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  • Understanding Trump’s Appeal

    The great mystery of our time, for me, is why a third to nearly a half of Americans continue to support our president, regardless of his statements or actions. It has become more and more obvious that the sneering, belittling persona he projects at his rallies is central to his appeal, as his core supporters experience joy and validation by cheering him on. How can this be?

    I have come to understand that the mystery of the Nazi’s rise to …

  • Full Employment Without Unions

    The Federal Reserve Bank, among others, has been made much of the anticipated inflation as the unemployment rate has fallen. It hasn’t happened, and speculation as to why has focused on a variety of possible factors, including whether our way of calculating unemployment—by only considering those actively seeking employment as unemployed and leaving off “discouraged workers”—gives an overly rosy picture. Perhaps those potential workers are discouraged by their poor prospects for decent pay? The demise of labor unions, especially in …

  • Inspired by the Younger Generation

    As a seventy-year-old who was inspired by the civil rights freedom riders and protested against the war in Vietnam, I am greatly heartened by today’s teenage activists. They seem to understand what many commentators do not: that the movement they are engaged in must be sustained over many years. Political commentators have similarly derided the Occupy Wallstreet movement for it’s lack of leadership and clear goals, but both represent a heartening groundswell of activism among younger Americans.

    One thing we’ve …

  • Welcome to a World Without Unions

    In Shopping the Two Americas, Alex Beam describes the proliferation of dollar stores at the expense of the malls that cater to a shrinking middle class and quotes the CEO of Dollar General about soaring income inequality. Last night when we saw a local production of 9-5 The Musical (based on the 1980 movie) and found it dated, my wife Dolores figured out why: who today would dare complain about a salaried 40 hour per week job with benefits? …

  • A Compromise on Semi-Automatic Weapons

    For those states that, unlike Massachusetts, are unable to pass a ban on semi-automatic weapons, there is a possible compromise. Why not ban private ownership of those weapons, but license gun ranges to provide them for use on their premises? It’s hard to imagine another safe place to use them anyway, and aficionados could still blast away. Some sort of ban on these weapons is the only way to put a dent into mass-shooter events. Because there are far too …

  • Budget Deal Gets It Wrong

    The economy is healthy and growing, and unemployment is relatively low. Even wages are beginning to rise. Great.

    But our infrastructure, from roads and bridges and public transportation to power distribution, air traffic control and communications systems is badly in need of overhaul; an aging population has thrown our retirement and healthcare systems into crisis; the basic and applied scientific research funding needed to maintain our leadership position internationally has been tailing off, and a reliance on private funding has …

  • For health insurance companies, a moment of truth

    The Globe has done a fine job covering Bernie Sanders’ introduction of a single payer plan and its practical and political implications, with one exception. By all accounts, current insurance providers are doing just fine under the Affordable Care Act, but they have done little to ensure its survival by increasingly focusing their services on the more profitable regions while threatening to pull out of rural and low-income areas. Given the possibility of a Democratic party takeover of both houses …

  • The President’s Blind Spot

    President Trump doesn’t understand the nature of public service. On the apprentice and in his business, the people under him are driven by personal ambition, whereas most public servants are driven by mission. If you fire the department head in your company, the next in line will get the message and come into line, but for many in public service, the mission is more important than promotion or personal gain. That’s why the FBI Deputy Director contradicted Trump’s assertion that …

  • Kidding Ourselves

    During a wonderful lunch today with Dennis McCrory, the original psych rehab psychiatrist and long-time consultant to the Massachusetts Rehabilitation Commission, he asked what I thought of MRC, our federal/state rehabilitation agency, and I, of course, digressed, sharing thoughts that had been occupying my mind for the previous week, just waiting for someone to come along and make them relevant.

    During our careers, early on in mine, two models of community day programming for people with psychiatric conditions dominated: day …

  • Why Writers Read: Thoughts on Creativity and Craft

    OK, so this may sound silly. Of course, writers need to read, and they do. It’s what they get out of reading that has me thinking. As I’ve gotten more serious about my own writing, and been inspired by examples from writing classes, I’ve returned to reading more serious writers. Studying that kind of literary writing, the best examples of the craft, must be helpful to my own, right? Well, in some respects, but maybe not as much as I’d …