Opinion

Displaying articles -19 to 0 out of 1937 total.

My Turn: One big, beastly bill

06-09-2025 10:24 AM

By DR. DAVID GOTTSEGEN

In nearly six months of hits to the health of Americans, the actions of the House in passing Trump’s so-called “One, Big Beautiful Bill” budget last month have reached a new level of callousness and ignorance. The $880 billion dollar cuts over 10 years in aid to states for Medicaid programs would have disastrous effects.


My Turn: On the Writ of Habeas Corpus

06-09-2025 10:24 AM

By DOROTHY STORROW

Lately, the news has been filled with references to habeas corpus. President Donald Trump’s administration is actively considering suspending habeas corpus. Article 1 of the U.S. Constitution provides a right to habeas corpus. As citizens, we all need to understand this right in order to have informed opinions about what is happening in our country.


My Turn: Massachusetts must continue to lead on common sense gun laws

06-09-2025 10:23 AM

By ROBIN NEIPP

My name is Robin Neipp. I currently work as a Public Health Nurse for the towns of Montague/Greenfield under the Valley Regional Health Collaborative Grant. I also currently volunteer with Grassroots for Gun Violence Prevention (Grassroots4GVP.org) in Massachusetts. In my work and personal life I recognize gun violence as a public health crisis and seek to decrease the loss of life and ongoing trauma that follows any firearm death or injury.


Lawrence Pareles: Protect the vulnerable, keep Covid vaccines available

06-09-2025 10:20 AM

I’m writing to express my deep concern about HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy’s recommendation to stop giving Covid vaccines to pregnant women and babies. His policy is not just unkind — it’s dangerous.


Columnist Daniel Cantor Yalowitz: Holding on to what matters

06-09-2025 7:00 AM

By DANIEL CANTOR YALOWITZ

We all learn at some point in life that nothing is permanent, all is transient. This is a powerful and poignant life lesson when it comes to us, usually through some major loss or transition. Growing up, I always thought that what I had and who I had around me would always be there. As I grow into my late 60s, I find that I’ve had to relearn and reframe that thinking — loss and change are a daily occurrence that somehow I must adjust to. It is a way of life for all of us.


My Turn: Every day should be ‘No Kings Day’

06-08-2025 11:58 AM

By ROB OKUN

A would-be king wants a coronation on June 14, a date already laden with meaning: Flag Day, the 250th anniversary of the founding of the U.S. Army, and, yes, Donald Trump’s 79th birthday. But this year, Americans are refusing to let the day be coopted. Across all 50 states, from big cities to small towns, more than 1,000 events are planned to mark what organizers are calling the “No Kings Day of Defiance.”


Kristan Bakker: Freedom is not free

06-08-2025 11:58 AM

From the American Revolution to today, U.S. service members have sworn an oath to defend our Constitution against all enemies. This past Memorial Day, we honor those who gave their lives in that service — those who sacrificed all their tomorrows for our country and our freedoms. The military oath begins: “I do solemnly swear/affirm that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic ... So help me God.”


Susan Kramer: Innocent until proven guilty

06-08-2025 11:58 AM

I appreciated in the guest column “Everyone is entitled to due process” [Recorder, May 16] that Republican lawyer Isaac Mass was taking a stand against the injustices of the Trump administration. However, when stating “… deporting undocumented foreign born criminal gang members without a hearing is unconscionable” isn’t he assuming these people are gang members just because Trump says they are? They never had a chance to challenge the charges against them. Mr. Mass should have referred to them as “accused gang members.”


Janet Keyes: Newspaper changes noted

06-06-2025 11:57 AM

In the past two weeks I have noted several changes in the Recorder.


My Turn: I have something to share with the class

06-06-2025 11:55 AM

By JOANNA BUONICONTI

Feb. 22, 2025, at around 10:45 p.m. will be a moment that will be imprinted in my mind until the day I die. It was the moment that I had my first kiss.


The World Keeps Turning: The man who would be king

06-06-2025 11:55 AM

By ALLEN WOODS

Donald Trump recently said that in his second term, “I run the country and the world” without worrying about advisers, elected and appointed government officials, and courts working against him. Even within the context of comparing his two terms, it is an alarming view of presidential power, and identifies a man who in every nuance and overt action aspires to wear a crown, be worshipped, and dutifully bribed by all seeking his favor.


Guest columnist Matteo Pangallo: Drowned by the Quabbin

06-05-2025 2:38 PM

By MATTEON PANGALLO

At Shutesbury’s 290th annual Town Meeting on May 31, our small Massachusetts town approved a $7.7 million budget for FY26. Payments-in-lieu-of-taxes for state-owned land, including the one-third of our town taken by the state for the Quabbin watershed area, cover less than 5% of that budget. Residential property taxes will pay for 73%, which is a much higher portion than is covered by property taxpayers in most towns.


Laurie Evans: Restore access for the Gordon King Estate Blueberry Patch

06-05-2025 2:38 PM

The Blueberry Patch is a cherished part of the Gordon King Life Estate for the public, including the folks with mobility disabilities as well as parents with small children in strollers. This has always been a beloved site in Leverett for many families and individuals to gather, explore and enjoy the bounty of nature.


David Parrella: Tertius Taylor

06-05-2025 2:38 PM

In the old cemetery in Buckland, Massachusetts there is a grave marker that reads: “He entered the service of the revolution in the year 1775 and after the toils and privations of eight years was returned to his family with the thanks of a free and happy country.”


My Turn: Retaining good leaders means fixing the educational foundation

06-04-2025 11:55 AM

By FRANCIA E. WISNEWSKI

In our county, the superintendent of the largest school district has resigned. The superintendence of the second-largest municipality has also stepped down. This isn’t just a local issue; you can look across Massachusetts and see the same pattern. Public education top leaders are walking away from jobs that have become nearly impossible to sustain.


Dan Stuart Alden: Make democracy work

06-04-2025 11:54 AM

Tim Walz made a great speech on May 31. As he pointed out, the working class voters gave a primal scream. They elected a horrible person because they were at the end of their rope. All hell breaking loose was better than what they’ve had for decades. Many will change their minds when they find Donald Trump does not make America great again; that he just cares about personal wealth and autocratic power. But that will just put us back where we started.


Mayor Virginia “Ginny” Desorgher: The future of the Greenfield School District

06-04-2025 11:54 AM

Hello Greenfield: I would like to extend my deepest appreciation to Superintendent Karin Patenaude for her service to the city of Greenfield. Across her 16-year career in Greenfield as a teacher, administrator and superintendent, Karin demonstrated tremendous passion and care for educating the students of Greenfield. Her efforts supported a generation of students in their growth and development, helping our brightest future, our youth, reach their full potential. I am grateful for Karin’s service and join our community in wishing her well in her future endeavors.


My Turn: Remembering pandemic’s victims: a lesson from the Vietnam War

06-04-2025 11:52 AM

By JAMES LOMASTRO

As we mark the 50th anniversary of the Vietnam War’s conclusion in 2025, we confront anew the enduring questions that follow in the conflict’s wake. How do societies move forward while honoring the truth of what occurred? The answer lies not in convenient forgetting but in the difficult practice of remembrance. There exists a fundamental distinction between forgiveness and amnesty and an even sharper distinction between amnesty and amnesia. While societies may grant legal pardons or establish reconciliation processes, these mechanisms cannot and should not erase the collective memory of suffering.


Pushback: Wendell votes Wednesday to finish battery storage licensing rights

06-03-2025 10:35 AM

By AL NORMAN

On Wednesday, Town Meeting voters in Wendell will finish an important piece of legal business that’s critical not only to the home rule powers of its 915 residents but for all cities and towns across Massachusetts.


Jeremy Williams: Conform and obey

06-03-2025 10:32 AM

I wanted to touch on one of the subjects Recorder columnist Jon Huer brought up in his last piece, “Our job anxiety: The chain that shackles us all” [May 31]. The part I wanted to bring up is how we obey orders and conform so easily. Even if we’re told to do something against our own personal beliefs. Huer brought up ICE agents doing their jobs like robots. So most of these ICE agents know that what they’re doing is not what their hearts would truly allow under normal circumstances. The main objective is to obey your orders. You will conform and obey, because that’s what they tell you to do.


Your Daily Puzzles

Cross|Word

An approachable redesign to a classic. Explore our "hints."

Flipart

A quick daily flip. Finally, someone cracked the code on digital jigsaw puzzles.

Really Bad Chess

Chess but with chaos: Every day is a unique, wacky board.

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Word search but as a strategy game. Clearing the board feels really good.

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Align the letters in just the right way to spell a word. And then more words.


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