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Letters

  • Published
    July 17, 2015

    Letter to the editor: Ramadan’s teachings transcend one faith

    We are concluding Ramadan, a time of reflection for Muslims worldwide, and I have recently reflected on my own life. When Ramadan began last month, my husband and I received the results of medical tests. The latest tests confirmed I remain cancer-free. I found myself pondering Ramadan, the holiest time of the year. During the […]

  • Published
    July 17, 2015

    Letter to the editor: Prosecute, detain swatters lest their idiocy spread

    Now that we have had at least three “swatting” incidents in Maine, I am hoping beyond hope that at least one of the people committing these crimes is caught and bears the full brunt of the judicial system. Throw the book at them. I think that the severe punishment handed down to the first caught […]

  • Published
    July 17, 2015

    Letter to the editor: Governor must be oblivious to his own character flaws

    In defense of his interference with Mark Eves’ hiring by the Good Will-Hinckley organization, Gov. Paul LePage has detailed what he believes are the lack of qualifications and skills that make Speaker Eves unfit to lead the organization. In doing so, I think he opens himself up to the same kind of analysis. Did a […]

  • Published
    July 16, 2015

    Letter to the editor: Doctors deserve gratitude for writing about climate change

    As a 60-year member of the Maine Medical Association, may I express my delight, and also congratulate Drs. Lisa Ryan and Daniel Oppenheim for finally bringing MMA into a leadership position regarding the changes in our climate, as indicated in their July 11 op-ed (“Maine Voices: Denial, delay by fossil fuel industry have slowed action […]

  • Published
    July 16, 2015

    Letter to the editor: Clarifying tipped-wage credit and its impact on Portland

    Based on the Portland Press Herald’s recommendation to increase the tipped credit wage (“Our View: Portland should leave tipped-wage hike as is,” July 11) – as well as several letters to the editor – there seems to be a misunderstanding of the tipped-wage credit and its effect on Portland’s recently approved minimum wage of $10.10 per […]

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  • Published
    July 16, 2015

    Letter to the editor: It’s time to take on issues that ‘little people’ face

    I am a 57-year-old adult. I am gay. I lived most of my life trying to live in the hetero world. I was brought up in a Christian family. I loved my church until I found that gays were sinners. When you believe that God is an all-loving God, how sad is that? As U.S. […]

  • Published
    July 16, 2015

    Letter to the editor: There are actions we can take to help protect birds

    Re: “Letter to the editor: A backyard once full of birds is strangely silent this year” (July 10): Here are some reasons for the writer’s observation about missing birds: At this time of year, the courtship of spring quiets down a bit, as many broods have fledged. Yet among the reasons for an overall decline […]

  • Published
    July 16, 2015

    Letter to the editor: Zoning has protected historic Yarmouth

    The recent front-page story “Yarmouth loosens leash on growth” (July 13) left me uneasy. Though I understand the economics behind diversifying the tax base in the wake of changes at Wyman Station, as a multi-decade resident of the area who grew up in Cumberland, I hope Yarmouth town planners do not become shortsighted at relaxed […]

  • Published
    July 15, 2015

    Letter to the editor: All need to agree that lives are more important than guns

    Mental illness, combined with readily accessible legal automatic weapons, is the absolute formula for another Columbine and Sandy Hook massacre. An all-consuming hatred of blacks plus the capability of purchasing a legal weapon on the open market resulted in the senseless deaths of nine innocent worshipers in a Charleston church of God. The consequence of […]

  • Published
    July 15, 2015

    Letter to the editor: A protector of children
 and an act of indifference

    By the time the Nazis closed the border in 1939, terminating the program, 669 children, most of them Jewish, had been safely transported to England. I also read a few days ago that the Legislature had overridden Gov. Le-Page’s veto of L.D. 1017 (the Maine Parentage Act) – the product of over a decade’s work […]