Keyword search: Letter to the Editors
Federal law enforcement agents, pledged to protect and serve. They whisk away a student for her opinions and associations. Hiding behind masks, are they ashamed, afraid, or both? Dishonorable, disgraceful and alarming. We are better than this. This cannot stand.
President Donald Trump campaigned on a promise of deporting gangsters, thugs, and drug-dealing criminals. Closing the border was the promise of keeping those threats from entering again. How is it working? We cannot know since those arrested and deported are denied access to the very truth-finding legal processes enacted into law by our representatives in Congress.
I’m so sad that Beaver Brook will soon no longer be a golf course. I started playing there when I was a kid. Bub Tiley was the manager and Jack Toski was the pro. I was very fortunate to get many golf lessons from Jack (at no charge). I’ve seen some wonderful wildlife, such as bears, deer, coydogs, minks, heron, egrets, turtles and a wide variety of birds. I even saw a doe give birth to her baby right by the eighth hole! I really loved playing golf there and meeting a lot of wonderful people. I wish it didn’t have to go.
Today’s Republican Party, committed to unpopular policies, shackled to an increasingly unpopular president and his billionaire co-president, is taking voter suppression strategies to ever greater lengths. Rather than implement policies of which voters approve, the Republican strategy is to eliminate as many voters as possible by creating obstacles to voter registration.
The Feb. 22 opinion page of the Gazette displayed an illustration depicting our president as a fierce dog with nobody holding his leash [letter, “Hell hath no fury like a narcissist scorned”].
In the space of about a month, we’ve heard about: invading Mexico and Panama, and taking over Greenland and Canada; ethnic cleansing and “owning” Gaza; withdrawal from the Paris climate accords; beginning peace negotiations with Russia over Ukraine without Ukraine’s leaders; withdrawal from NATO; trade wars with allies; and J.D. Vance and Musk’s support of neo-Nazi groups in Germany
Nothing new under the sun: The Doge of Venice acted as both the head of state and head of the Venetian oligarchy. Doges were elected for life through a complex voting process.
One of worst aspects of the current political zeitgeist is the ascension of bullies into unchecked power. Tough guy Trump and Macho Musk have made the Oval Office into a middle school playground, preying on the weak.
Our new “dictator for a day” — stretching it to almost a month now — has already made less safe roads, airways, medicines, drinking water, schools, media and groceries, all while propelling eggs toward $12 a dozen.
Waiting for craven legislators or beholden Supreme Court justices to put the brakes on Donald Trump, and his band of opportunist miscreants? It isn’t going to happen.
The president has subcontracted the work of the legislative and executive branches to tech oligarch Elon Musk, who is dismantling agencies created and funded by our elected members of Congress. It’s not about reform or efficiency, but destruction.
The headline for Stephen Fox’s Jan. 30 guest column was bleak: “Just not ready for clean energy future.” I was encouraged, though, that he called himself a climate change believer and conservationist. Then I read on and was discouraged by outdated and misleading information.
Deb Henson’s Feb. 15 column [“Northampton mayor, council fail to heed our priority — Schools,” Feb. 14) made two significant assertions that are not supported by the facts.
In his guest column “Just Not Ready for Clean Energy Future” [Jan. 30], Stephen Fox identifies himself as a climate change believer and conservationist but then engages in fear-mongering about the transition to renewable energies.
Studies reveal the mental health of Americans is deteriorating, and this deterioration is sure to increase as a result of witnessing Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu declare that Gaza will be taken over and the Palestinians will be removed so it can be turned into a world-class beach resort.
So many of us feel an urgent need to do something right now even as we simultaneously feel powerless. In fact, there are things we can do — many powerful things. Culturally, we tend to value big, grand actions, but small acts add up in ways we cannot know.
Richard Fein’s Jan. 27 column “Can anything good happen with Trump?” is worrisome. Not since Vichy France have I read such an apologist piece.
I wanted go congratulate the Gazette on the splendid editorial cartoon in the Oct. 22 edition, “Would you like lies with that?”Our tense pre-election time is not easy to live through. I was a child in Nazi Germany. My father, an American citizen,...
As most of you probably know, next year South Hadley will switch from using regular trash barrels to ones that the trash truck can pick up and automatically dump. Hopefully, we can keep the amount of plastic thrown away in this changeover to a...
By ANN DARLING
Buried in Section 73 of Gov. Maura Healey’s supplemental 2024 budget is an interesting little tidbit, a new definition of “clean energy generation.” In this bill, clean energy now includes, among other things, “nuclear power generation that is...
Growing up Jewish in Massachusetts, the topic of the Holocaust was one explored and discussed frequently, both at Hebrew school and also in the public schools I attended. I was haunted by the story of Anne Frank, and by the images of the skeletal...
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