Vol 1. No. 25.Baltimore, MD  Wed September 08th 2010GIVING YOU THE NEWS THE MSM IGNORES 
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O's chance at sweep in Bronx slips away
O's chance at sweep in Bronx slips away

Bell doesn't hide awe at Yankee Stadium
Bell doesn't hide awe at Yankee Stadium

Innings piling up, Arrieta remains strong
Innings piling up, Arrieta remains strong

Durable Albers key to O's bullpen
Durable Albers key to O's bullpen

Arrieta baffles Yanks, topping Sabathia
Arrieta baffles Yanks, topping Sabathia

Jones back for O's after injury swarm
Jones back for O's after injury swarm

O's add 'comfort' with trio of arms
O's add 'comfort' with trio of arms

Hernandez, Viola, Patton to join Orioles
Hernandez, Viola, Patton to join Orioles

Guthrie's service nets him O's Clemente nod
Guthrie's service nets him O's Clemente nod

Yes, it was a hot one
The temperature at BWI-Marshall Airport reached 91 degrees Tuesday, setting a record for the most 90-degree days in a calendar year and topping off more than eight months of weather extremes in Maryland. Since last winter's blizzards and record accumulations, 2010 has brought drought, crop losses, rising numbers of heat-related deaths and the hottest summer on record for Baltimore. Above, Kelly West tried to beat the heat in July with an egg custard snowball on North Bethel Street in East Baltimore.




U.S. Senate to hold rape hearing
Hearing spurred in part by Sun reporting on cases in city

Concerned that police departments nationwide fail to fully investigate rapes, a congressional committee will examine the issue next week at a hearing spurred partly by a Baltimore Sun examination of the systemic underreporting of sex crimes.




Board upholds license suspension against doctor in abortion injury
State panel grants continuance to lawyers for second physician

State panel grants lawyers for second physician in case a continuance




HealthKey: Inflammatory bowel disease on the rise in kids
The reason more children being diagnosed with 'adult' disease is a mystery

For 10-year-old Jacob Krause, getting ready for the new school year wasn't a simple matter of back-to-school shopping. It also involved working out logistics for getting to the bathroom as many as 20 times during a single school day.




Police: W.Va. man killed during drug deal in S.W. Baltimore
Victim found in Edmondson Village neighborhood

A 35-year-old West Virginia man was fatally shot Tuesday night in Southwest Baltimore during what police said was a drug transaction.




Critically injured Columbia man charged in fire, ex-wife's death
Damon Willie White, 34, is in critical condition at Maryland Shock Trauma

A Columbia man has been charged with murder and arson in the death of his ex-wife and subsequent apartment fire, according to Howard County police.




Philip Carroll of Ellicott City family, Doughoregan Manor dies
Carroll was buried Tuesday in a simple graveside service on estate

Philip Carroll, the 86-year-old patriarch of historic Doughoregan Manor in Ellicott City, died Saturday and was buried Tuesday at what was called a simple graveside service for less than two dozen people at the nearly three-century-old Carroll family estate.




Baltimore School for the Arts leader to depart at end of year
Leslie Shepard to leave school after 32 years

Leslie Shepard, director of the Baltimore School for the Arts who has worked at the prestigious school since it opened, will leave her post after this academic year, officials announced Wednesday.



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Perhaps the best part of blogging or the internet in general is the occasional discovery of something unexpected.Over on Baltimore Reporter and Conservative Thoughts is a great and thought provoking article by Robert Farrow.I hope you will follow this link and read this great post.

from conservativecontracts.com


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Once again - as happens so often - I have been positioned here on the living room couch, immersed in your blog. You are better than Fox News.

Kevin Dayhoff



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8/3/2009

Devil’s Dance
Filed under: — Robert Farrow @ 11:00 pm

From Red Maryland

Baltimore Democrats wish Sheila Dixon’s legal troubles would just go away:

The new indictments issued last week in the City Hall corruption probe has many of Baltimore’s political leaders impatient for resolution to a case that has spanned three years and left the city’s reputation in limbo.”Most people I talk to are saying ‘Let’s just get this over with,’ ” said Baltimore Del. Curtis S. Anderson, a Democrat… “It is not something we are proud of,” Del. Talmadge Branch, a longtime state delegate from East Baltimore said of the new indictments. Branch, a Democrat, said many were hoping the cloud over City Hall would “blow over.” But it hasn’t, leaving Branch “waiting and seeing” what happens.Others just didn’t want to comment. Gov. Martin O’Malley had nothing to say about the new indictments, said his spokesman Rick Abbruzzese.

Of course they wish this inconvenient prosecution was over or don’t want to talk about it. This case has ripped the scab off the sore that is the shady manner in which business is conducted in Baltimore. Back in January I wrote in Baltimore Examiner—may she rest in peace—about the devil’s dance between machine politicians and city developers. Given the ostrich act Democrats are pulling I think it is apropos to revisit a portion of that column today to remind those who would have us forget what is going on.

The allegations involving Dixon and Lipscomb [and now Paterakis] highlight the symbiotic relationship between city developers and machine politicians. In a nutshell, developers, through campaign finance loopholes, funnel hundreds of thousands of dollars to city politicians. The politicians in turn put that money into their machines to turn out the vote. In return for their donations, developers expect huge tax breaks and public largesse for their projects. While this dance may not be illegal, it definitely appears unseemly…

Developers get tax breaks while an ever-shrinking middle class is squeezed to foot the city’s bills. Meanwhile, Baltimore’s political elites arrogate more power for themselves. The political machine and the developers feed off one another, all the while perpetuating the gap between the haves and the have-nots.

Power is concentrated in the secretive Baltimore Development Corp., and the powerful Board of Estimates, the latter on which Dixon sits. Both entities determine which projects get city tax breaks and, therefore move forward. The authority to decide on those projects, along with the strong executive powers of the office, make Dixon a powerful woman. That kind of concentrated power in the hands of any one person makes for a heady and dangerous cocktail…

Real reform would mean ending city-subsidized development to allow natural economic growth, where Baltimore’s ever-shrinking middle class and small businesses no longer bear the overwhelming tax burden to finance city programs—which come Election Day, create reliable voters. Ending the development-political complex would mean giving up power, and politicians never give up power on their own volition, especially a machine politician like Dixon. Unfortunately, even if she is convicted and removed from office, the dance will continue, just with different partners.

That ladies and gentleman is why Baltimore Democrats want this case to recede from memory. It’s a reminder of how they are part and parcel of the planned, controlled, and subsidized decline of Baltimore.

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