Benghazi could have been a striking example of American resolve. The president chose, unnecessarily, to protect Islam from American free speech instead.

The protected status of ambassadors is an ancient protocol. Even 1,000 years ago, anyone who’d harmed a Mongol ambassador would not have been surprised by the consequences.

Without a reliable explanation for such a serious incident, it seems plausible that our unprotected ambassador died in the ubiquitous crossfire of Islamic North Africa and the Middle East. Washington authorities decided that, so close to an election, they were simply unwilling to send help or publicly amplify the trouble in any way, regardless of the consequences. The ambassador and his brave associates may have paid for that political decision with their lives.

Islam never gets the credit it deserves. It was Islamic traders in the Indian Ocean, and Mongol converts along the old Silk Roads, who introduced Europe to things like numbers, paper, gunpowder, medicine, science and sails. Crusaders came home with knowledge and novelties they’d picked up in the markets of the Middle East.

But Islam is a serious adversary. The greatest threat to Western civilization, the challenger with the most significant differences, who has come the closest to toppling the entire legacy of ancient Greece and Rome, was never Soviet Russia, Nazi Germany or Imperial Japan. It was Islam, on at least four occasions, beginning 1,000 years before America was born.

The significant thing about the president’s deliberate refusal even to acknowledge the 1,400-year-old religious, cultural and political friction between Islam and the West in any world-historical context is willful blindness. It reveals a dangerous absence of critical, strategic thinking.

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If we keep on going with the president’s approach, the price will get steeper and the 1,400-year-old dustup will finally muscle its way into the headlines where it belongs.

Dick Baker

North Yarmouth

 

Maine schools work hard to assist anti-obesity effort

 

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As a former Maine adjutant general, parent and grandparent, it is alarming to read the astronomical figure from a University of Maine researcher who projects that the medical cost of obesity for children and adolescents in Maine could reach over $1.2 billion in the next 20 years.

The news article also states that last year the medical costs of obesity for all age groups in Maine were nearly $453 million. Both the sheer dollar amount, and the projected rate of growth, are reasons for grave concern.

This is more than just a fiscal and health issue, it is a national security issue.

Being overweight is the leading medical reason why young adults cannot serve in the military, which could impact future recruiting efforts.

While there is no silver bullet for combating obesity, I agree with the Institute of Medicine’s assessment that schools are an important partner, along with parents, in a broader effort to promote healthy living to our youth.

That is why I and other retired generals and admirals of the national security nonprofit group called Mission: Readiness support efforts to improve the nutritional quality of foods sold in schools.

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I commend the many schools in Maine that are upgrading their nutritional standards and encourage all schools to join this important effort. We must all act now so that our obesity crisis does not also become a national security crisis.

Earl Adams

major general, U.S. Army (retired)

Pittston

 

Criminalization of pot use lacks logic, compassion

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I found the Nov. 3 Associated Press article on Israel’s marijuana policy very meaningful and, hopefully, instructive (“Marijuana in Israel: Medical pot hot, but not a hot potato”).

It is not surprising that a country founded by a people who lived through the Holocaust would value and appreciate anything that alleviates pain and suffering.

We Americans, however, legalize cigarettes, which kill millions, and alcohol, which destroys lives and families, and yet we demonize and criminalize the use of a natural substance that has been proven to assist with intractable pain and disease-related suffering. Where is our logic and compassion?

Judi Czimbal

Scarborough

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Jesus forgives alleged ‘johns,’ directs them to better path

 

To the gentlemen whose names have been published because of the prostitution case: I understand your pain.

Not because I have been accused of seeing prostitutes, but because I share the experience of having made bad choices and caused myself and those I love hurt and pain. It is a condition common to all of mankind.

The truth is that for every choice we make, there is a consequence of equal magnitude.

That consequence may be immediate, or it may take days, weeks, months or years.

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I have decided that hard consequences are good things.

I discovered this when I realized that I did not have to go through them alone and hopeless.

Jesus came to earth to identify with the hopelessness we experience and to hold out a handful of good news.

The good news is that when we grab hold of Jesus’ hand and invite him into our life and circumstances (he doesn’t come in unless he is invited), he freely gives his forgiveness, guides us through and gives us unexplainable peace – beauty for ashes.

That’s good, but there’s more.

We are all headed for destruction because of all of these bad choices, and Jesus puts a stop to that when we ask him.

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I now cannot remember any consequence that I have walked through that I am not thankful for. And I am free of fear to enjoy life with him without any thoughts of future destruction.

The news is all good!

Embrace your circumstances and find Jesus in the middle of them. You won’t be sorry. He is your way through and the hope of your hopelessness — and your family’s as well.

I have not read your names and have no need to.

I am no different than you.

With all my heart, I say, “May God bless you and himself.”

Judy Mickelson

Bridgton

 


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