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letters to the editor

WAVES OF DISEASE

Almost exactly a year ago was the world’s worst natural disaster, when a giant tsunami extinguished the lives of nearly 200,000 people in Indonesia, Thailand, India, Sri Lanka, and other countries on the Indian Ocean.

Yet, each year, seven times as many Americans die of heart disease, stroke, cancer, and other chronic killer diseases that have been linked conclusively with consumption of meat and dairy products. Meat consumption also dumps animal waste in our waterways, destroys wildlife habitats to grow animal feed, and tortures innocent animals in factory farms and slaughterhouses.

Because of the many benefits it brings to us and our planet, let’s make a New Year’s resolution to replace meat and dairy products in our diet with wholesome, delicious, vegetables, fresh fruits, and whole grains. With every supermarket featuring a large variety of these foods, as well a rich assortment of soy-based veggie burgers, soy dogs, deli slices, ready-to-eat frozen dinners, and soy milk and ice cream, it’s got to be the easiest resolution we’ll ever keep.

Payton Barnard
Portland

THE INACCESSIBLE SENATOR

Olympia Snowe’s refusal to meet with members of the Maine majority who recognize that the Iraq war was born of deliberate fraud and has become a bloodbath for Iraqis worse than anything Saddam Hussein visited on his own people (see "Visitors Sent Packing," by Sara Donnelly, December 23) is unsurprising.

(1) Olympia Snowe has supported every war conceived in Republican Washington since Ronald Reagan’s proxy contra terror in Nicaragua (seven by my count), this one, she acknowledged in a conference call with peace activists, because she just did not know what to believe. So she went with the logical gymnast in the White House who, faced with years of inspections finding no weapons of mass destruction, demanded that Hussein prove a negative.

(2) Snowe does not meet with peace folk, whether they are the majority, as during the contra terror and now, or not. She prosecuted one poor Aroostook County fellow for sitting in her office when she repeatedly refused him a meeting about the contras. Jerry Genesio, a founder of Veterans for Peace, caught her in a Congressional office building corridor and was invited in, then out when he mentioned the thousands of innocent civilian victims of the contras. She declared that she would not listen to sentimental arguments, Genesio reported.

Snowe’s Portland aide, Cheryl Leeman, is a hospitable and attentive listener to delegations wanting to meet with Snowe, but she cannot answer questions directed to Snowe.

Like former senator Bill Cohen, Snowe does not reflect the views of the majority of the Maine citizenry. Cohen was re-elected on charm. Given her inaccessibility, the Iron Lady’s security in Washington is something of a puzzle.

William H. Slavick
Portland

Latest Articles

Abused by the system

Letters to the Portland Editor, December 18, 2009
It is a Godsend to read the article "Stopping Abuse," by Deirdre Fulton, in the October 16 issue. I personally have been dealing with abuse most of my life.
By PORTLAND PHOENIX LETTERS  |  December 16, 2009

Palin's appeal

Letters to the Boston editor, December 18, 2009
I was disappointed in your editorial on Sarah Palin. However, I cannot say I was surprised by it.
By BOSTON PHOENIX LETTERS  |  December 16, 2009

Sin tax

Letters to the Boston editor, December 11, 2009
Among other things, your editorial calling for the Catholic Church to be punitively taxed for its anti-abortion lobbying suffers from a breathtaking lack of inconsistency.
By BOSTON PHOENIX LETTERS  |  December 09, 2009

Suspect principles

Letters to the Boston editor, November 20, 2009
I was disappointed that the Phoenix chose to describe Attorney General Martha Coakley’s stand against the health-care bill recently passed by the House of Representatives as “principled.”
By BOSTON PHOENIX LETTERS  |  November 18, 2009

Time for law to end torture

Letters to the Portland Editor, September 18, 2009
In a collaborative effort between human-rights activists and incarcerated Mainers, a bill to end the use and abuse of solitary confinement has been drafted and will be submitted to legislators soon.
By PORTLAND PHOENIX LETTERS  |  September 16, 2009

Letters to the Editor: August 28, 2009

Letters to the Portland Editor
The venting of wind-power skeptics in the Phoenix piece " What's Wrong With Wind Power " (by Deirdre Fulton, August 21) really misses a major point — global warming. When we finally get down to grappling with dangerous climate disruption all forms of non-carbon emitting power will rise.
By PORTLAND PHOENIX LETTERS  |  August 26, 2009

Letters to the Portland editor: May 1, 2009

Loving Maine
Is Rick Wormwood an inbred Maineiac as some would speculate?
By PORTLAND PHOENIX LETTERS  |  April 29, 2009

Mountains, not windmills

Portland Phoenix Letters: February 27, 2009
I just read your article (" Transmission Troubles ," by Deirdre Fulton, February 13) in the Portland Phoenix, great article.
By Portland Phoenix Letters  |  February 25, 2009

Changing the face of art

Letters to the Boston editor, February 13, 2009
Why are artists getting the shaft?
By BOSTON PHOENIX LETTERS  |  February 11, 2009

Artists and beholders

Letters to the Boston editor, February 6, 2009
I found it rather stupefying that the Phoenix proudly toted an interview with Shepard Fairey on the same front page it used to complain about artists getting the shaft by money-grubbing businesses.
By BOSTON PHOENIX LETTERS  |  February 06, 2009

Batter up

January 30, 2009
When I saw your cover about shaking up sports, I thought, "Cool idea." Then, I opened up the paper and saw that your first idea was a salary cap for baseball.
By BOSTON PHOENIX LETTERS  |  January 28, 2009

Battle stars

  January 23, 2009
Has the Phoenix lost its collective mind?
By BOSTON PHOENIX LETTERS  |  January 21, 2009

An accidentally tragic timeline

Letters to the Boston editor, December 12, 2008
Your “Terror Masala” article, unintentionally of course, is very timely in view of the atrocities in Mumbai.
By BOSTON PHOENIX LETTERS  |  December 10, 2008

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