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Keyword search: Letter to the Editors

Displaying articles 1 to 20 out of 1265 total.
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Letter: In defense of the Social Security Administration
03-20-2025 10:50 AM

As an estate planning/administration attorney for more decades than I want to admit, I write to provide support for the Social Security Administration. Without a doubt, SSA is the most efficient government agency with which I work. When a person dies, the SSA immediately upon notice of death from a funeral home withdraws that month’s payment. In a timely manner, the SSA notifies the surviving spouse of the benefits they will receive, which is the higher of the husband’s or wife’s monthly benefit. If you have a question, the SSA office actually answers the phone and provides answers to questions. You are treated with respect.


Letter: Rundlett alternatives
03-20-2025 10:50 AM

It now appears there is no expectation of any building aid from the state to partially offset the cost of a new Rundlett Middle School, which would cost approximately $164 million. Previously, School Board deliberations included some level of aid to reduce the total expenditure. With this financial setback, I suggest that the Board pause any further expenditures for the architects until they provide Concord taxpayers with a cheaper alternative for review. It appears the contract with HMFH architects says that “If the District does not receive state funding in the next bi-annual funding cycle (2025-26, 2026-2027), the contract may be paused until such funding is made available for the project.” A pause would allow time for the Board and the people of Concord to explore all possibilities.


Letter: Democrats are organizing better than ever
03-20-2025 10:50 AM

Ever since Donald Trump was inaugurated in January, Democrats have been organizing, mobilizing and working hard to tell the American people the truth. Just this weekend in Concord, hundreds of Democrats and even some independents lined Main Street in front of the State House holding signs and showing which issues matter most, like saving Medicaid, basic freedoms, taking climate action, gun reforms and holding extremists accountable. They were on the streets from morning until evening, waving to voters, protesting peacefully and understanding everyone’s opinions. The Democratic party will continue to organize in New Hampshire to ensure that every voter gets the correct information.


Letter: A Ponzi scheme?
03-20-2025 10:50 AM

Elon Musk, who gets more money from the government than anyone else, called social security a Ponzi scheme on a recent podcast. Nothing could be further from the truth. A Ponzi scheme assumes there are limited investors that will reap the majority of the fraudulent scheme. Social security is a benefit that every taxpayer will at some point in their life be able to use. On the other hand, what is going on is a Pyramid scheme, primarily benefiting the top 10 percent of wealthy individuals and corporations. It started with Reagan’s trickle down theory. The idea is: Let’s give tax breaks to billionaires and corporations, and they will automatically reinvest. What a crock. Tax cuts to the wealthy have been the primary driver of our national debt. Recently, I had to find myself in agreement with Steve Bannon. He is against tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations. In his view, the 2017 tax cuts did not provide any economic boost. These individuals and corporations used the money to fill their own pockets, through stock buybacks and high dividends payments. So now, President Trump wants to continue this Pyramid scheme to the tune of 4 trillion dollars. No strings attached, just collect your money. And what do we get for it all? Absolutely nothing, except for cuts to Medicaid and education because we have to pay for this free handout to billionaires somehow.


Letter: A DOGE by any other name
03-20-2025 10:50 AM

On March 7, for the second time in a row and the second time since President Trump was elected, the redesigned SpaceX starship exploded — or, as SpaceX put it in a sublime example of Orwellian Newspeak, the starship had a “rapid unscheduled disassembly.” Plus, according to the New York Times, it is probable that the same problem that caused the first explosion caused the second one. Yet, the U.S. pays SpaceX billions of dollars for government contracts. I don’t know whether any taxpayer dollars were used to fund the rocket. Even if not, given the latest failure, how about putting SpaceX contracts under DOGE’s axe? Only that, for Elon Musk’s personal use and benefit, “DOGE” means Department of Government Extravagance.


Letter: A lesson for our times
03-20-2025 10:50 AM

The world lost one of its few remaining Holocaust survivors last month when Martin Turski died at age 98. As a teenager, Turski was shipped from Poland’s Lodz ghetto to the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp. His father and brother were killed there. Altogether 39 of his family members were murdered by the Nazis, but Turski miraculously survived, and he dedicated his adult life to warning the world about the danger of indifference to injustice. In 1965, just 20 years after the liberation of Auschwitz, he joined the Selma-to-Montgomery civil rights march led by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Why? In a 2020 interview, he warned: “The 11th Commandment is important: Don’t be indifferent… Do not be indifferent when you see historical lies. Do not be indifferent when any minority is discriminated against. Do not be indifferent when power violates a social contract.”


Letter: Gov. Ayotte's Trump tariff problem
03-20-2025 10:50 AM

Since President Trump has threatened and now imposed tariffs on many goods coming from Canada, I sent Gov. Ayotte a number of emails asking what plans she had to deal with the severe economic impacts these tariffs would have on New Hampshire’s economy. Canada is New Hampshire’s largest trading partner, including lumber, fuel oil, electricity and gasoline. The loss of Canadian tourism is another potentially severe economic problem for New Hampshire.


Letter: No Other Land
03-20-2025 10:50 AM

At the Oscars, delighted cheers went up for the film “No Other Land,” a documentary about an Israeli and a Palestinian sharing friendship and resistance in the West Bank. The Israeli director, Yuvla Abraham, told the crowd, “When I look at Basel, I see my brother. But we are unequal. We live in a regime where I am free under civilian law and Basel is under military laws, that destroy lives.” Co-director Basel Adra has not been free his entire life. The entire population of Gaza, the majority of whom were forced out of their homes generations ago, is not free — not even to flee 2,000 pound bombs. Gazans are not free to go back to their homes. They are not free to go for hospital care. They are not free to sell and buy goods from the rest of the world. Director Abraham continued, “Can’t you see that we are intertwined? That my people can be truly safe only if Basel’s people are truly free and safe?” It is not possible for Israel to enjoy peace while actively denying freedom to occupied Palestine. Abraham knows that Israel has the power and could choose the path to peace for all. As we approach a vote in our senate to send billions more in bombs to blow the people in Gaza and the West Bank to pieces, we can call our senators. Use your voice to show Basel and Yuval that you support safety and peace.


Letter: Remember Title IX, anyone?
03-20-2025 10:50 AM

In 1972, Title IX was signed into law. Over the years, it’s been tweaked and adjusted. Now, both Jeanne Shaheen and Maggie Hassan voted against keeping men out of women’s sports. Common sense says this is not an adjustment Title IX needs. Please, remember when these women run for election again, they care more about an agenda than they do about your daughters.


Letter: Energy independence
03-20-2025 10:50 AM

China is the world leader in the manufacturing and export of wind turbines, solar panels and electric vehicles. They’re investing in the infrastructure necessary to support EV markets. Tesla currently has a project under construction, building a 50-acre battery manufacturing plant larger than Boeings facility in Seattle with the help of the Chinese government. The strategy is to strengthen the energy storage business by creating the largest battery manufacturing facility in the world. The U.S., in the opposite move has pulled out of all environmental organizations, canceled tax incentives, halted leases for offshore wind farms ready to start construction after years of delays and programs designed to reduce our dependence on fossil fuels. I guess this is one area the U.S. doesn’t want to be number one.


Letter: My child's transness is a tiny part of who they are, and a part of them that I love deeply
03-20-2025 10:48 AM

While testifying against anti-trans healthcare bans, a piece of my testimony was quoted by the Concord Monitor and WMUR saying “Why would I want this for my child?” I want to be clear that what I never wanted for my child was the hate, vitriol and political attacks aimed at them and other trans, intersex and gender non-conforming people. My trans child has given our family a wonderful gift. We are more comfortable in our skins and in the ways we don’t meet impossible standards of the gender binary. We are more understanding and are more willing to seek to understand. We are fiercer and more likely to stand with those being marginalized and most importantly- we have more love because we have created an amazing community for ourselves. My child’s transness is a tiny part of who they are, and a part of them that I love deeply. Having a trans child is not what brought me to tears at the State House, having a trans child who is being demeaned, threatened and attacked by our local and federal government is. My child deserves to play sports, see books that reflect who they are, use a restroom in public without threat, have documentation that matches their name and pronouns, be safe in school, have access to the same medical care and live a long and happy life, just like other children.


Letter: Harmful anti-trans bill
03-20-2025 10:48 AM

Rep. Lisa Mazur has introduced a bill to keep transgender youth under the age of 18 from accessing puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones. She accused the medical community of “rushing minors into irreversible medical interventions.” She ignored the fact that every major professional medical and psychological association approves these treatments and that both individual testimony and gender care clinics show there is no rush involved. She showed compassion when speaking of individuals she had talked with who regret their decision and detransition, but she admitted she had had no conversations with people who were happy and thriving after transgender care. Only 2% of trans individuals regret their decision, so perhaps speaking to some of the other 98% would have helped her craft this bill, or better yet, scrap it. She did not have a single question for the young people or their parents who came to testify. I don’t know why I am surprised. I’m a constituent and she refuses to talk to me. Legislators who see themselves as only representing those who agree with them do not truly represent us. When asked if she has a moral objection to transgender people, she said, “I love everyone.” I’ll believe it when I see it.


Letter: Kearsarge school tax questions
03-20-2025 10:48 AM

It appears to me that the New Hampshire School Fairness Funding Project (NHFFP) is a politically motivated group advocating for higher taxes to increase financial support of public schools. I have questions. Take for example, the Kearsarge School District budget of over $55 million which will represent a $33,000 cost per student per year because there are only 1,668 students in the district. Was the Kearsarge Superintendent and School Board advocating that all New Hampshire school districts should spend $33,000 per student by hosting a recent meeting for the public with the NHFFP? Does spending more per student equal better outcomes?


Letter: Learning respect vs. teaching hate
03-20-2025 10:48 AM

I’m writing to you as a retired educator, mother and grandmother. Nothing matches the sheer joy and pride of a child, teen or young adult learning a new skill, reaching a personal goal, feeling exhilaratingly excited and glad to be themselves. The equation doesn’t change, no matter the skin color, economic background or gender. Good parents know this, whether parents of binary, non-binary or transgender children. As the South Pacific song says, “You’ve got to be carefully taught” to hate and fear someone perceived as “different.” When you have personal experience with queer young people, you see these individuals as the human beings they truly are, not through the lens of fearful, preconceived stereotypes the current administration wants to teach you to use. The lies told by those who fan the fears of citizens lacking in empathy or personal experience are a travesty and nothing but hateful.


Letter: Farewell Judie Milner
03-20-2025 10:48 AM

Franklin has lost a valuable asset. The departure of our City Manager, Judie Milner, will no doubt set back all of the great work that has been done to revitalize this city. Judie truly cared about Franklin and its future and was very successful in obtaining grants and other revenue streams for the betterment of this community. I believe the new “players” in city government have an agenda and will systematically set us back 20 (or more) years. This regime has installed bad actors and has driven out those who worked hard to make Franklin a better place. City workers are succumbing to this toxicity as evidenced by the departure of other valuable staff. I strongly urge all citizens to look closely at what’s happening from the top down starting with the mayor and vote accordingly in the next election cycle.


Letter: We all lose together
03-20-2025 10:48 AM

The heavy hand of the state is poised to come down hard on a small group of children who want to play on their school sports teams. Why do our elected legislators propose so many cruel restrictions on the rights and opportunities of transgender children who are a tiny percentage of our population? I think they do it because, at heart, they want to live in a society where minorities are kept segregated and inferior rather than respected and embraced — an undemocratic, white supremacist society. Restricting access to bathrooms and sports teams may seem small matters, but together with other legislative initiatives to curtail health care, ban books, eviscerate school curricula and even to defund public schools, it all adds up to a vicious attack on democratic society and specifically democratic concepts of equality. The late Sen. Paul Wellstone was fond of saying, ”We all do better when we all do better.” In this case, the inverse of that is “when we beat up on our minority children, we all lose together.


Letter: Do the difficult thing
03-20-2025 10:48 AM

The op-ed by Reps. Vose and Hill (Monitor, Feb. 27) stands the school-funding argument on its head. There is no encroachment on regulatory authority here. The NH Supreme Court was just doing its job when it ordered the state to pay for an adequate education, declaring that inequities in educational opportunity and funding were due, at least in part, to the state’s failure to cherish education. That would be cherish, as in the state’s constitutional obligation to cherish public education. What definition of cherish would these two gentlemen prefer? Using a watered-down definition of the word would not remove the problem.


Letter: History repeating?
03-20-2025 10:48 AM

Some have compared Trump’s demand for minerals in Ukraine to the odious reparations imposed on Germany by the Treaty of Versailles. There is a fundamental flaw in that argument. Germany in 1919 was a defeated foe. Ukraine in 2025 is a loyal ally who is still in the fight.


Letter: Community Power scheme
03-20-2025 10:48 AM

I’ve been suspicious of the offers coming from the various Community Power outfits, and now I know why. The Community Power Coalition struggled to meet its mandate of providing power at a cost lower than Eversource. Their rate of 8.9 cents/Kwh was lower than Eversource by 0.03 cents. Applied to a 650 Kwh monthly electric bill, this reduction is 19.5 cents. Not even enough to buy the stamp needed to mail in the payment. That 8.9 cent rate began about the first of 2025, but in early March, the CPC defaulted on their deal and raised the basic rate to 9.7 cents which will prevail through July 2025. So much for lowering power bills. And the rate is not the only thing that went up. The CPC budget line for ‘Salaries and Benefits’ went from $1.4 million in 2024 to $1.7 million for 2025. Someone is making money off this scheme. I’m wondering if the New Hampshire Attorney General’s people need to have a look at CPC.


Letter: Bleeding Disorders Awareness Month
03-20-2025 10:48 AM

Did you know that March is nationally designated as Bleeding Disorders Awareness Month? And recently, Gov. Ayotte signed a proclamation to declare March as Bleeding Disorders Awareness Month in the Granite State. This recognition aims to raise awareness about bleeding disorders with the general public and foster a stronger sense of unity among all individuals in the bleeding disorders community. To help raise awareness for those living with bleeding disorders in the Granite State, the Concord Hotel was lit in red on Friday, March 14. In New Hampshire, there are an estimated 100 people living with hemophilia and about 13,000 living with other types of bleeding disorders, including von Willebrand’s disease. Having a bleeding disorder can be a very serious condition that often requires treatment and lifestyle modification. Thanks to recent medical advances, many bleeding disorders are able to be treated such that a person can live a productive life without fear of repeated hospitalizations or medical interventions. The Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center in Lebanon hosts a Hemophilia Treatment Center that is a critical source of medical expertise and support for residents of New Hampshire and Vermont with bleeding disorders. If you are interested in more information about bleeding disorders, visit the New England Hemophilia Association at www.newenglandhemophilia.org. Its mission is to create an inclusive community across all six New England states that empowers and enhances the lives of individuals with inherited bleeding disorders and their families.

Displaying articles 1 to 20 out of 1265 total.
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