THE CONVERSATION — Less than 24 hours after the mutiny began, it was over. As the rebelling Wagner column bore down on Moscow, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko brokered a deal under which Russian President Vladimir Putin promised to drop criminal charges against the mercenary leader Yevgeny Prigozhin and allow him to seek asylum in Belarus. The departing Wagner troops […]
Times Record Opinion
Columns and opinion news from the Times Record.
Andrew Rabbe: Politicians shouldn’t control our power
This November, we are voting on the Pine Tree Power referendum — a proposal to seize the state’s utilities and create a state-run power authority. Take it from someone who worked for the government-owned electric utility on Long Island, New York: putting politicians in charge of the power grid is a really bad idea. I […]
Gordon L. Weil: A tale of two ‘witch hunts’
It looks like the same thing is happening on both sides of the Atlantic. Or maybe not. In the U.K., the country’s political leader has been forced from office for lying about his own lawbreaking. In the U.S., the country’s once and possibly future political leader faces criminal charges for lying about his own lawbreaking. […]
John L. Micek: Can radical pragmatism win the White House?
Progressives might not be thrilled about it, but President Joe Biden, who will be the oldest American president to seek re-election, is just the kind of candidate that Democrats need to hold onto the White House and to expand their ranks on Capitol Hill in 2024. That’s the message from Will Marshall, the president of […]
Letters to the editor: Let’s get moving on the Merrymeeting Trail
Trail tech I want to highlight an important new technology that will greatly increase the use of the proposed Merrymeeting Trail for recreation, for tourism, and most importantly, for commuting. That technology is e-bicycles, bicycles that work both with regular pedaling and with supplemental electric power when needed. This technology is revolutionizing the distances that […]
Danny Tyree: Did someone say ‘cataracts’?
“Because I could not stop for cataracts, they kindly stopped for me.” Someday I hope to find time to luxuriate in the collected works of poets such as Emily Dickinson – on paper, not as an audiobook — so my ears perked up when my recent eye exam revealed the early stages of cataracts in […]
Just a Little Old: In praise of diversity and inclusion
In my day as a student in the early 1960s, Bowdoin College was a bastion of homogeneity. My class of 200 men included, as I recall, two African Americans, two Asian Americans and zero Hispanics. We had more students from my own high school in Delaware (three) than from the states of California, Florida, Washington […]
Tom Purcell: Good luck paying Uncle Sam’s debt
The national debt broke the $32 trillion barrier this week. It’s a number so huge it’s incomprehensible to the average citizen. We knew $32 trillion was coming. It just got here a lot faster than the money experts thought, thanks to the roughly $5 trillion that the feds spent to help people and businesses withstand […]
The Maine Idea: Dems AWOL as Republicans take charge
Last week, as the Legislature lurched toward adjournment of its bill-packed session, a moment of extraordinary clarity occurred: Republicans, in a major surprise, announced a solution to the longstanding problem of an underfunded highway budget. As anyone who follows the state budget knows, Maine DOT funding has been a basket case ever since former […]
The Conversation: As Ukraine takes the fight to Russians, signs of unease in Moscow over war’s progress
THE CONVERSATION — Whether or not the Ukraine counteroffensive that began in early June 2023 succeeds in dislodging Russian troops from occupied territory, there are growing signs that the push has prompted anxiety back in Moscow. Such unease was, I believe, detectable in Russian President Vladimir Putin’s meeting on June 13 with a group of influential military bloggers – […]
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