Sign In:


columnists
  • Published
    July 31, 2011

    CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER: We’ll get national debate’s verdict in 2012

    We're in the midst of a great four-year national debate on the size and reach of government, the future of the welfare state, indeed, the nature of the social contract between citizen and state. The distinctive visions of the two parties -- social-democratic versus limited-government -- have underlain every debate on every issue since Barack Obama's inauguration: the stimulus, the auto bailouts, health care reform, financial regulation, deficit spending. Everything. The debt ceiling is but the latest focus of this fundamental divide.

  • Published
    July 31, 2011

    RICHARD CONNOR: Captain of the ship needs to take wheel

    Our government, with its checks and balances and need for consensus makes for difficult navigation, even if you are captain of the ship.

  • Published
    July 30, 2011

    DANA MILBANK: Are you with robbers or dirty old men?

    The time has come in the debt-limit fight for all Americans to declare their loyalties: Are you with the bank robbers, or are you with the dirty old men?

  • Published
    July 30, 2011

    MAINE COMPASS: It takes a communal effortto stifle domestic violence

    The tragic results of domestic violence are appearing all too frequently on the pages of our local newspapers and broadcast from our local news stations. These stories are chilling reminders that this is a problem that affects every one of us in some way. Victims are our friends, our neighbors, our coworkers and our relatives. As part of the health care community, we realize too well that domestic violence is a serious health issue. But are we doing enough?

  • Published
    July 29, 2011

    JOSEPH REISERT: We’re all at fault for breakdown of political institutions

    I argued in my last column that our government is becoming dangerously dysfunctional. The showdown over the debt ceiling is only the latest in a series of unnecessary and artificial crises caused by our political leaders, who have irresponsibly turned the ordinary disagreements that constitute democratic politics into occasions for total war. Instead of legislative debates and regular legislative processes that produce outcomes that all sides can live with, we have scorched earth campaigns that result in temporary victories, but inflict lasting damage on our institutions and undermine the public's trust in government.

  • advertisement
  • Published
    July 28, 2011

    ANTHONY RONZIO: Won’t somebody stand up for the facts?

    I was chatting with a friend, a journalist, about a feature story he had just written. I told him it was great, but needed some more supporting data.

  • Published
    July 28, 2011

    COMMUNITY COMPASS: The people of Readfield have already made right decision

    We read with great concern the recent KJ article ("Vote in the works," July 15) about the petition drive to force another vote about the phase-out of the Readfield Public Works Department.

  • Published
    July 27, 2011

    GEORGE SMITH: Trahan’s career year in Augusta is good news for sportsmen

    Sen. David Trahan (R-Lincoln County) had a career year in the legislature during the recently completed session.

  • Published
    July 26, 2011

    MIKE TIPPING: Odds, pollster favored positive response to casino query

    Backers of a new casino proposal in Lewiston should be very happy with the press coverage of the poll they released last week.

  • Published
    July 25, 2011

    MAINE COMPASS: Industrial wind development would spoil region’s natural beauty

    George Smith's recent column stating the mountaintop industrial wind proposal for Bowers Mountain in the Grand Lakes Watershed is no big deal, and that it will not undermine outdoor recreation and tourism, was absurd and defies logic. Then again, Smith should have disclosed that his blog is sponsored in part by First Wind, the developer of Bowers Mountain.