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

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.




Mikulski: Plans to burn Quran 'disgraceful,' 'un-American'




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.

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11/1/2009

Harry’s Shell Game
Filed under: — Robert Farrow @ 10:17 pm

From Red Maryland

By Ellen Sauerbrey

After months of work by Senate Committees, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid stepped up to the microphone and pronounced that in his opinion ““the best way to move forward is to include a public option with the opt-out provision for states.” Though there is little understanding of how an opt-out provision would work, it resurrected the seemingly dead government plan that, if enacted, will eventually destroy the private insurance market.

The inclusion of a public option in the Senate bill was a double cross that immediately resulted in Maine Senator Olympia Snowe, the only Republican who was lending a “bipartisan fig leaf” to any of the Democrat’s health care plans, withdrawing her support. Liberal Democrat Chuck Shumer lauded Senator Reid who, he said, “showed just how deep his commitment is” to the public option.

Reid knows that without the illusion of a bipartisan plan, he is likely to lose several middle of the road Democrats, especially those who must face the voters next year. Senator Joe Lieberman signaled weeks ago his concern that Obama was trying to do too much too fast in a weak economy and has now said he is likely to join a Republican fillibuster.

The likelihood of Reid getting the needed sixty votes to pass a bill out of the Senate with a public option, with or without the new gimmick of a “state opt- out” remains murky at best. So what is his motivation?

The Senate leader is facing a very difficult re-election campaign with polls showing him running behind Republican contenders. His liberal base, in and out of the Senate, demands a public option. The opt- out provision may be a meaningless gimmick but it allows Reid to appear strong with Democrat activist groups back home and perhaps gives cover to worried Democrats.

No one knows the language of the Senate bill, but it is certain that the public option will draw the greatest attention and debate. Even if Reid can’t get the votes for what will become, in reality, a government health care system, he will be credited by his leftist supporters in the Senate, as well as back home for having given it his best. He can then offer up Senator Snowe’s trigger, regain “bipartisan support”, and attract nervous Democrats.

All the while, with the media focusing on the fight over “public option”, “opt-out”, and “trigger” provisions, other equally destructive parts of the bill will be overshadowed.

As Harry’s shell game is played in Congress, voters need to keep an eye on the ball. The problems with this “reform” go far beyond the issue of a public option. With or without the public option, it will be at minimum a trillion dollar proposal with a new “Health Choices Commissioner dictating health insurance plans.

With or without a public option, it forces everyone to buy a government dictated health insurance plan, imposes new job-killing taxes on employers, slashes Medicare for seniors, underpays doctors and hospitals, limits the deductibility of medical expenses on income taxes, imposes billions in new fees on manufacturers of life saving medical devices, creates taxpayer subsidies for abortion and illegal aliens, and leaves millions uninsured.

Harry’s shell game is about his tough re-election prospects in Nevada. Many think he is misreading his state. Unless the people of Nevada really want this new dependency on government, they are about to bury him in “you are fired” pink slips for attempting to destroy the finest health care system in the world.

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