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Letters to the Editor
  • Published
    April 8, 2011

    ‘Gardasil is a different ball game’ of vaccines

    In response to “Vaccines given early protect later, when needed” (letter, March 26), Marty Soule defends the use of Gardasil. She says, “Immunization given early in life allows our immune system to prepare so that it can protect us from disease later in life.” This may be true in some vaccines, but Gardasil is a […]

  • Published
    April 8, 2011

    Have we created a monster in LePage?

    As far as I’m concerned, politics has gone full swing back to the 1800s, the days of bullies, innuendos and half-baked ideas. Back then, a good candidate, the one welcomed by those looking for changes and who didn’t care how the changes came about, had everyone’s attention. With that attention, the candidate could say anything […]

  • Published
    April 8, 2011

    Children saved lives of kittens left to die

    Two children saved lives tonight. Two beautiful kittens were put in a Sunkist 12-pack box wrapped in blue duct tape and left to die at Oosoola Park here in Norridgewock. The kittens had no water, food or any chance of survival against the cold night had it not been for these kids. I would like […]

  • Published
    April 8, 2011

    Government money used for mural, but not war heroes

    In years past, I was asked and did donate to the Vietnam memorial and the World War II memorial. Government money could not be used to honor our war heroes. Today, I see that government money was used to pay to honor unions with a mural at the expense of the 75 percent of open-shop […]

  • Published
    April 8, 2011

    O’Keefe goes undercover to expose agencies’ fraud

    I disagree with David B. Offer’s assessment of James O’Keefe. Offer says it is unfair that O’Keefe goes undercover, as was the case with Acorn and now NPR. I’m fine with O’Keefe. With his undercover work, he is exposing the fraud that lies within these agencies. Let’s think back to the Acorn unveilings in which […]

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  • Published
    April 8, 2011

    Did LePage really have authority to remove mural?

    Gov. Paul LePage — yikes! It appears that some letters to the governor moved the mountain. These complaints managed to bring about an order by Maine’s leader to remove the 11-panel mural that recently hung in the lobby of the Maine Department of Labor. This artwork depicted the history of labor struggles in Maine and […]

  • Published
    April 8, 2011

    Tax policy hasn’t worked, should be changed

    Joseph Reisert’s column on March 25, “Pain from budget cuts inevitable, but do we have a choice?” misses the mark entirely. He claims that there really is no alternative to our governor’s proposed budget. That budget would cut state employee benefits, “reform the state’s welfare programs” (which apparently is another way of describing huge cuts […]

  • Published
    April 8, 2011

    Businesses need labor, just as labor needs businesses

    I would like to suggest that Gov. Paul LePage replace the murals in the Department of Labor with those giving the “business” point of view. May I suggest one of the Ludlow Mine strike in 1914, with the National Guard shooting women and children, or the Columbine Mine massacre by the local militia in 1927. […]

  • Published
    April 8, 2011

    Tourists boycott places they find politically offensive

    Gov. Paul LePage has been very efficient in the number of people he has managed to offend with a single decree. In taking down the mural in the Department of Labor depicting events from the history of labor in Maine, he has offended artists, historians, labor activists, union members, art historians and many of us […]

  • Published
    April 8, 2011

    Wondering if LePage was person offended by mural

    Gov. Paul LePage’s remarks and actions remind me of “The Emperor’s New Clothes,” the classic fairy tale meant to teach a lesson about honesty, integrity and truth. The emperor wants to believe he is smarter, better than all of us, that we will be intimidated to admit that we don’t see what is right. Even […]