Thursday, October 31, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Commentary

Opinion: FBI to Baltimore area businesses: Partner with us to protect against cyberattacks

There is an increasing urgency for U.S. companies and organizations to partner with the FBI to effectively protect their information, technology, trade secrets and research from the growing cyber threat. Over the past several years, cybercriminal’s use of ransomware has had the most visible, direct impact on industries the U.S. government considers critical infrastructure. Their assets, systems and networks are so vital, losing them would debilitate national security, economic security and public health or safety. Nothing appears to be off-limits for these cybercriminals, including children’s hospitals. Ransomware is exactly what it sounds like — hackers stealing someone’s data and holding it hostage for payment.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
US Dollars
Student debt: Biden’s imperfect plan triggers mountain of resentment

There are any number of legitimate criticisms of President Joe Biden’s effort to cancel student debt for tens of millions of Americans, from how the potential $300 billion cost could prove inflationary to the likelihood that he has overstepped his legal authority. It’s not even clear how much the plan unveiled Wednesday will help families truly staggering under the weight of government-backed loans and how much will wind up in the pockets of people who can afford to make payments as they journey further on their degree-buoyed professional career tracks.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Marc Elrich must do better in his second term

Montgomery County Executive Marc Elrich has fended off challengers for his job in the Democratic primary, all but guaranteeing him a second term as the top local elected official in Maryland’s most populous locality. He won by a gossamer margin, beating his closest rival, businessman David Blair, by fewer than three dozen votes out of more than 141,000 cast. His victory was hard-fought and legitimate — it took election officials more than a month, including a recount, to tally the ballots.

Rodricks: Republican Dan Cox says Democrat Wes Moore would be a ‘woke governor.’ Good.

I broke from my wellness regimen and opened an account on Truth Social, Donald Trump’s social media platform. I did this as a public service, just to follow Dan Cox, the Republican candidate for governor of Maryland who thinks the 2020 presidential election was stolen from the nation’s leading hoarder of top-secret documents. Cox went on Truth Social the other day and posted a meme that said, “Maryland Does Not Need A Woke Governor.”

Read More: Baltimore Sun
The new school year is a good time for all ages to get caught up on vaccinations

Even though more than 12 million Marylanders have received at least one COVID-19 vaccination, immunization rates for other communicable illnesses have dropped, leaving particularly vulnerable communities — such as children, college students and seniors — susceptible to a host of preventable illnesses. With Maryland students returning to classrooms this month, this is an important opportunity to ensure that all family members are protected from potentially fatal illnesses, including measles, polio, meningitis and pneumococcal disease.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Opinion: The Maryland Democratic Party in 2022

Black people in Maryland, as is the case around the U.S., are a captured electorate of the Democratic Party. The core of the party, which is dominated by an overwhelmingly white donor class (made up of white corporate and political elites and a multiracial gatekeeper class), has benefited more from Black people’s consistent patronage than Black people have benefited from Democratic Party representation.

For every individual shot in Baltimore, many more are wounded

We spent a few minutes on a recent Saturday evening this month lying behind a car as close as possible to the sidewalk. Moments earlier we had been walking to dinner at a friend’s house a few blocks from our own home in Southwest Baltimore. A car drove by slowly, essentially unnoticed. But immediately after it passed, shots erupted behind us. Someone returned fire. A family with small children moved quickly into their home from the stoop, near where we had been walking. It was over in moments, and there was silence except for the sound of approaching sirens.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Bob Cassilly: Let’s put governance above politics

The partisan polarization and grandstanding rhetoric that face voters today have become more disabling than ever and are distractions from the real-life issues.  They drive us toward politically expedient, impractical, and untested solutions that drain resources and do not improve our quality of life. In this climate, it is vital that county leaders stay focused on the real challenges we face and offer meaningful solutions.  As a sitting Maryland senator and a candidate for Harford County Executive, here are my thoughts on some of those real challenges and some practical solutions:

Jonah Goldberg: The paradox of Trump’s charisma

Donald Trump has a lot of charisma. Let me finish. I do not mean charisma in the colloquial sense of being charming, though he has charmed millions. I’m referring to a style of leadership famously described by the German sociologist Max Weber, who described three forms of authority or leadership: traditional, legal-rational and charismatic. In traditional societies monarchs derive their authority from custom. In modern societies, most leaders — elected or otherwise — are chosen based on their qualifications and expertise and their authority is prescribed by law.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Prescription drugs on an orange background with a pill bottle. Orange pills.
Opinion: Prior authorization requirements harm patients and physicians; FTC must look into drug delaying practice

In June, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) announced they will be launching an inquiry into the practices of the “prescription drug middleman” industry. These middlemen, known as Pharmacy Benefit Managers (PBMs), determine if an insurer will pay for a prescription that is prescribed for a patient. Caremark, ExpressScripts and Optum are some of the familiar gatekeepers and suppliers of medications. The FTC statement reads, “Pharmacy benefit managers are the middlemen who are hired to negotiate rebates and fees with drug manufacturers, create drug formularies and surrounding policies, and reimburse pharmacies for patients’ prescriptions. The largest pharmacy benefits managers are now vertically integrated with the largest health insurance companies and wholly owned mail order and specialty pharmacies.”

Read More: Baltimore Sun

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