Think about the lasting effects gun violence can have on Americans. That brief moment when someone opens fire at a school, a restaurant or in the mall, and people die while others are traumatized by what they hear and see. Shootings over the last years have sparked a debate on gun control in the United […]
American Journal Opinion
Mainewhile: The many moving parts in the Ukraine invasion
Pick an image, any image, coming out of Ukraine right now and it will break your heart. People evacuating the city with their pets, young couples preparing to defend their homes, the soldier who gave his life to detonate a bridge, the older woman who defied invading Russian soldiers. Heartbreaking, every one. If, for some […]
Life Unwound: Look up to keep from feeling down
I pick up the phone on what my Florida friends say is a miserable, cold, Maine winter day. My good friend, my age, says, “I’m in the ER with my husband. He woke up with no memory of anything that happened last month. The doctors suspect a stroke.” I say, “I am so sorry. I […]
Forum: Now that we know better, we’d better act
I never met my grandfather. He died quickly from cancer. Maybe curable today. He left his wife, my mom and her little brother in this world back in 1957. Mom would tell us “he was so hard-working, and kind, and a community leader.” One of my seven siblings would cut her off: “Yeah, yeah, Mom, […]
Sustainably Speaking: PassivHaus is proactive when it comes to energy loss
If your house is like mine, it is an inefficient envelope that loses heat through windows, walls, roof and basement. According to the Maine Climate Council’s “Maine Won’t Wait” executive summary, given that 72% of a building’s energy is devoted to heating it, energy loss is a big problem in Maine, where winters are cold […]
Mainewhile: Why can’t we take a spin with style?
Presidents Day is a strange holiday. It began as a day to commemorate George Washington and Abraham Lincoln but seems to be mostly about sales and big bargains. Ads, flyers, giant banners flapping in the wind. All the stores join the action, but the big daddy, the apex predator if you will, is undoubtedly the […]
Through My Lens: Immigrants’ objectives should not be politicized
As a columnist and a public speaker, it is not easy to live a normal life. Anything I write to defend my community or speak the truth irritates some people. A column I wrote in January to celebrate the first-ever Muslim and Somali immigrant elected to lead as the mayor of a city in Maine […]
Mainewhile: Historic Black designers knew how to dress for success
I have a guilty secret. This isn’t something I admit too often – and it certainly isn’t something you’d guess by looking at me – but I have an absolute weakness for fashion. My one and only request at Christmas was the book “How to Read a Dress.” I had two copies under the tree. To […]
Mainewhile: Celebrating the shout of joy that was Ashley Bryan
If you, like me, have ever had the great good fortune to spend even so much as a single afternoon out on Cranberry Island, then the odds are very high that you, like me, had the great good fortune to be invited into the home of Ashley Bryan. Because that is what Ashley did. He […]
Here’s Something: COVID lockdown story points to media’s failings
A newly released study overseen by an economics professor at Johns Hopkins University comes to the same conclusion that many have been saying for the duration of the pandemic – lockdowns are unprecedented government overreach and next to useless. The study, released last week, found that government-imposed lockdowns and shelter-in-place emergency orders in the early […]