Wednesday, October 30, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Commentary

Opinion: How to Unleash the Power of the Asian American Vote in Md.

Before the 2020 elections, conventional wisdom, including among Maryland candidates, was that “Asian Americans do not vote.” In fact, half of Asian American registered voters polled nationally in September 2020 reported that neither major political party contacted them. What a mistake. In 2020, the Asian American vote surged because we took our own communities to the ballot box. From individual efforts like award-winning author R.O. Kwon’s nationwide phone banking events to concerted voter drives by newer organizations like Georgia’s Asian American Advocacy Fund, Asian and Pacific Islander voters increased by over 47% compared to 2016’s turnout. It’s a significant jump compared to all other voters, whose turnout increased by 12%. And this jump in voters was beyond the margin of victory in key races.

Opinion: Protecting and broadening Maryland’s access to abortion care

The Supreme Court in Dobbs held there is no constitutional right to abortion. From now on, federal courts will apply a deferential level of review and uphold most state bans or restrictions. What does this mean for people in Maryland? While much has been said about Maryland’s abortion-protective laws, more needs to be done to ensure long-lasting protection. Many states have banned or are poised to ban abortion with severely limited exceptions. Anti-abortion groups are drafting proposed state laws to preclude residents from accessing abortion care in other states.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Opinion: Baltimore’s ticking time bomb: uninvestigated animal cruelty cases

In the aftermath of devastating massacres in New York and Texas, officials have scrambled to determine what warning signs were overlooked. While multiple factors may drive individuals to become mass shooters, one common denominator has emerged from both cases: a history of animal cruelty. Alleged Buffalo shooter Payton Gendron boasted he had decapitated a cat with a hatchet, after stabbing it and smashing its head. Similarly, suspected Uvalde shooter Salvador Ramos tortured cats and displayed videos of the torture on social media. The link between animal cruelty and human violence is common knowledge.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Fall Sunset Closes the Busy Day
Can a $40 fine save lives? Experience suggests it will

Drivers, start your checkbooks. Or possibly your credit cards. Efforts to return the Jones Falls Expressway — aka the Baltimore City Raceway — into something resembling the reliable and safe commuter highway it was intended to be get revved up tomorrow as those long-awaited speed enforcement cameras get their long-awaited teeth. Instead of merely observing speeders on the 8-mile city stretch of Interstate 83, owners of vehicles caught traveling 12 miles per hour or more above the posted limit will get a $40 ticket in the mail.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Supreme Court gun ruling likely to clarify permitting process, but also put guns in hands of unprepared people

The Supreme Court’s 6-3 landmark ruling allowing citizens to carry a firearm in public for self-defense creates a tipping point in Maryland that not only threatens to accelerate gun sales, but put them in the hands of a public woefully unprepared to make life and death decisions. The case, New York State Rifle and Pistol Association v. Bruen, reversed New York regulations that required anyone who wanted to carry a firearm to demonstrate a “proper cause” as to why they should be allowed to.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Baltimore County state’s attorney primary a choice about what kind of crime should be prosecuted

For 15 years, Baltimore County has been satisfied with their self-proclaimed tough-on-crime prosecutor, State’s Attorney Scott Shellenberger. But a former public defender believes the county is ready to embrace the progressive approach toward crime and punishment seen elsewhere in the country and has launched the first primary challenge against the Democratic incumbent since he was first elected in 2006.

Bret Stephens: Keep czars far away, in Moscow or Mar-a-Lago

A great-grandfather on my mother’s side had a big mouth. The trait seems to run in the family. Ivan Grodzensky — his first name was Israel before he Russified it — was living a prosperous life in Moscow in 1914 when he was overheard at a restaurant denouncing Czar Nicholas II for getting Russia involved in World War I. The czarist secret police imprisoned him, but he got out.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
This shot makes me thirsty! I love how this shot turned out. I was about 10 meters above the ground with my Mavic Pro. This is a small winery in the mid-Willamette Valley outside Salem, Oregon. This is one of the biggest wine-producing areas in the country and it makes for some wonderful evening drone flights.
Opinon: Maryland’s stealthy new tax on small farms

The war in Ukraine, the COVID-19 pandemic and the shortage of baby formula highlight the fragility of the food supply. Regrettably, as the consequences of climate change threaten even more devastating disruption, higher property taxes — implemented without public comment, court order or legislative support — further jeopardize Maryland’s ability to feed its residents. Agriculture is risky, especially for families living and working on small farms. Most farms in the United States report losses each year. Moreover, agriculture faces enormous weather-related challenges and requires significant capital investment.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Opinion: The vaccines were a biomedical triumph. They reached too few.

Stop and reflect on the success of the coronavirus vaccines. While most vaccines take five to 10 years to develop and manufacture, the remarkable mRNA shots appeared in less than a year. They were safe, efficacious, free, and dramatically reduced serious illness and death, one of the great biomedical achievements of all time. Yet their results could have been even better. A study by Oliver J. Watson and colleagues at the MRC Centre for Global Infectious Disease Analysis at Imperial College London, published June 23 in the Lancet, sheds light on the scope of the achievement.

Rodricks: Four suggestions for reducing tensions, creating jobs for Baltimore’s squeegee workers

One Friday evening last November, a man stepped out of a minivan on President Street and beat a young squeegee worker bloody with a small wooden bat. Brandon Mead, a Baltimore attorney, witnessed the attack. “Clearly, this guy was ready for it,” Mead told me, referring to the white, middle-aged driver of the van, which had Pennsylvania plates. Mead heard the man yell. He saw him get out of the van and raise the bat against a Black teenage boy. The boy raised a squeegee in defense, but his attacker swung the club, broke the squeegee, then struck the boy in the face. The boy went down in front of Mead’s car.

Read More: Baltimore Sun

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