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Commentary Robert Whitcomb Commentary Robert Whitcomb

Senate CIA report cover for brutal dictators

Perhaps the worst thing about the Senate's report on CIA interrogation methods is that it will provide cover for the many regimes that have engaged in, and will continue to engage in, vastly worse practices  every day but do not have the open, democratic system we have to monitor and if need be punish bad behavior by government agents.

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Commentary Robert Whitcomb Commentary Robert Whitcomb

Always near the breaking point

weisbergconundrum  

"Conundrum'' (black and white tape on paper), by DEBRA WEISBERG, in the ''Somatic (e)Scapes show,'' at Nesto Gallery, Milton, Mass.

Her works, says the gallery, ''are inspired by the delicate tension between chaos and order in nature''.

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Commentary Robert Whitcomb Commentary Robert Whitcomb

Don Pesci: Of Gruber, abortion and crime rates

 

VERNON, Conn.

As many students of politics know, there are two kinds of truth: political truth and all other varieties. Political truth, unlike scientific truth, need not be connected verifiably with objective reality. Political truth sometimes dresses up in the robes of science, but bad science also leaves objective reality behind at the altar.
Jonathan Gruber of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), the Cassandra of Obamabots, was one of the architects of Obamacare who, unlike many proponents of President Obama’s “Affordable Care Act,” went off script and, in venues he may have thought were off record, simply laid out the truth about Obamacare in such unvarnished terms that even those over-friendly to President  Obama in the media could not easily misunderstand Mr. Gruber’s essential message – which was: Obamacare, right from the get-go, was intentionally misleading. More importantly, he noted, it was of necessity misleading. The sales pitch of the used car salesman who wants you to buy the lemon on his lot, likewise and for much the same reasons, is misleading.
The press spotlight having been focused on Mr. Gruber and the Obamacare warts, media sleuths have now discovered that Mr. Gruber has also told the inconvenient truth about abortion. In a paper co-written during the Clinton administration and printed in the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), “Abortion, Legalization and Child Living Circumstances,” Mr. Gruber, along with two other co-authors, wrote:
“Legalization of abortion in five states around 1970, followed by legalization nationwide due to the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision, generates natural variation which can be used to estimate the effect of abortion access. We find that cohorts born after abortion was legalized experienced a significant reduction in a number of adverse outcomes. Our estimates imply that the marginal child who was not born due to legalization would have been 70% more likely to live in a single parent family, 40% more likely to live in poverty, 50% more likely to receive welfare, and 35% more likely to die as an infant. These selection effects imply that the legalization of abortion saved the government over $14 billion in welfare expenditures through 1994.”
Mr. Gruber also touted a positive link between abortion and a precipitous drop in crime rates among “cohorts,” by which term Mr. Gruber means to indicate single parents, the poor and welfare recipients – or, to put the matter bluntly, the underclass, mostly African American and Latino city dwellers, all of whom are fortunate enough to live in close proximity to abortion mills.
A more recent report published in the National Bureau of Economic Research in 2000, “NBER Working Paper No. 8004, probes the connection between legalized abortion and recent crime reductions:
“We offer evidence that legalized abortion has contributed significantly to recent crime reductions. Crime began to fall roughly 18 years after abortion legalization. The 5 states that allowed abortion in 1970 experienced declines earlier than the rest of the nation, which legalized in 1973 with Roe v. Wade. States with high abortion rates in the 1970s and 1980s experienced greater crime reductions in the 1990s. In high abortion states, only arrests of those born after abortion legalization fall relative to low abortion states. Legalized abortion appears to account for as much as 50 percent of the recent drop in crime.”
The  Center for Disease Control and Prevention's Abortion Surveillance report has found that between 2007 and 2010, nearly 36 percent of all abortions in the U.S. were performed on black children, even though blacks make up only 12.8 percent of the population. Another 21 percent of abortions were performed on Hispanics, and an additional  7 percent on other minority races. More than half of all babies killed by abortion between 2007 and 2010 were minorities.

 

Note that both  Connecticut Gov.  Dannel Malloy and his prison czar, Mike Lawlor, the architect of a bill that awards early-release credits to violent prisoners, have claimed responsibility for a reduction of crime in Connecticut that parallels a national reduction in crime attributed by Mr. Gruber and other economists to abortion. This is the kind of pseudo-science that leaves objective reality waiting impatiently at the altar for a marriage that never occurs. Neither Mr. Lawlor nor Mr. Malloy has yet been so brash to claim credit for the drop in crime rate that has occurred nationwide.

 

Don Pesci (donpesci@att.net) is a writer who lives in Vernon
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Commentary Robert Whitcomb Commentary Robert Whitcomb

David Warsh: Globe arts revival and my migration

SOMERVILLE, Mass. Boston is slated to regain a battered badge of its identity next month, when arts coverage is expected to return to the daily broadsheet editions of The Boston Globe. To be sure, the return of a “Living/Arts” section is apparently a consequence of an expanding business coverage. Details are still unclear. It is a heartening development nevertheless.

Distinctive criticism has been a hallmark of Boston’s newspapers since 1830, when the Boston Evening Transcript opened for business. (It closed in 1941.) Thirteen years ago, to save some money in production costs, at a time when the paper was still highly profitable, The Globe banished its critics, along with its coverage of food and personal health, to a tab section it called “G,” printed a day in advance.

 

That robbed dignity and immediacy from criticism by such distinguished contributors as Mark Feeney, Robert Campbell, Richard Dyer, Gail Caldwell, Ed Siegel, Sebastian Smee, Jeremy Eichler, Wesley Morris and Ty Burr. (Five Pulitzer Prize winners are on that list.) Dyer, Caldwell, Siegel and Morris have left the paper. The tab was among the worst of a long series of bad ideas from the New York Times Co., which bought The Globe for $1.13 billion in 1993 and sold it last year for $70 million.

 

Google didn’t do that. New York did.

 

Another mistake, not on the same scale, was shutting down my column "Economic Principals'' {since transformed into www.economic principals.com}. Editor Martin Baron said he wanted technical economics only, no politics. But even if economists sought to strip their discipline of its inevitable political overtones (and most no longer bother to try), it was a terrible idea for newspapers to go along. So EP quit and moved to the Web.  (On the other hand, Baron subsequently hired the last four of those critics.)

 

Thirteen years later, EP has amply proved its point.  Its coverage of Harvard’s Russia scandal ran circles around that of The Globe, The Times  and The Washington Post (where Baron is now editor). Its reporting on trends in growth economics was praised in  The Times by columnist Paul Krugman (and, a few years later, dismissed on his blog!). Its coverage of the financial crisis has been more penetrating than that of The Times; of the fortunes of the Obama economic team, more realistic; of  U.S.  policy toward Russia, more skeptical; of the competitive situation of print newspapers, less panicky. Like  The Times,  EP made a  dreadful mistake in supporting the U.S. invasion of Iraq,

 

Moreover, EP’s public broadcasting model has proved out. A relative handful of readers support the enterprise with an annual subscription of $50, in return for an early email version on Sunday morning (Eastern Standard Time), with another 20,000 or so reading, over the course of a quarter, the online version for free.

 

How many pay? From year to year, it’s hard to know, renewal rates being hard to predict – somewhere between 250 and 500, fewer, perhaps, than had been hoped, but enough to keep EP in business.  Subscribers include civic-minded citizens from all walks of life in the four corners of the world.

 

Others who left The Globe have founded successful public radio talk radio shows: former foreign editor Tom Ashbrook started “On Point;” Steve Curwood, “Fresh Air.”  Bruce Mohl edits Commonwealth magazine.  EP goes it alone, with only its surpassingly loyal copy editor to correct infelicities and, occasionally, restrain enthusiasms. The payroll consists of vegetables, fruit and ice cream

The Times is in the throes of change, but it remains a great newspaper (as do the Financial Times and the The Wall Street Journal, the other papers to whose print editions EP subscribes). You can learn a million things from  The Times that you’ll never see here.

 

But EP regularly provides a parallax view of developments in economics and politics, as seen from Boston, much the same as it once did at the newspaper itself.

I look forward to many more years of doing the same.

 

I expect, too, to write slightly more frequently about Boston. The New York Times Co. occupation is ended, but  The Globe  is damaged and the Herald is a shadow of its former self.  The sphere of news-gathering and discussion is considerably attenuated.  The conversation about Boston needs to include many voices.

 

David Warsh is proprietor of www. economicprincipals.com and an economic historian and longtime financial journalist -- so longtime,  indeed, that he worked at The Wall Street Journal back  in the early '70's, when the overseer of newenglanddiary.com, Robert Whitcomb, was there.

 

 

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Commentary Robert Whitcomb Commentary Robert Whitcomb

Darkening light

potkay  

"Dark Light'' (mixed media on canvas), by JOAN POTKAY, in the show ''Land Forms East,'' at Colo Colo Gallery, New Bedford, through Dec. 19.

I love the paradoxical idea of a "dark light.'' It reminds me of Churchill's famous line about the Nazis:

"But if we fail {to defeat the Nazis}, then the whole world ... will sink into the abyss of a new Dark Age made more sinister ... by the lights of perverted science.''

 

--Robert Whitcomb

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Epochal letter writing

Stpaul  

"St. Paul,'' attributed to Guercino (Bologna, 1591-1666) (brown chalk drawing on laid paper), at  Spaightwood Galleries, Upton, Mass.

 

Here, the gallery notes say, "St. Paul sits at a desk, writing one of his epistles, the sword of his martyrdom leaning against the table upon which he works; an inkpot sits by his book within easy reach.''

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Commentary Robert Whitcomb Commentary Robert Whitcomb

Donna DeForbes: Looking for the most eco-friendly X-Mass tree

By DONNA DeFORBES/ecoRI News contributor

We run this courtesy of ecoRI News

A Christmas tree is often the cornerstone of a family’s holiday season. There is much ado around getting it, rearranging furniture to provide it with ideal window placement, and decorating it while listening to a Dean Martin Christmas — or, maybe that’s just my family.

But does your little green heart ever wonder which kind of Christmas tree is most sustainable? Are real trees better than artificial ones because of their naturalness, or does the reusability of an artificial one make that the greener choice? Perhaps we should weigh the environmental pros and cons. This is what I grew up with, and it seems like a sustainable decorating option when the same tree is used year after year. However, the truth is that most artificial tree-users replace them about every five years with newer versions. According to a study from a Canadian environmental consulting firm, an artificial tree would have to be reused for at least 20 years to be more eco-friendly than buying a fresh-cut tree annually.

That is largely because artificial trees aren’t recyclable or biodegradable, they deplete resources and, with most being manufactured in Asia these days, transporting the trees leaves a large carbon footprint.

A bigger concern for families is that artificial trees can be toxic. They’re typically made with polyvinyl chloride (PVC), one of the most environmentally damaging forms of petroleum-derived plastic and a known carcinogen.

In addition, an artificial tree may shed lead-laced dust all over your children’s gifts, since lead is often used as a stabilizer for PVC. Not so very merry, is it?

There is some good news, however. If you’re set on acquiring an artificial tree, there is a newer technology where tree branches are being manufactured from polyethylene plastic (PE) instead of toxic PVC. And they look more realistic. Alicia Voorhies from The Soft Landing offers tips on where to find a holiday tree made from polyethylene.

If you get one of those PE trees and keep it for the next 20-plus years, you can feel pretty good about preserving both the planet and your family’s health. Not to mention saving quite a bit of money. Many people prefer the fresh scent and magic of a real Christmas tree, whether they buy a pre-cut one from a street lot or chop one down at a tree farm.

According to the National Christmas Tree Association, there are about 350 million Christmas trees growing on U.S. farms, with up to 30 million harvested annually. Natural trees are a recyclable and renewable resource, and a Christmas tree farm offers many benefits, including preserved green space, animal habitat and soil stability.

The downside is that only 1 percent of U.S. Christmas trees are grown organically — so that other 99 percent may have been grown using pesticides. Trees bought at corner lots and big-box stores are typically shipped here from out of state or Canada, and the sellers know little to nothing about the tree’s origins.

Buying your tree from a local farm offers several advantages: you’re supporting a local business; you’re reducing the environmental impact of long-distance transportation; and you can speak directly with the farmer to learn about the growing process.

For instance, my family discovered that Fraser Tree Farm in Coventry, R.I.,  uses organic practices, yet they aren’t classified as an organic farm since they’re not seeking certification. Search for other Rhode Island tree farms, and call ahead to ask questions.

Perhaps the best part about natural trees is they can be recycled after the holidays. Many cities and towns collect the trees curbside and turn them into mulch or compost. Rhode Islanders can find out about their municipalities’ Christmas tree recycling process here. Although not the most popular, a living tree, with roots and all, is certainly the most sustainable option.

Some things to consider when buying a living tree: choose a tree that looks bright and lively with a well-developed root ball, and choose a tree size that will work well in your yard. Pot it up with quality soil, and keep it well watered throughout the holidays. Dig the hole outside in the fall, and cover it with mulch to keep it from freezing over before you’re able to plant the tree.

Donna DeForbes is founder of Eco-Mothering.com, a blog that explores ways to make going green fun and easy for the whole family. She is a contributor to Earth911, MammaBaby and author of the e-book “The Guilt-Free Guide to Greening Your Holidays.”

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Commentary Robert Whitcomb Commentary Robert Whitcomb

Robert Whitcomb: Unfair to ban fraternities

The controversy over alleged sexual assaults and their cover-ups at the University of Virginia has refueled the seemingly endless war over the role of fraternities at colleges and universities. Many colleges, of course, have fraternities, though sometimes they go by other names, such as Harvard’s Final Clubs and Princeton’s Eating Clubs.

Are things worse these days, with students more out of control? Or is there more extensive and intensive reporting of outrages? Or both? How does behavior in dorms compare with that in fraternity houses?

The news media and the public love stories about bad behavior at colleges, with “Animal House,” the over-the-top movie filmed at the University of Oregon and inspired by the purported hijinks at Alpha Delta Phi at Dartmouth in the early ’60s, the sort of aesthetic quintessence of this. That many of these stories turn out to be apocryphal tends to be forgotten as the news media and the citizenry move on to the next sensation.

In any case, trying to ban college fraternities is unfair and unwise. Smaller independent social units not controlled by a large bureaucracy serve as environments in which to develop supportive relationships. And most fraternities are safe organizations in which many people develop lifelong friendships. The few bad ones skew the numbers.

As Will Kamin, president of Chi Psi at Amherst College, told The New York Times, “For a lot of these guys, this [his fraternity] is the only place where they can talk openly about their lives and form strong bonds,” and he told CNN that membership “has taught guys about what it means to be a man and a good man at that.”

I confess to having been in a fraternity and, while I’m not a particularly outgoing person, found it to be an edifying experience, surrounded by young people who were, all in all, gentlemen. The majority have gone on to have productive and highly civilized lives. They were pretty nice people back then.

Many fraternities also perform civic good works such as raising money for charities (including for the colleges themselves). Dorm living is too amorphous to elicit much of such commitment. As Alexis de Tocqueville noted, the variety of social and civic organizations in America is one of our great strengths.

Why punish all fraternities for the actions of a few of their members?

There is also the little matter of freedom of association, which a diverse democracy must protect. I suppose that colleges have the right to ban their students from membership in certain groups as a condition of being registered students, but at the risk of undermining the “diversity’’ that leaders of higher education always assert that they favor. (Of course, diversity in colleges doesn’t always include diversity of opinion.)

Individual fraternities vary about as widely as humans do. As with any organization, it depends on who is in them, particularly their leaders. And the prevention of bad behavior depends on the willingness of college administrations as well as fraternity and sorority leaders to report possible offenses to the police and cooperate with outside authorities in criminal cases. But all too often, crimes by students at colleges are treated as “internal matters.”

Indeed, over recent decades, many college and university administrations have acted to shield students from outside law enforcement. What college administrations should have been doing is to immediately call the police (not the campus cops) if they think that a crime has been committed. Such a stance will, over time, make students much less likely to commit them. Perpetrators must be made to realize that they will be punished.

Any institution with large numbers of young people is particularly susceptible to excessive drinking and sexual assault. The Nov. 30 New York Times article, “In the Company of Men: Why is it so hard to prosecute sexual assaults in the military?” detailed the very serious problems of inadequate reporting and prosecution of sexual assaults in the U.S. military. Some of the cases sound similar to recent fraternity incidents. As in other institutions where these problems persist, vigilant reporting and tough prosecution are essential to achieve long-term improvement.

College administrations and faculty should, of course, lecture students on the perils of heavy drinking, sexual assault and so on. Most students, after all, are late adolescents and are presumably in college to learn about how to be responsible adults, and not just from academic courses. But shielding criminal students from the police goes too far. A crime is a crime, whether in the military, in a dorm, in an on-or-off-campus fraternity or anywhere else.

Robert Whitcomb oversees New England Diary.

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Happier when you keep your head down

  franson

 

"Eleven Plus One'' (photo), by BILL FRANSON, in the  group show "Strange Days: The Uncanny, the Curious and Quite Possibly Magical'' at the Lamont Gallery at Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter, N.H., through Dec. 18.

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Commentary Robert Whitcomb Commentary Robert Whitcomb

Writing for Rolling Stone? Make up your own factoids

  More and more it appears that  the most  outrageous stories in the troubled Andrew Lohse's story "Confessions of an Ivy League Frat Boy''  (about Dartmouth College) were  fabricated. It was published in Rolling Stone because that magazine wanted another sensationalist story (like its recent UVA rape story) and ignored all traditional journalistic  rules of fact-checking, talking to all sides of the story, seeking corroboration, etc., etc.

In Rolling Stone, writers just make up  stuff with impunity.

It's increasingly difficult to believe anything in that mag.

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Commentary Robert Whitcomb Commentary Robert Whitcomb

Any background reading?

How many people demonstrating about the Michael Brown and Eric Garner deaths at the hands of police have actually read a word of official court documents explaining why the police officers in question were not charged with  crimes?

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Richard Kirsch: An overdue fix to overtime

There are a lot of ways that businesses are squeezing worker pay. Here’s a big one.

On the one hand, millions of Americans are stuck in low-paying part-time jobs that don’t offer them enough hours.

On the other, millions more are now routinely forced to work over 40 hours a week without getting a dime for their overtime labor. In many cases, that’s because employers are paying hourly wage workers as if they were salaried professionals.

There used to be a big distinction between hourly and salaried employees. That wasn’t by accident.

In 1938, Congress passed the Fair Labor Standards Act, which forced bosses to pay workers a minimum wage and time-and-a-half for any hours worked over 40 a week. That law was key to building America’s middle class.

Only a small percentage of employees — executives, administrators, and travelling salespeople, among others — were exempt from overtime.

Yet since figuring out who was eligible for overtime proved complicated, regulators settled on one rule that trumps them all: weekly salary. By having a clear rule on salary level, it’s much harder for employers to avoid paying overtime.

In 1975, for example, employers were required to pay overtime to anyone on a salary of less than $155 a week. That covered 7 out of 10 workers.

But that salary limit hasn’t kept up with inflation or changes in the workforce. As a result, many businesses have been putting anyone with even minor “management” responsibilities on salary.

For example, a federal court found that a clerk at a Dollar General store — who worked 50 hours or more a week stocking shelves and mopping floors — could be considered a salaried “manager,” since she was responsible for minding the store.

Today, if your salary is more than $455 a week — that’s just $23,660 a year — you can be forced to work long hours without any extra pay, let alone time-and-a-half. As a result, instead of 7 of 10 workers being eligible for overtime, now it’s only 1 in 10.

Last March, President Obama told the Department of Labor to modernize the regulation covering who gets overtime. “Because these regulations are outdated,” he acknowledged, “millions of Americans lack the protections of overtime and even the right to the minimum wage.”

To restore this pillar of middle-class income, regulators should once again ensure that 7 out of 10 workers are covered. That’s the best way to close the loopholes that businesses will use to cheat workers out of overtime.

To do that, the Department of Labor should set the new cap to at least $1,327 a week, or $69,000 a year. That level would do what the law was intended to do — namely, to distinguish between workers and bosses.

As a result, 10 million workers would get more money in their wallets to spend boosting the economy in their communities.

In addition to increasing the weekly salary amount, the Labor Department should modernize the rules so that the so-called “managers” at fast food restaurants, clothing outlets, and discount stores — who may be responsible for supervising their co-workers but don’t have any real executive authority — get overtime as well.

Closing the overtime loophole could also increase the earnings of millions of part-time workers. Rather than paying time-and-a-half to employees they’re currently forcing to work unpaid overtime, many businesses are likely to increase the hours worked by part-time employees who are eager to work more.

Overtime pay is key to restarting the middle-class engine of our economy. It’s past time for the Department of Labor to act.

As long as it delays, millions of workers will continue to be cheated by big businesses out of a fair share of the wealth their labor helps to create.

Richard Kirsch is a senior fellow at the Roosevelt Institute and the author of ''Fighting for Our Health: The Epic Battle to Make Health Care a Right in the United States''. He’s also a senior This was distributed via OtherWords.org.

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David Warsh: Health economist reaps whirlwind from his irony

Irony – the tendency to underscore a point by stating the opposite of what is meant – has been the downfall of many an advocate.  It’s an often powerful technique. In political speech, though, it is prone to backfire, because it can easily be taken out of context. It’s more dangerous than ever in the age of YouTube and opposition research. Accept that “oppo” has greatly damaged the effectiveness of Jonathan Gruber, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the economist who in 2004 framed the financial strategy that, over a twisted course, led to the adoption of the Affordable Care Act, in 2010.   Gruber is a leading healthcare expert, much in demand.  For two weeks he’s been at the center of a firestorm because of three video clips in which he seems to give comfort to enemies of Obamacare.

The story of how investment adviser Rich Weinstein, angered because he was forced to search for a new policy under terms of the ACA (he found one),  turned amateur sleuth, searching through hundreds of online videos, radio interviews and podcasts to find three damaging ones, makes interesting reading. We owe it to reporter David Weigel, of Bloomberg Politics.

The ACA requires those who don’t receive health insurance benefits from their employer or from the government to buy their own insurance, much as licensed drivers must purchase automobile insurance, with government subsidies for health insurance for those who earn less than a certain amount.

According to Gruber, the bill was written in a “tortured” way to avoid describing its mandates as taxes.  He told a health care conference at the University of Pennsylvania last year that ''Lack of transparency is a huge political advantage, Call it the stupidity of the American voter or whatever, but basically that was really, really critical to getting the thing to pass.''

 

Gruber was being ironic.  Addressing an audience of healthcare professionals, he meant that, for good reasons or bad, in extending insurance to those who couldn’t afford it or even obtain it, that Americans had done the right thing.  Sleuth Weinstein found two other clips in which Gruber seemed to buttress Republican argument that insurance obtained on a federal exchange is not eligible for subsidies because the legislation anticipated that all states would form exchanges of their own. Twenty-four states, all with Republican governors, refused to form such exchanges. The  federal government formulated a marketplace in their stead.

Health Adviser Logged White House Visits,” headlined The Wall Street Journal. “Fallout From Gruber’s Remarks Spreads: Economist’s Comments on Affordable Care Act’s Passage Prompt Vermont to Cut Ties, Michigan Lawmakers to Seek Probe.” .

In an editorial, “The Impolitic Jonathan Gruber,” The New York Times came to the ACA’s defense:

''Republicans are crowing over Mr. Gruber’s remarks because he has been portrayed as a major architect of the health reform. In truth, his role was limited.  He had a big contract with the White House to use his econometric model to calculate the financial and coverage effects of proposed measures.  And he was one of thirteen experts who advised the Senate Finance Committee.  His comments should not be taken as evidence that the reform law was hatched in secrecy and foisted on the public by trickery.''

It depends, I guess, on what is meant by “truth.” In truth, Gruber’s role in devising the mandate strategy of the ACA was absolutely fundamental. The idea had originally been proposed in  the early 1990s by the conservative Heritage Foundation as an alternative to Hillary Clinton’s much farther-reaching plans. Gruber dusted it off and broached it in 2004, at the request of then-Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney. Romney was in the early stages of preparing a presidential bid.  His plan was adopted by Massachusetts’ s heavily Democratic legislature, with apparent success.

The mandate idea was taken over by the Democrats in the campaign for the 2008 presidential election.  By now a leading expert on its operation, Gruber first advised John Edwards, then Hillary Clinton, and finally Barack Obama on the details of the plan. In early 2010, President Obama relied on Democratic majorities in both the House and Senate to pass the measure into law.

Was it a good idea?  Some Democrats have begun to voice their doubts. Sen. Charles Schumer (D.-N.Y.)  said, last week: “It wasn’t the change we were hired to make.” The party should have found a way to raise wages and create jobs, instead of focusing on the uninsured, he continued, whom he described as “a small percentage of the electorate.”

David Axelrod, a close adviser to President Obama in both campaigns countered (in a another story in the WSJ ), “If your calculus is solely on how to win elections, and that is your abiding principle, it leads you to Sen. Schumer’s position. But that’s precisely why big difficult problems often don’t get addressed in Washington, and why people have become cynical  about that town and its politics.”

The ACA will continue on its perilous course in the courts, this time in King vs. Burwell, a challenge to subsidies for those policies obtained from the federal exchange.  The 2016 elections come after that.

With much rule-changing still to be done before the huge medical sector becomes stable, U.S. healthcare reform is like global warming: Further measures are not a matter of if but when.

 

David Warsh, a longtime financial  journalist and economic historian, is proprietor of economicprincipals.com

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Tara Mitchell: Company sees the value of waste

Via ecoRInews John Engwer, owner of Groundscapes Express Inc., and Butch Goodwin, operations manager, recently led Ecological Landscaping Alliance (ELA) participants on a tour of the company’s composting facility, explaining how compost is made and discussing its many benefits and uses.

Through knowledge, training and, most importantly, years of experience, Engwer and Goodwin have developed a fine-tuned operation for turning waste into a valuable product.

Many people are familiar with the benefits of compost as an amendment to improve soil quality and to provide the slow release of nutrients for plants. However, compost has many other less-recognized uses and benefits in the landscape.

Compost, for instance, has a large water holding capacity. When applied over bare soil as a compost-mulch mix, it has the ability to capture and hold rainwater, preventing runoff and protecting soil from erosion. For example, a 2-inch layer of a compost and wood-chip mix, can hold about 160 gallons of water per 1,000 square feet.

Compost also has a high number of microorganisms that play an essential role in making nutrients available to plants and in breaking down and binding pollutants and heavy metals. All of these benefits make compost invaluable not only for gardens but also for protecting water quality.

Composting and the use of composed material essentially imitates the natural process of growth, death, decomposition and renewal. Composting, whether as a backyard operation or a larger-scale business, is basically a mechanism of accelerating decomposition using manual or mechanical methods.

Applying a compost-mulch mix over bare soil instantly provides the soil protection that ground cover and leaf litter naturally provide. Compost as a soil amendment speeds up landscape restoration by providing an immediate source of organic matter, moisture and microbial activity that would otherwise take years to evolve through the natural cycles of growth and decay.

Groundscapes Express’s compost begins with organic waste product brought in by local suppliers. Piles of wood chips, leaves, manure and cranberry waste line the edges of the composting area. Turning those materials into a high-quality product requires getting the proper carbon-to-nitrogen ratio and maintaining the right moisture levels.

Putting food scrap to work
With the recent implementation of the Massachusetts ban on food waste being buried or incinerated, food scrap from hospitals, restaurants and supermarkets have become another ingredient in the composting process. Food scrap from a local hospital is now incorporated into Groundscapes’ composting process.

Food scrap has the benefit of higher moisture and nitrogen, but requires additional quantities of the drier feedstocks to get the proper carbon-to-nitrogen mix and the right balance of moisture. Food scrap also adds the problem of attracting wildlife, and is more likely to be delivered with plastic debris that must be removed.

Once the right proportions of the feedstock are mixed by a loader, the material is laid out in long rows, to await the work of bacteria, fungi and other living organisms to turn the material into compost. Maintaining the right balance of water and oxygen as the material decomposes is critical to creating a high-end product. Too little water or oxygen can slow decomposition. If the material is too wet, it results in anaerobic conditions, and the living organisms necessary for aerobic decomposition die.

Piling the rows too high can also result in anaerobic conditions, because the high moisture content of organic matter makes it heavy and susceptible to compaction within the pile. An easy way to identify poor-quality compost or anaerobic compost is by smell. Bad smelling compost, or compost that smells like ammonia, is likely anaerobic and shouldn’t be used.

During decomposition,  air circulation is important not only to provide oxygen to the microbes but also to help maintain proper temperatures. As the bacteria and other organism feed on the carbon, energy (heat) is released.

Temperatures inside a pile can reach 200 degrees. However, for quality compost, the temperature must be maintained at an average of 140 degrees, according to Goodwin. High temperatures are necessary to kill pathogenic bacteria and organisms and to ensure that weed seeds are no longer viable. If temperatures are too high or too low, certain necessary bacteria and microorganisms will die, altering the process and resulting in a final product that has less microbial benefit.

Goodwin and his crew take the temperature of the compost twice a week, monitor both the interior and the exterior temperature of the piles to determine when they are ready to be turned. To turn the piles, Groundscapes uses a compost turner, which both aerates the compost and physically breaks down the material, speeding up decomposition. They also sift out large chunks of wood, rocks and other debris.

To ensure that material at the bottom of the pile gets aerated, the entire row is moved and shifted. From start to finish, the piles shrink by some 40 percent as material is broken down and moisture released. As existing piles shrink and more space opens up, new piles are added.

The finished compost feels light and smells earthy. Consistency is an essential part of the process and begins with having regular suppliers with consistent feedstock. Materials can vary, depending on the source and how much undesirable debris comes with the product. Leaf matter can vary depending on the season, and various materials have differing amounts of moisture.

Maintaining the routine of monitoring and turning also is important. Like making bread, which is also dependent on the work of living organisms, producing quality compost is based on using the right proportions of ingredients, proper handling of material, and paying attention to temperature and timing.

Goodwin said the material takes about four months to decompose and is then left to cure for another two months. It’s then screened. The finished product, dark brown, moist, light and crumbly, smelling of earth and full of microbes, is then ready to be delivered.

Compost filter tubes In addition to using and supplying compost for application to soils, Engwer created compost filter tubes for use as erosion control. Using a compost blower truck, a mix of two parts wood mulch and one part compost is blown into burlap tubes on site. Due to the weight of the compost mix — about 30 pounds a cubic foot dry and 90 pounds wet — the tubes, unlike hay bales and silt fence, don’t need to be trenched, avoiding a disturbance that leaves the soil and the site susceptible to weed seeds. The tubes also can be easily placed on compacted or frozen soils.

These burlap tubes filled with compost and wood-chip mulch provide multiple benefits for stormwater management. They physically filter sediment and serve as a physical barrier, slowing the velocity of water. The compost filters also captures and holds water, reducing flow.

The microorganisms provide additional long-term benefit by chemically breaking down, binding and reducing nutrients and pollutants, such as heavy metals, petroleum products and harmful bacteria, thus protecting water quality. And, because the burlap is biodegradable, the tubes don’t have to be removed and continue to provide a benefit as they decompose in place.

One big rain garden As the tour ended, Engwer noted that, “All the earth is a rain garden.” The entire landscape works as a system, absorbing, infiltrating, releasing, cleaning and cycling water. Like the composting process, that system is dependent on a continual supply of organic matter.

Engwer emphasized the importance of using, reusing and retaining existing wood, stumps, brush and other natural material on site so that organic matter can remain part of the cycle of growth, death, decomposition and renewal.

Tara Mitchell is a landscape architect with the Massachusetts Department of Transportation. Her responsibilities include design, design review and construction services for landscape restoration. This story originally ran in an Ecological Landscaping Association newsletter.

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Commentary Robert Whitcomb Commentary Robert Whitcomb

I would forever be a complainer

farm

-- Photo by JOHN PINNING

Green End Farm, in Middletown, circa 1960, where the author savored his Thanksgiving dinner.

 

We’re rolling merrily down my grandparents' lane in Middletown,  R.I.,  which is next to Newport. A border of weeping willows just beyond the passenger windows drapes into Green End Pond before the lane curves away at the stone wall and up between two towering maples and past the rarely-used front door of the white farmhouse. We pull around back by the cast iron water pump with the long, curved handle and trundle in through the back door.

My grandmother is at the kitchen stove, a pot on every burner, opening the oven door to baste the turkey. The entire house is rich with the aroma of pies, vegetables and turkey.

Everything glistens. The mahogany table, the backs of the chairs. The window glass and the cut glasses and candlesticks on the table. The silverware. Heat comes up through the scrollwork of the floor registers. It is here, in the big dining room, behind lace curtains with the afternoon sun streaming in, that we celebrate Thanksgiving.

Aunts and uncles and cousins arrive from Newport, Bristol, Warren and Providence. I am shy around some of these people whom I only see a couple times a year. These are working people; Portuguese, Irish, fishermen and plumbers. They are jostling and physical, and my head is rubbed many times, and I am hugged and kissed by aunts with booming voices wearing too much lipstick and perfume. I am not a loud person. I don’t know how to smile unless I am genuinely happy. I am feeling pretty happy at the moment, just overwhelmed and crowded.

The grand feast is served forth, the plates are loaded and the eating begins, soon followed by the arguing. Something is said about the Kennedys and my father starts in about the Bay of Pigs, and then an uncle accuses a brother-in-law of “double-dipping,” and the battle cry is raised about taxes in Newport and taxes in Bristol and why am I being sent to a private school — aren’t public schools good enough for me?

My mother’s younger sister is in high spirits with her new boyfriend and my mother has to take her down a few notches, accusing her of having more growing up than she did, and nobody notices when I slide down out of my chair and crawl out of the room. In the back hall I grab my coat and slip outside.

The sky is a watercolor wash of blues, grays and pale whites as I head up to the barn. My grandfather is inside, arranging the milking machines, the big grey tabby following him. I hadn’t notice him leave the dining room before me. He is wearing a work coat over his suit and a red plaid hat with flaps up.

I walk past him to visit the bull with the ring in his nose, watching us from behind the thick iron bars of his stall.

I follow my grandfather back to the front of the barn, where he takes another plaid wool hat, a green one like the red one he wears, and fits it onto my head. Then we walk down the lane to the pond.

Two swans glide over to us and my grandfather takes a chunk of bread out of his pocket, breaks off a piece and tosses crumbled bits of it into the water. He hands the chunk of bread to me and I do the same.

A group of mallards stream in, darting at the bread furthest from the swans and the last of the sun starts streaking the sky orange and purple.

“Time to bring in the cows,” my grandfather says.

We turn and head up the lane, toward the farmhouse and the pasture beyond. My grandmother is standing in a window watching us and I smile and wave to her. She smiles and waves back.

“She can listen to that. I can’t,” says my grandfather.

“Why do they complain so much?” I ask him.

“Not enough money,” says my grandfather. “That’s why your parents want you go there,” and he points to the Gothic spires of the St. George’s School chapel, lordly stoic beyond the fields on the highest point of land in the area.

And one day, I did go to that prestigious boarding school. But it was already too late for me. I was of the complaining class, and no matter how far life took me, I would forever see everything that was wrong and complain about it.

Still, Thanksgiving remains my favorite holiday — even if for turkeys it is a complete disaster, and for the American Indian, a day of national mourning.

 

Charles Pinning is the author of the Rhode Island-based novel “Irreplaceable.”

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Commentary Robert Whitcomb Commentary Robert Whitcomb

Hoping for dinner in the Depression

  tgiving

 

"Thanksgiving Pie'' (print of oil painting), by William Meade Prince, who did magazine covers in the golden age of that medium -- from about 1900 to 1965. This one was done in 1930, as America slid deeper into the Great Depression.  As Joseph Asch noted in Dartblog.com, Mr. Prince's work  appeared on the cover of The Saturday Evening Post, Red Book, Cosmopolitan and Collier’s as well as The Country Gentleman.

Mr. Asch noted it  ''seems quaint that magazines would commission oil paintings to appear as cover art.'' We recommend that readers visit the National Museum of American Illustration, in Newport, R.I., to see an astonishing collection of the originals of this great popular art form.

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Commentary Robert Whitcomb Commentary Robert Whitcomb

Chris Powell: They're happy to flee family on Thanksgiving

MANCHESTER, Conn.Thanksgiving, some  Connecticut Democratic state legislators said at a press conference the 
other day, is when Americans should be with their families, and so state law 
should require retailers open on the holiday to pay their employees a punitive 
doubletime and a half. 

The sentiment is lovely but it's a hallucination -- because for every big-box 
retail store employee who wishes that he didn't have to work on Thanksgiving 
there are a thousand people clogging the aisles of his store thrilled to have 
gotten  away from their families, many of them having 
already attended a high-school football game and many others planning to go to 
the movies afterward. 

Who will introduce the legislation requiring the shoppers to stay home so  that the 
retail employees can stay home too? By what necessity does the government get so 
intrusive in people's personal lives? 

General working conditions have been government's domain for decades, but the 
country already has minimum-wage and overtime laws. With more people shopping 
than working in retailing on Thanksgiving, why obstruct democracy? 

Further, why, with a doubletime-and-a-half law, drive up the costs of 
bricks-and-mortar retailing, which pays plenty of state sales and local property 
taxes, and thereby give more advantage to Internet retailing, which doesn't? 

The Thanksgiving doubletime proposal is just more pious pandering to a special 
interest at the expense of the public interest. 

But pandering to special interests pays well in Connecticut politics, as 
suggested by the announcement this week from the Connecticut Education 
Association, the state's biggest teachers union, that it will hire Senate 
President Pro Tem Donald E. Williams Jr. as its deputy policy director when he 
leaves office in January. 

"Don is a strong advocate for public education and teachers," CEA President 
Sheila Cohen declared, which was to say that during his 22 years in the General 
Assembly Williams has been a reliable vote for the union. While state law 
forbids Williams from accepting money for lobbying state government until he has 
been out of office for a year, nothing prevents him from advising the union's 
lobbyists until the revolving door is unlocked. 

But if Williams has been a tool of the teachers, most Democratic legislators 
are, and if this ever bothered his constituents, they could have replaced him -- 
at least if newspapers and rival candidates had dared to make the point. 
Further, government in Connecticut is now so pervasive and legislative salaries 
so low that almost any employment undertaken by a legislator may present 
opportunities to exploit his office and increase his incentive to be a tool for 
somebody. 

Still, it's a matter of degree, and since no special interest is bigger than the 
CEA, Williams's new job can't help smelling like a payoff, especially since he 
does not seem to have been eager to pursue a career in private industry -- not 
that there is much private industry left in his part of 
the state, northeastern Connecticut. 

A few months ago Williams applied for the presidency of Quinebaug Valley 
Community College, in Killingly, near his home in Thompson on the Rhode Island 
border. Every cynic in the state was stunned that this  
payoff didn't come through, stunned that the community college board hired 
someone else, someone with a background in education -- though of course even a 
former politician might have a better grasp of the real world than a career 
educator. 

But at least the Senate Democrats have found a sinecure for Williams. Now they 
have to figure out what to do with state Sen. Andrew Maynard, of Stonington, 
hospitalized incommunicado for months with a serious brain injury two years 
short of his state pension qualification. How much really can be asked of the 
CEA? 

So could any of the big corporations that have received millions in "economic 
development" money from the Democratic state administration just to stick around 
use a deputy policy director? 

 
Chris Powell is managing editor of the Journal Inquirer, in Manchester, Conn. 
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