Vox clamantis in deserto
Llewellyn King: The disastrous outcomes when politicians ignore cause and effect
Ishikawa diagram on cause and effect
—FabianLange graphic
WEST WARWICK, R.I.
Anyone who has spent time in criminal court knows this: One of the characteristics of lawbreakers is a poorly developed sense of cause and effect.
At the low end, the folly of the defendants is always on display. The young man who takes a gun with him on a night’s drinking. He has increased his chances that he might use it, and spend the rest what might have been his most useful years in prison.
The shoplifter who keeps at it despite past convictions and faces undetermined years behind bars. The burglar who robs a house and while there calls home on a cell phone, which will ping off the nearest cell tower, negating any alibi. The murderer who posts on social media.
This poorly developed sense of cause and effect isn’t confined to the lawless. It is rife in the political class, in both cohorts of the class, but primarily these days in the ruling Republican cohort.
We, as a nation, appear to have forgotten that actions have consequences. Those consequences ricochet down through the decades, even the centuries.
Bomb people and you will get a massive refugee problem.
Deny medical funding and you will get overburdened emergency rooms.
Underfund science and the talent will pop up somewhere else, such as the universities of Europe and Asia.
Cut off immigration and you will have deflation from population decline.
Create stateless people — they are still people, still there — and they will become a burden.
Don’t raise taxes to cover the $39 trillion national debt and the interest payments on the debt will be so enormous that there will be little left for the business of governance.
Action has consequences just as inaction has consequences. Winston Churchill said: ‘’A decision not taken is nonetheless a decision.”
Here are just some areas where the effect may linger long after the cause has lost its currency — long after the action, which seemed to be “a good idea” at the time, was taken:
Cause: Traduced allies, vitiated treaties and long-term friends abandoned with abusive disdain while rewarding the deplorable with praise, recognition and encouragement.
Effect: The slights and the negations won’t be forgotten, but the reason for them will have faded with the perpetrators. America diminished as a global power, taking a seat beside Brazil or Argentina, damned by a history of causing damaging effects for passing motives.
Cause: Profligate use of the presidential pardon.
Effect: A further temptation to abuse power and advance corrupt patronage. Friends go free.
Cause: The abandonment of the sacred right to see a judge, to identify the accuser, to be tried by a jury of your peers.
Effect: A lawless state of injustice and cruelty, the state out of control, thugs loosed on the people.
Cause: Undermine the elections by claiming falsely that they were rigged.
Effect: A fundamental weakening of democracy and the supremacy of the ballot. All elections are doubted and more easily overturned. The system is undermined.
Cause: Sustaining a lie in the belief that if you claim it long enough, it will sow doubt.
Effect: Truth becomes what those who have power say it is, whether it is about an election, immigrants, the cost of wind turbines or climate change. Truth becomes a commodity in short supply in the political marketplace.
All governments make mistakes and most go too far in the service of political ideas, which have legitimacy for a time and then fade. This time it is different.
The list of political actions that will have detrimental effects in the future and substantially threaten our world leadership is long.
Since the end of World War II, we have led the world in everything from creativity to moral example, from generosity in foreign aid to genius in medical science, from legal thought to environmental protection.
Now political exigency is undermining that. Petty, small triumphs in what are often just the culture wars have effects that diminish us worldwide, and harbinger a more troubled future for us and the world.
Any day, in the heat of a political moment, another cause may leave an effect that will damage the decision-making mechanisms of the U.S. Senate. If the filibuster goes, both parties would rue the effects of that, long and often.
If it goes, the cause will be forgotten but the effect will endure.
Llewellyn King is executive producer and host of White House Chronicle, on PBS, and an international energy-sector consultant. His email is llewellynking1@gmail.com , and he’s based in Rhode Island.
‘Secrets of nature’
Photo by Edward Batcheller, at The Parsonage Gallery, in Searsport, Maine
He says:
“My mission is to explore the hidden secrets of nature with photography.
“I focus primarily on landscape and the environment of the natural and made world, how they intersect, relate, question and inform.
“I utilize the turn of the century process of coating glass plates with emulsion, and develop the images in the traditional manner. The resultant glass plate transparencies are then organized and arranged with various structural devices that allow for transparency, layering, juxtaposition, and the play of light and shadow within the work.’’
Circa 1908) a six-masted schooner at Mack Point, the coal and freight terminal for the Northern Maine Seaport Railroad (a line opened in 1905 by the Bangor & Aroostook Railroad) at Searsport, Maine. In 1900 to 1909, 10 six-masted schooners, which delivered coal to run northern Maine locomotives, were built.
Alma Beauvais: Wounded in one shooting, and close to Brown shooting, she talks about the permanent trauma
Mia Tretta, seen here on the Brown campus, in Providence, found a calling as a gun-violence-prevention advocate committed to inspiring others to action.
—Photo by Amanda McGregor/Brown University
Via Kaiser Family Foundation Health News
This article was reported by Alma Beauvais of The Trace, a nonprofit newsroom covering gun violence in America.
In 2019, Mia Tretta, then a high school freshman at Saugus High School in Santa Clarita, Calif., was struck in the stomach by a round from a .45-caliber semiautomatic handgun fired by a schoolmate. Two students were killed during the attack, including her best friend, and two others were injured.
When she graduated from high school, she enrolled at Brown University, the scene of another shooting, in December 2025, while she was studying for finals in her dorm room.
As messages flooded in about an active shooter on campus, she felt pain where she had been shot in the stomach. The college junior experienced a phenomenon she called “phantom bullet syndrome,” similar to phantom limb syndrome, in which someone senses something is there that is not. It occurs whenever she feels extremely stressed, she said.
“It’s crazy to say that the first time, I was the lucky one because though I got shot, I didn’t get killed,” said Tretta, now an anti-gun violence advocate who is studying public affairs and education. “And the second time, I was the lucky one because I was a few blocks away.”
Tretta represents a small but growing cohort of young people who have lived through more than one shooting. She also embodies the findings of a recent study that links gun violence exposure to chronic pain.
The study, published in BMC Public Health in January, found that both direct and indirect exposure to gun violence are linked to higher rates of chronic pain among American adults.
Rutgers University researchers studied six types of gun-violence exposure: being shot, being threatened with a gun, hearing gunshots, witnessing a shooting, knowing a friend or family member who was shot, and knowing someone who died by firearm suicide. Using a nationally representative survey of 8,009 people, they found that 23.9% had pain most days or every day, while 18.8% said they had a lot of pain.
Daniel Semenza, the study’s lead author, told The Trace that whether someone has lost a person to gun violence or they’ve been shot themselves, their mental and physical health are inextricably linked.
“Your body, through the experience of post-traumatic stress, is going to feel as if it’s happening over and over and over again,” said Semenza, the director of research at the New Jersey Gun Violence Research Center and an associate professor at Rutgers University.
Tretta underwent surgeries to remove the bullet, she said, and later received a nerve block to address ongoing pain from her injuries. But the bullet fragments remain in her body years later, she said.
She was also diagnosed with psoriatic arthritis — a chronic disease causing swelling, pain, and stiffness in the joints.
“I have dealt with chronic pain, immunodeficiencies, and bodily differences ever since the shooting happened,” Tretta said. “Every time I get a fever, it’s a completely different thing than anyone else I know, or even pre-shooting for me. I shake uncontrollably, and it hurts to even touch my arm.”
The Rutgers study is one of the first to focus on outcomes like chronic pain as part of an emerging body of work on the physical health toll of gun-violence exposure.
“It highlights the fact that, for the thousands of people who are killed every year, there are lots of people who knew those folks,” Semenza said. “The toll of gun violence is much broader than we originally anticipated.”
Efrat Eichenbaum, an inpatient psychologist who has treated gun-violence survivors and their families at a Level 1 trauma center in north Minneapolis, said the study accurately reflects what she has seen in her clinical work.
“You can plainly see the trauma that follows an event like that,” she said. “Not just for the survivors, but for their families. It does not even limit itself to family members. This is an issue that touches entire communities.”
David Patterson, an emeritus professor at the University of Washington whose work focuses on pain, says the study shows, in particular, just how far the impact of gun violence fans out and how costly a problem it is for society.
“Chronic pain is a major health problem in itself, and it costs our society billions of dollars because it’s very hard to manage,” he said. “You can’t cure it; it has to be managed.”
Back in her dorm room at Brown, Tretta explained that medical care does not end when someone leaves the hospital after a trauma like hers. It goes on for years.
“Your body will never be the same as it was before,” she said. “There’s no time that you can’t feel the 7 or 8 inches of scar tissue running through the middle of your stomach. It’s just a constant physical reminder, because you can’t leave your body.”
Alma Beauvais, The Traceabeauvais@thetrace.org
Construction site America
“Columbus Blocked,’’ by Aaron T Stephan, in the group show: “Under Construction: America at 250,’’ at the Art Complex Museum, Duxbury, Mass., June 14, 2026-Aug. 29, 2
The museum explains:
“As America marks 250 years of its ongoing experiment in democracy, “Under Construction: America at 250” invites reflection on where we’ve come from, where we are now, and where we’re headed.
Selected through a nationwide call for art, 15 powerful and diverse works created by individual artists and collaborative teams will be installed across the museum’s beautifully landscaped grounds. Each piece offers an opportunity to pause and consider, in this Semiquincentennial year: What does America mean to me?
William Morgan: The beauty of a breakfast biscuit
—Photo by William Morgan
Irregardless has been open for more than two years, but my wife, Carolyn, and I just discovered this wee restaurant at 94 Carpenter St,, beyond Route 95 and just off Broadway, in Providence’s Armory District.
Starting to line up one morning.
Looking out from the restaurant at spring in the Armory District.
Note art on the wall.
Every year we return to Carolyn’s home state of North Carolina in search of such non-Yankee culinary delights as Krispy Kreme donuts, real barbecue, and ham biscuits. At least for the last item, a tad of homesickness is now alleviated by this place in Providence’s Armory District.
Make something the best it can be and don’t worry that you have to be bigger or flashier. Irregardless demonstrates that small is not only beautiful, but that such modest effort can reinvigorate a neighborhood better than the addition of yet another bland food franchise.
William Morgan is an architecture writer based in Providence. His articles have appeared in such newspapers as the New York Times, The Boston Globe, The Christian Science Monitor, and Finland’s leading daily, Helsingin Sanomat. His books include The Cape Cod Cottage and Academia: Collegiate Gothic Architecture in the United States.
Mass General Brigham leading research into using AI to detect early signs of Alzheimer’s
A normal brain compared to the brain of a person with Alzheimer’s
Lightly edited from a report by The New England Council
BOSTON
“Mass General Brigham is leading research into using artificial intelligence to identify early warning signs of Alzheimer’s disease, a development that could significantly improve outcomes for the estimated 7 million Americans living with the condition. Dr. Lidia Moura, director of population health in MGB’s neurology department, co-authored a study examining how AI can scan electronic medical records from routine patient visits across specialties, from primary care to ophthalmology, for subtle indicators of cognitive decline that clinicians might otherwise miss.
“The study, recently published in the journal npj Digital Medicine, analyzed 3,300 clinical notes from 200 anonymized patients. The AI tool accurately detected early signs of possible cognitive problems 88 percent of the time. The system works by deploying a team of AI ‘agents’ that check and refine their analysis of clinical notes — flagging signals as routine as a missed appointment, a family member’s comment about forgetfulness, or difficulty managing prescriptions. MGB is currently seeking philanthropic funding to launch a pilot program within three to four months.
“The research is accompanied by a parallel study from Worcester Polytechnic Institute, in which scientists used machine learning to analyze MRI brain scans for early structural changes associated with Alzheimer’s, achieving nearly 93 percent predictive accuracy. Together, the two efforts reflect a broader push to close a significant diagnostic gap: Currently, 90 percent of people in Alzheimer’s earliest phase, mild cognitive impairment, go undiagnosed in the United States.’’
A ‘stormy petrel’
A Rockwell Kent illustration in Moby Dick, or the Whale, by Herman Melville, in the show “Rockwell Kent: A Force of Nature,’’ at the Cahoon Museum of American Art, Cotuit, Mass., June 17-Dec. 20.
The museum says:
“Rockwell Kent (1882-1971) is remembered today as an artist, illustrator, explorer, writer, and political activist. Though he was born in the village of Tarrytown, New York, Kent traveled throughout Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine, Alaska, Newfoundland, Tierra del Fuego, Greenland, and Cape Cod. His book N by E tells the tales of several such dramatic adventures in his own words, through his own artwork.
“Both Kent’s art and written works express his philosophical considerations of the natural world and humanity’s role in it. Inspired by transcendentalist and mystic philosophies, his pieces often feature one or two central figures isolated amongst the raw power of nature: rolling waves, rugged mountains, or an almost invisible horizon. In addition to his vast travels, his work maintained significant connections to Massachusetts through several projects, including his celebrated illustrated volume of Moby Dick or The Whale by Herman Melville. This masterpiece of illustration is exemplary of the infinite, elemental aspects of life that Kent himself boldly pursued throughout his career as the ‘stormy petrel of American art.’’’
Don’t tread on us
The Vermont State House, in Montpelier
— Photo by Farragutful
“Vermont will continue to uphold the laws of our state and nation, but we will not be forced to take any action that we believe violates Constitutional rights, or infringes upon the rights of Vermont as a sovereign state.’’
—Gov. Phil Scott
— Photo by Farragutful
When it warms up
“Take Me Sailing in Maine and Tell Me You Love Me” (mixed media on canvas), by Rick Hamilton, at Portland Art Gallery.
Chris Powell: Forget the ‘‘nips,’’ it’s the balloon-litter crisis
Balloon litter
— Photo by Robbie Morrison (RobbieIanMorrison)
High-end “nip’’ bottle
Photo by Andy Mabbett
MANCHESTER, Conn.
State legislators think that they have found a new way to protect Connecticut's environment. They are about to criminalize releasing party balloons into the air, subject to a $20 fine. The pending legislation would replace the current law that imposes a $500 fine on anyone who releases 10 or more balloons within 24 hours, as if anyone is really counting.
Of course the legislation will turn out to be an idle gesture. Who is going to call the police about balloon releases and litter? Which departments will hurry to dispatch officers to investigate such complaints? Which prosecutors will put aside plea-bargaining felonies to handle party-balloon cases?
The bill takes the wrong approach to the problem even as a better approach is practically staring legislators in the face: the approach they have taken to the extensive litter caused by the sale of tiny liquor bottles, "nip" bottles.
Rather than impose a return deposit on the bottles, which liquor stores don't want to take responsibility for and which are not recyclable, Connecticut has imposed a 5-cent-per-bottle wholesale tax on "nips" with the revenue distributed to municipalities in accordance with the number of "nips" sold in each. Municipalities can use the money for environmental purposes of their choosing, and most spend it on anything except collecting the "nip" litter that continues to deface roadsides and parks.
So why not a wholesale tax on party balloons too? It might not raise much but it would raise far more than any fines collected from balloon-release scofflaws.
If legislators really cared about the environment more than they care about feeding the insatiable pension and benefit society that is state government, they wouldn't bother with party-balloon legislation. They would impose on "nip" bottles a deposit fee large enough to incentivize people to return their bottles or to collect them from roadsides and parks -- say, a dollar a bottle -- and require liquor stores to refund the deposits and dispose properly of the litter they have generated.
Or else legislators should just outlaw sale of "nip" bottles. A hefty deposit fee would probably have the same effect, since liquor stores would stop selling them if state government stopped letting liquor stores profit from covering the state in trash.
But the legislature won't even impose a special fine on anyone caught improperly discarding a "nip" bottle, a fine like the one about to be imposed -- in theory -- on party balloon scofflaws.
Why the disparate treatment of these two littering industries?
It's because while the litter caused by party balloons is nothing compared to the litter caused by "nip" bottles, balloon sellers are few, while "nip" bottle sellers have outlets -- sometimes dozens -- in every legislator's district, fiercely defend their privileges, and finance a trade association that has controlled liquor legislation for decades, trampling the public interest by inducing the legislature to forbid price competition in liquor.
The liquor industry in Connecticut is a fat target for reducing both consumer prices and litter. But no legislator dares to pop that industry's balloons.
CLEAN SLATE, DIRTY RESULT: A near-disaster has just inaugurated Connecticut's ill-conceived "clean slate" law.
The law conceals court records of misdemeanor and lesser felony convictions on the premise that such records prevent people from getting jobs and housing. Of course criminal records don't help, but people have far more trouble getting jobs and housing because they lack work skills. In any case the "clean slate" law denies employers and landlords their right to know about the people they may assume responsibility for.
The near-disaster was the plan of the Republican Party in an eastern Connecticut district to nominate for state representative Michael Carroll, who nine years ago was convicted of vandalism for spray-painting Nazi swastikas on buildings and traffic signs. While his conviction was recently removed from court records, some people remembered and called attention to it, so he ended his candidacy.
State law now says people shouldn't be able to know such things about candidates for public office.
Chris Powell has written about Connecticut government and politics for many years (CPowell@cox.net)
They’ll drink it up
These pools that, though in forests, still reflect
The total sky almost without defect,
And like the flowers beside them, chill and shiver,
Will like the flowers beside them soon be gone,
And yet not out by any brook or river,
But up by roots to bring dark foliage on.
The trees that have it in their pent-up buds
To darken nature and be summer woods -
Let them think twice before they use their powers
To blot out and drink up and sweep away
These flowery waters and these watery flowers
From snow that melted only yesterday.
“Spring Pools,’’ by Robert Frost (1874-1963)
National Guard to help police Boston in this very busy summer
This article is slightly edited from a Boston Guardian article by Jules Roscoe
(Robert Whitcomb, New England Diary’s editor, is chairman of The Boston Guardian.)
The city has a busy summer planned this year. Between the FIFA World Cup, the Tall Ships celebration, and the country’s 250th anniversary, Boston’s public-safety teams have their work cut out for them. To help ensure staffing coverage, the Boston Police will be relying on mandatory overtime and such external partners as the state’s National Guard.
In a city council hearing on March 26, the police assured councilors that there would be no change in regular police coverage to accommodate the swath of summer events.
“Communities will not be impacted regarding any staffing reductions or any response during these activities,” Deputy Supt. Sean Martin, of the department’s Bureau of Field Services, said at the hearing. “We will have a significant amount of resources, internal and external with our partners and outside assets. However, that will not impact the community’s response on a nightly basis.”
Those resources include local police officers from other regions and state National Guard members that are teamed up with both the police and fire departments. Martin said the major events would be staffed on an individual basis.
But the city also has big plans for its police generally this summer. Mayor Michelle Wu’s Warm Weather plan, released early this month and designed to combat open-air drug use concentrated in places like the South End and Roxbury, involves substantial police support of the healthcare-focused Critical Response Team. Despite the many big events this summer, the police’s focus is going to stay on those neighborhood initiatives and regular patrol.
“Obviously, their priority is always in the neighborhood, so they’re going to have to maintain the proper strength in the neighborhood,” said Bill Evans, who served as the city’s police commissioner from 2014 to 2018. “That’s your bread and butter. Anytime we have a special event, you don’t want it to cost the coverage of patrolling neighborhoods around the city. It’s going to cost the city overtime. It’s a busy vacation season for the policemen, too. Officers in the city do a super job, but they’re going to have their hands full trying to squeeze in a vacation as well as police all these events.”
To cover that additional staffing, Martin confirmed that officers would be required to work overtime, even with outside resources.
And, in a tight budget year with the city council budget still unfinalized, it’s not clear how much that staffing will cost. There is no money set aside specifically in the city budget to cover public safety for major events this year; the budget in fact states that, “New classes and management initiatives have begun to reduce the use of mandatory overtime.”
The Boston Police and the mayor’s office did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
Martin said at the hearing that the department was applying to various federal and state grants in order to help offset some costs.
“There are grants that will cover some training that’s going to be handed to our officers,” City Councilor Henry Santana, who chairs the council’s committee on public safety and ran the hearing, said in a phone call. “There are grants that do cover some overtime fees, and there are grants for some equipment that the city’s going to be receiving.”
Officers will also be allowed to take planned vacation blocks to help avoid burnout.
‘Vessel for memory’
“The Escapist” (wood, steel, acrylic, paper, brass, polystyrene), by Seth Clark, in the show “Home Sweet, Somewhere,’’ at the Lamont Gallery, Exeter, N.H., Sept. 1-Nov. 21.
The gallery explains that this is a “contemporary exploration of the spaces we call home.’’ The architecture around us becomes a “vessel for memory, emotion, and our subconscious.’’ The nuanced layers of the spaces we occupy “create a sense of being lived in as they simultaneously mirror and extend into our identities over time. While everyone understands ‘home’ differently, the feelings we invest in our surroundings are something we can all connect with.’’
Llewellyn King: Looking at New England’s electricity future with some trepidation
Offshore-wind projects will be a growing source of regional electricity.
WEST WARWICK, R.I.
These days, in terms of resources, New England is poorly positioned to make electricity. As Gregg Cornett, president of Rhode Island Energy, told me in an interview, it doesn’t sit on abundant coal reserves and natural gas — the latter the critical fuel in today’s electricity-generating mix — or hide beneath the surface, waiting for the gasman’s drill.
Going forward the prognosis is that New England will make it through without electricity disruption unless there is severe cold, in which case the system will be stretched and blackouts could result.
The North American Electric Reliability Corporation, the industry-supported, not-for-profit authority that studies electricity supply and predicts problems, says New England is at “moderate risk” this summer, but sees changes and stress in consumption patterns as the region shifts from summer peaking to winter peaking. This will put further pressure on the delivery of gas into the region.
Winters are going to be tough for the New England electric grid and the collective transmission organization that distributes power from and between the region's utilities, the New England Independent System Operator (ISO-NE).
Rhode Island Energy’s Cornett points out that the area has continued to grow, but the infrastructure to support that growth — especially of pipelines bringing in natural gas — has languished.
In part, environmentalists have been responsible because of their desire to restrict all fossil fuels. Times of crisis, though, lead to the burning of oil — a much greater environmental challenge.
Also, because of the lack of pipeline capacity, New England imports liquified natural gas (LNG) from as far away as Norway, adding to the cost of electricity throughout the region. It also imports electricity from Canada.
This means that New England has some of the highest electricity rates in the country. Inaction has consequences.
The bright spots for the future are renewables, wind and solar.
At present they contribute only 12 to 15 percent of the total New England mix, but they represent the one resource that the region has aplenty, especially offshore wind. Currently, this is hamstrung by opposition from President Trump, but there are hopes that these sources will play much bigger roles in coming years.
Cornett says that Rhode Island Energy is enthusiastic about solar and expects this to grow, although power from rooftop installations now represents a decided challenge for the utility. It is by law obliged to pay top dollar for this electricity, and that is more than the power is worth in the market.
The law guaranteeing the high rate was passed by the Rhode Island General Assembly in 2014 to encourage solar installations, not to hobble Rhode Island Energy with high costs. Cornett says the utility, which is the dominant one in the state, gets no gain from the solar power which it has to buy under this arrangement.
There is irony in the energy shortage in New England because twice in its history, it has led the nation in energy production.
According to the 1840 U.S. Census, there were 5,000 water-powered log mills in the region and many other mills, making cloth and grinding corn. New England had dominance in milling of all kinds, thanks to its abundance of rivers on which mills were granted “privileges.”
Rhode Island — with five rivers that had sufficient flow for mills — was a beneficiary of the boom. Most of the mills that survived were converted to steam and those that survived after that, mostly textile mills, turned to electricity.
In the 1990s, there were six operational nuclear-power plants with eight reactors. Today there are just two: Millstone, in Waterford, Conn., with two reactors, and Seabrook,in Seabrook, N.H. with one reactor.
All six New England governors have signed a commitment to investigate the deployment of small modular nuclear reactors (SMRs), but at present there are no commitments to build. This may reflect a national uncertainty about which of the many competing SMR designs with their various technologies will eventually be market-dominant and lead the way to a nuclear renaissance.
Meantime, power executives across the region are grateful they aren’t feeling pressure from data center developers and are hoping for mild winters ahead.
Electric-utility executives used to list cybersecurity as their No. 1 worry. Now they say it is the weather.
You can engineer defenses against cyberattack, but when it comes to the weather, the answer is to hope for the best and respond quickly if there is an outage. The supply future is cloudy.
On X: @llewellynking2
Llewellyn King is executive producer and host of White House Chronicle, on PBS, and an international energy consultant. He’s based in Rhode Island.
A potter’s sense of Vermont
Work by potter Ann Joppe-Mercure, at Catamount Arts, St. Johnsbury, Vt.
Deeply contradictory New England
“Ah, New England. An amalgam of picket fences and crumbling bricks; Ivy League schools and dropped Rs; social tolerance and the Salem witch trials, Henry David Thoreau and Stephen King, P-town rainbows and mill-town rust; Norman Rockwell and Aerosmith; lobster and Moxie; plus the simmering aromas of a million melting pot cuisines originally brought here by immigrants from everywhere else searching for new ways to live.
“It’s a place where rapidly-growing progressive cities full of the ‘wicked smaaht’ coexist alongside blight-inflicted Industrial Revolution landscapes full of the ‘wicked poor’. A place of forested mountains, roaring rivers, crystalline lakes, urban sprawl, and a trillion dollar stores. A place of seasonal tourism beach towns where the wild, rank scent of squishy seaweed casts its cryptic spell along the vast and spindrift-misted seacoast, while the polished yachts of the elite glisten like rare jewels on the horizon, just out of reach.
“Where there are fiery autumn hues and leaves that need raking. Powder snow ski slopes and icy windshields that need scraping. Crisp daffodil mornings and mud season. Beach cottage bliss and endless miles of soul-sucking summer traffic .
“Perceived together, the dissonant nuances of New England stir the imagination in compelling and chromatic whorls.”
― Eric J. Taubert
‘‘No such thing as ‘anti-aging’’’?
“Mr. Bennett, East Jamaica, Vermont” (1943, gelatin silver print (vintage), on paper), by Paul Strand (1890-1976), in the show “With Time,’’ at the Middlebury (Vt.) College Museum of Art, May 23-Aug. 9
The museum says:
“When it comes to aging, we are living in strange times.
“We are bombarded by advertisements for ‘anti-aging’ products—quick fixes for smoothing wrinkles, revitalizing weary bodies, and returning us to younger versions of ourselves. Elixirs of youth fill store shelves and infiltrate social-media feeds. Countering these efforts is an alternate chorus, one that reminds us that there is no such thing as ‘anti-aging,’ and that we should celebrate every age and stage with gratitude and grace.’’
New effort to boost quahog crop
Small quahogs
Excepted and edited from an article in ecoRI news
Three wire bins containing about 20 quahogs each sit inside a giant tank burbling with rust-colored water in a basement marine laboratory at Roger Williams University, in Bristol, R.I.
Although they may look as if they aren’t doing anything special besides existing, these quahogs are part of an innovative effort to study and boost the population of the iconic, native hard clam in Narragansett Bay.
Funded through a Partnership for Research Excellence in Sustainable Seafood (PRESS) grant from the University of Rhode Island supported by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the initiative will help expand hatchery production, strengthen disease monitoring, and accelerate quahog restoration in Rhode Island.