Island politics.
Politics This Week: What They Find Interesting (And Not)
John DePetro and Justin Katz discuss the stories we don’t hear and should.
Politics This Week: The Wall of Insider Silence
John DePetro and Justin Katz highlight topics RI’s insiders try to keep behind the scenes.
Politics This Week: Messaging in a Trustless World
John DePetro and Justin Katz review the latest in Rhode Island politics.
Politics This Week: What They Find Interesting (And Not)
John DePetro and Justin Katz discuss the stories we don’t hear and should.
Politics This Week: The Wall of Insider Silence
John DePetro and Justin Katz highlight topics RI’s insiders try to keep behind the scenes.
Politics This Week: The Madness We’re Not Allowed to Handle
John DePetro and Justin Katz discuss the many charades insiders want RI to perpetuate
Politics This Week: The Business of Corruption
John DePetro and Justin Katz trace the evidence that corruption has become the business of government.

Rhode Island General Treasurer Seth Magaziner just sent out a statement through his official spokesman and including the seal of his office: “Statement from Treasurer Magaziner Calling for Vaccine Requirement for Teachers and School Staff.”
“With children across Rhode Island returning to school this week, we must take immediate action to protect them from COVID-19,” said General Treasurer Seth Magaziner. “Rhode Island should join other states such as California, Illinois, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, and Washington in instituting a vaccination requirement for all teachers and school support staff.
This is inappropriate abuse of his office for political campaigning. Magaziner doesn’t even attempt to fabricate some argument that would connect this with the duties of his role as general treasurer.
As we used to say, “no duh.”
Gov. Dan McKee’s mandate that all health-care workers be fully vaccinated by Oct. 1 has operators of Rhode Island nursing homes – already enduring staff shortages – worried the requirement may mean hundreds of workers leaving their positions.
Fully 75% of the staff are vaccinated (compared with 60% for the state overall), but that’s not good enough for bureaucrats. Note the response of the state to John Gage, head of the Rhode Island Health Care Association:
“They’ve listened to our concerns but there has been no commitment. Most of our questions have gone unanswered,” said Gage.
Government officials have given themselves a single overriding mandate: prove they’ve got the power to force people to comply in order to allay the fears of the fearful. So, there’s nothing they can say, because worker shortages are not their primary concern. (But you can bet it will be soon.)
Jon Miltimore contrasts the rhetoric with the reality when the UK opened up earlier this summer, writing for the Foundation for Economic Education:
CNN described it as a “huge gamble,” while Labour Party leader Keir Starmer criticized the move as “a reckless free-for-all.” Neil Ferguson, professor of mathematical biology at Imperial College London, said it was “almost inevitable” the decision would result in 100,000 daily cases and one thousand hospitalizations per day, despite the presence of vaccines.
“The real question is do we get to double that – or even higher,” Ferguson told the BBC. “And that’s where the crystal ball starts to fail. I mean, we could get to 2,000 hospitalisations a day, 200,000 cases a day – but it’s much less certain.”
What happened? The opposite. Yeah, maybe cases will go back up… maybe it was just coincidence. But when the experts assert that something will happen and it doesn’t, it means they don’t know what they’re talking about, even if only because of variables outside the reach of their expertise.
Contrast this news from the American Rifleman:
In June, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF) published a notice of proposed rulemaking that would make nearly all firearms configured with a pistol stabilizing brace subject to the National Firearms Act, requiring taxation and registration of millions of lawfully acquired firearms. The proposal represents a dramatic shift in ATF treatment of pistol-stabilizing braces.
With this tweet from the Taliban’s spokesman (as translated by Twitter):
In Kabul, all those who have the means, weapons, ammunition and other government goods are informed to hand over the mentioned objects to the relevant organs of the Islamic Emirate within a week.
Jack Phillips, of Epoch Times, translates the tweet as implying “government-issued” weapons, but I’m not so sure it isn’t asserting that all weapons are government property. Either way, confiscating weapons is a lot easier when there’s a list.