Maine Voices
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PublishedFebruary 11, 2020
Maine Voices: Work permits for asylum applicants? Slow down
We need more data on how long it takes most refugees to make enough in wages to support their families without taxpayers' help.
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PublishedFebruary 10, 2020
Maine Voices: Polio survivor urges ‘no’ vote on Question 1
No new medical advance has prevented more suffering than the increased use of vaccines.
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PublishedFebruary 9, 2020
Maine Voices: Questions about arc of racial justice arise on drive through Georgia
With enough will and unity, equity is difficult but not unattainable, an African American former Mainer says.
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PublishedFebruary 8, 2020
Maine Voices: Poisoned bait kills more than mice
Dogs and cats, foxes, bobcats, hawks, eagles and owls all are at risk of death if they eat poisoned rodents.
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PublishedFebruary 7, 2020
Maine Voices: On climate change, Portland says one thing and does another
The approval of the massive mixed-use 58 Fore St. project is the latest decision at odds with the city's pledges to work toward a low-carbon economy.
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PublishedFebruary 5, 2020
Maine Voices: Growing number of doctors coming out in favor of universal care
The nation's second-largest physicians group backs single-payer or a public option, and the AMA has quit an anti-reform coalition.
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PublishedFebruary 4, 2020
Maine Voices: In defense of hillbilly religion, and regular folks of simple faith
A recent jibe by NBC's Chuck Todd is the latest salvo in the half-century assault on the intellectual respectability of religious belief.
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PublishedFebruary 3, 2020
Maine Voices: Prostate cancer is not ‘the good cancer’
It is wrong to presume that any cancer is anything but a fearful occurrence in one’s life.
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PublishedFebruary 1, 2020
Maine Voices: Mental health care system continues to abandon the people who need it
This system has already deprived my father of a purposeful life. Now it has failed the clients of Shalom House.
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PublishedJanuary 30, 2020
Maine Voices: Tipping point on climate action likely to be later rather than sooner
History shows that in most cases, a destructive human activity is halted only after great harm has already been done.
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