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BALTIMORE (Map, News) - Sex educator Violet Blue does it — a lot.
Boston’s Cardinal Sean O’Malley does it — religiously.
When William Shatner also does it, he sees stars.
It seems that everyone is doing it. Walter Cronkite … David Hasselhoff … Al Roker … Anna Kournikova … Bruce Willis.
Even grandmothers are doing it. And school principals, and politicians, and Sunday school teachers, and your neighbors. Teens are even trying it.
And they’re doing it everywhere — on couches, in bedrooms, bathtubs, and the back seats of cars, on airplanes, in restaurants, outdoors. They’re even doing it in public and talking about it at happy hours.
Whenever the urge strikes, they do it in blogosphere.
Bloggers — they’re everywhere, thanks to the fast and seductive world of the Internet. And “blogging” has taken on a life of its own, where people from all walks of life — from the rich and famous to the average Joe on street — can rant, rave, satirize, criticize, philosophize, keep diaries and even report. And anyone can do it. Just get to a computer.
From the White House to the big house
They’re even blogging in the White House.
President Bush — who doesn’t blog — signed a bill in September creating a datebase of federal spending.
Bush’s signature marked the latest step toward acceptance for a new breed of Internet writer, the “citizen journalist” — part reporter, part pundit and part diarist. They’ve made their impact known, especially in the realms of politics. Consider this, in March 2005, mediabistro’s FishBowlDC became the first blog with a White House press pass.
But many people use blogging as a simple means to communicate with far-flung family and friends. Others use it as a 21st-century soapbox — complete with video, audio and photos. Almost all bloggers use it as a way to link to other ideas that they either enjoy or can criticize.
But, of course, there can be a sinister side. In September, a blogger — and Rep. Ben Cardin staffer— named Persuasionatrix was fired for embarrassing Cardin by posting online racial comments and her complaints about work in his office.
And convicted murderer Vernon Evans Jr. blogs from the bowels of the Maryland State Penitentiary as the first “death row blogger.”
What is blogging?
Blogging is keeping an Internet journal. The term “blog” is short for “Web log” and goes back to the mid-1990s.
The Media Bloggers Association says its “members slip in and out of roles as journalists, reviewers, poets, pundits or provocateurs with each post.” Bob Cox, the association’s president, is even more general with his definition. “If you ask 10 bloggers to define blogging, you will get 10 different answers — and they will all be right.”
Whether bloggers are writing about their families, pets or home renovations, they are reaching out to others. Most blogs include ways for readers to contact the author or post responses. As Cox says, “I am not just seeking an audience but looking to strike up a conversation.”
Part of that conversation is done by linking to other bloggers, news organizations, think tanks, photo Web sites (like www.Flickr.com) and more. The links are an essential component that sets blogs apart from traditional print journalism.
Some blogs include advertising, especially from Google and Amazon.com. Blogads and Intermarkets are just two companies that handle advertising for blog sites. For the most popular national blogs, that can be lucrative because payment is based on the number of viewers. Some sites simply solicit donations.
But following blogging is like trying to count raindrops. Technorati, a Web site devoted to blogs, currently tracks 57.4 million separate blogs but estimates 75,000 more are added each day. The total is more than one-sixth of the U.S. population.
A study released in July — by the Pew Internet & American Life Project — estimates that 39 percent of Internet users read blogs — or roughly 57 million American adults. Compare this to traditional media. Just 24.6 million people watch one of the big three TV broadcast news shows each night. Numerically, blogs clearly beat network news, but they pale in comparison to newspapers.
Even though daily newspaper circulation has dropped to about 51 million, and with only three of the top 25 newspapers reporting gains in the most recent six-month period, the number of actual readers — some 126 million Americans each day — is more than twice the blog readership.
One blogging survey hasn’t been that kind, however. A Gallup analysis from February criticized blog readership, saying “only 9 percent of Internet users say they frequently read blogs, while 66 percent never read them.”
Former Westminster mayor Kevin Dayhoff, 53, is one of many bloggers who mixes politics with local news and items of interest — much like a newspaper. He says blogging is “an alternative electronic conversation about current events and issues. An electronic show and tell.”
That show and tell and can be a strange mix. Dayhoff’s posts tell of his trip to Ocean City, running into Baltimore Mayor Martin O’Malley and struggling to make his mobile Internet connection work. “I felt like the computer-geek that I am,” he wrote, telling about moving the car back and forth to get a signal. “Pray for my wife,” he added.
To a blogger who goes by the name Broadsheet, a “40-something healthcare executive” who blogs at www.broad-sheet.blogspot.com, the whole idea of blogging has built a new community.
“Blogging breaks down a LOT of social and cultural barriers that might normally prevent people from getting to know one another in ‘normal’ circumstances,” she wrote. Her blogging experience has taken her everywhere from “a 20-something’s kegger birthday party” to London, where she met up with one of her blog readers.
Blogging in politics
Dave Wissing, a 31-year-old Columbia engineer who writes the Hedgehog Report (www.hedgehogreport.com), tracks politics with polite fervor — proud that conservative and liberal Howard County bloggers “get along pretty well.” His posts are generally conservative, but he knocked Lt. Gov. Michael Steele’s latest campaign ad. “While Steele’s last ad attacked both Republicans and Democrats, his latest offering decides to change it up a little and only attack Republicans,” he posted on his blog. “He does realize he needs Republican votes to win, doesn’t he?”
Local blogs don’t just lean right. Bruce Godfrey a 37-year-old Reisterstown attorney who posts on www.crablaw.com, said his favorite post was about his own political evolution. He called it “A Libertarian Limps Leftward,” and the writing detailed his political shift from right to left. The GOP, he now says, “ballooned the deficit through unfunded wild spending beyond the wildest drunken dreams of the last Texan president, Lyndon Johnson.”
Some politicians have tried to embrace bloggers as allies. No wonder President Bush invited so many to the bill signing. According to CQ Weekly, bloggers have “showed they have the power to move a piece of legislation — without spending cash, buttonholing lawmakers or hiring lobbyists.”
Gubernatorial candidate and Baltimore mayor Martin O’Malley even has what is called an “O’Blog” on his Web site. The blog pulls no punches, accusing Gov. Bob Ehrlich — on Oct. 23 — of “another dirty trick” involving a campaign finance complaint.”
Ehrlich’s site doesn’t have a blogger.
Blogging as journalism
Resentment of traditional media is a driving force for many bloggers.
Robert Farrow, a 36-year-old nursing home director from Halethorpe, is one of several people who write for baltimorereporter.com. The blog comments on journalism including CNN, Newsweek, The New York Times, The Baltimore Sun and The Baltimore Examiner. Farrow is critical of today’s news media. “Journalism is supposed to report the facts, editorials are supposed to give opinions, but this is no longer the case,” he stated.
David Gerstman, a 45-year-old Baltimorean who blogs as “Soccer Dad,” said media bias was “what inspired me to get involved in blogging in the first place.”
Owings Mills writer Stephanie Dray, a 35-year-old former attorney, said her “blogging is essentially publishing your own syndicated column on the Internet.”
Former Westminster mayor Kevin Dayhoff’s blog mixes news and commentary and photos such as his Sept. 19 report of a fatal Westminster crash “involving a bicyclist and a Carroll County Sheriff’s deputy.”
Baltimore Crime (baltimorecrime.blogspot.com) delivers “a digest of crime in Baltimore City, Maryland.” The blog is a collection of local police stories from several news outlets with attitude. One section of a recent post was headlined: “Dept. of Booze and Nudity.” An Oct. 31 post following protests of a racially tinged frat party at Johns Hopkins blasted the campus. “Is it not bad enough Hopkins pays no taxes?
The Baltimore Crab (baltimorecrab.blogspot.com/) promoted itself as “Baltimore’s Premiere Source For Fake News.” Written in news format, the blog told one humorous story after another — Ehrlich promoting “pedal-powered generators” to produce electricity for the poor, or tales of a “rogue underground citizen group known as the Zoning Intelligence Agency” that has a “crusade against the tyranny of roof-top doghouses and excess inches on additions.”
Nationally, bloggers have made more of a mark critiquing “fake news.” Their involvement helped uncover several media scandals including Dan Rather’s well-known CBS story citing unsubstantiated documents about Bush’s National Guard service. But that adversarial relationship is changing. Many daily newspapers like the New York Times now include blogs, as do network news operations like CBS and Fox News.
Blogging everything else
Alan Lazerow, a 22-year-old researcher at the National Institute of Mental Health who lives in Pikesville, blogs about religion, among other topics. “I started blogging to mostly vent certain frustrations with living in an Orthodox Jewish community for the first time in my life”
Lazerow’s blog includes detailed discussions of Jewish life and the Torah. But in the middle of that, Lazerow bemoans a personal loss. “One of the truly beloved things in my life has died.” His iPod’s hard drive. “We will be sitting shiva at my apartment this evening.” he added.
Blogtimore.com bills itself as “a blog of blogs.” Of course, it also calls itself — tongue-in-cheek — “The Greatest Web Site in America.” The blog appears as just a collection of headlines from other sites, but it has the depth of the human experience. In one post headlined, “Time to get back to the gym,” a blogger named “Epiphany in Baltimore (epiphanyinbaltimore.blogspot.com),” lamented “A student told me today that I looked just like Kevin James. Aughhh.”
Paula Willey blogs as Your Neighborhood Librarian (www.yourneighborhoodlibrarian.blogspot.com), one of the many blogs that appear on Blogtimore.com. Willey, a 40-year-old part-time librarian from Lauraville, cites the potential of the Internet as “connective tissue.” It’s “especially for those of us who don't get much of our intellectual/emotional/friend life out of our work,” she said. “The use of blogs in a community is, I think, going to be huge.”
Willey’s blog is the story of her life and her family. It includes video clips of her son, and a recent post had a picture of the family house decorated for Halloween. But it’s not all domestic bliss. In one post she tells about how the children became enthralled by a popular four-letter word just before visiting family. She was worried about them “whipping out their favorite new word in front of Grandfather.”
– Dan Gainor
Why not to blog about your boss
Work is tough enough. Blogging just made it harder.
The combination of more than 57 million blogs along with social sites like MySpace.com and Facebook.com, has given employers and potential employers more information than ever before. If you thought that employers just looked at your resume or ignored what you did out of the office, think again.
According to the Electronic Freedom Foundation, your blog is likely to attract a range of people who know you and “these include potential or current employers, coworkers and professional colleagues.”
And the fact is, blogging has cost people their jobs. Whether it was at Delta Airlines, Google or just Rep. Ben Cardin’s senatorial campaign, people who blog about their jobs sometimes lose them.
EFF reminds bloggers “if you work for a private employer and you have no union contract or other agreement that provides you with additional protections, you are considered an ‘at will’ employee and the employer may fire you for any reason that is not specifically prohibited by law.”
Blogging can be a landmine for an employer and sometimes a gold mine for the employee. Capitol Hill politicos won’t soon forget Jessica Cutler, the one-time congressional staffer who blogged about her sex life under the name “Washingtonienne.” The posts landed her office in hot water and landed her a fat book contract.
For employees, the standard advice for blogging about work is “don’t.” A lawyer quoted in the Sept. 27, New York Times warned that the business world would soon turn against blogging. The “safest way to blog about work is not to do it,” said Daniel M. Klein, a partner at the Atlanta law firm Buckley & Klein.
Even anonymous blog postings can eventually be traced if you give out too much information. That also means that everything you say on a blog can be held against you by employers.
Employers have to take that into account without abusing it. Experts urge companies to have human resources staff search the Internet for information about job candidates. That search should include Myspace, Facebook and the blogosphere. Companies are also urged to set policies about blogging about the job so workers know what they shouldn’t do.
– Dan Gainor
The Best Local Blogs
Looking for a hot local blog? Check out these:
» Maryland Politics NOW — www.mdpoliticsnow.com
» Kevin Dayhoff site — kevindayhoff.blogspot.com
» Blogtimore — blogtimore.com/
» Maryland Democrats Blog Network — www.mddems.org/ht/d/sp/i/583271/pid/583271
» Soccer Dad — soccerdad.baltiblogs.com
» Charm City Chronicle — charmcitychronicle.blogspot.com
» Baltimore Crime — baltimorecrime.blogspot.com
» Anger Hangover — angerhangover.livejournal.com
» The Hedgehog Report — www.davidwissing.com
» Your Neighborhood Librarian —
yourneighborhoodlibrarian.blogspot.com
» Free State Politics — freestatepolitics.blogspot.com
» Baltimore Reporter — baltimorereporter.com
» Alanlaz — www.alanlaz.blogspot.com
Other key Web sites for bloggers
» The Media Bloggers Association — mediabloggers.org
» Blogger.com — www.blogger.com
» Technorati — www.technorati.com
» Electronic Freedom Foundation — www.eff.org/bloggers
Most Popular National Blogs
Technorati rates blogs by how many other blogs link to them. Here are the best choices of the top 20 blogs from Technorati:
» The Huffington Post — www.huffingtonpost.com
» Techcrunch — www.techcrunch.com
» Daily Kos: State of the Nation — www.dailykos.com
» PostSecret — postsecret.blogspot.com
» Lifehacker, the Productivity and Software Guide — www.lifehacker.com
» Crooks and Liars — www.crooksandliars.com
» Think Progress — thinkprogress.org
» Michelle Malkin — michellemalkin.com
» Gawker, Manhattan Media News and Gossip — www.gawker.com
» Instapundit.com — instapundit.com
How to Blog
All it takes to blog is access to a computer.
Bob Cox, the president of the Media Bloggers Association, urged new bloggers to use www.blogger.com. “I generally tell people to start with Blogger (owned by Google) because they offer a free, quick and easy, three — step process, that can create a blog for you in about 30 seconds,” he explained. (As a test, I created a blog in less than two minutes thanks to a Comcast high—speed connection.)
There is a wide selection of blogging software, but Blogger.com is owned by Google, so you have some certainty about it working.



Comments from Examiner Readers
3:31 PM MST on Thu., May. 29, 2008 re: "Korean community driven by success"
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2:12 AM MST on Wed., May. 21, 2008
re: "Tales from Baltimore City’s impound lot"
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7:10 PM MST on Sun., May. 4, 2008
re: "Prostitution: Worth police enforcement?"
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10:25 AM MST on Tue., Apr. 29, 2008
re: "Ranting & raving for the whole world to see"
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9:06 PM MST on Thu., Apr. 10, 2008
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8:49 PM MST on Mon., Dec. 31, 2007
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2:30 AM MST on Thu., Dec. 13, 2007
re: "Sex, lies & a Ph.D."
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8:38 PM MST on Thu., Sep. 20, 2007
re: "Dixon: Police must be trusted"
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7:45 AM MST on Tue., Jul. 31, 2007
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6:02 AM MST on Tue., May. 29, 2007
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4:57 AM MST on Tue., May. 29, 2007
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6:16 AM MST on Mon., May. 28, 2007
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9:27 AM MST on Tue., May. 1, 2007
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Examiner Reader said:
Thanks for this long but thorough and informative article about the Korean community in the area. Asian Americans tend to be under-covered in the mainstream media, so it's nice to see the Examiner spend some time putting Koreans in the spotlight.
13 agree | 13 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
The workers their shouldn't be able to take what they want out of your car either. Why is the city not responsible for items lost while in there possession?
13 agree | 11 disagree
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the only one really seeing?? said:
How about the police going after the pimps and johns who are oppressing these women!! They are women before being labeled as prostitutes, and human beings above all!! I can't believe people; legalize prostitution?? Make this even easier for pimps and johns to continue to demoralize, abuse, torture, rape, and kill the women of OUR society?? These are our sisters, our daughters, our mothers;they're not aliens. Change the thought process and use the precious tax dollars for programs such as transitional housing and rehabilitation for the WOMEN, John schools for the 'johns', and harsher punnishments for the pimps. And please stop using the word PIMP in everyday language and descriptions! Do you know what a pimp does? Restructure the police force and actually "train" them on the realities of this IMMENSE wrong-doing of humanity in order to allow for correct policing. Help these women who are the victims of this vicious cycle! Break the cycle!! Address the actual problem, and OPEN YOUR E
14 agree | 12 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Am I alone on this how many agree that REv Wright need to go back into the hole he was in before the primary elections and not give the impression that he is here to represent the Blacks of America and the Black Church of America. His views are only for him and the 500 people that attend his church. He is hurting everything that we have worked toward in the last 40+ years to be seen/heard and appreciated as part of the American dream. You are hurting US can you just be quiet. Concerned.
23 agree | 18 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
What does it mean when my boyfriend tells me that we fight every weekend (which I don't keep tabs on but we've been together since 11/07 till now, 4/08 and we've broken up seven times), and he only wants me for the week and to keep his weekends "open"??!
16 agree | 13 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Connolly is a typical irish catholic democrat who immigrated from Caambridge Massachusetts.He sells the typical Bostn irsh rethoric like the Kennedy's. We can all be persuaaded without thinking of what he is selling to the citizens of Fairfax County????
188 agree | 196 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
I suppose Howard County Sheriff have nothing better to do than raid alleged prostitutes. The woman that reported her should feel awful. I wonder if she divorced her husband. I doubt it. I would also bet she thinks everything is ok now and her husband hasn't found someone else.
253 agree | 187 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
YOU say we must trust Dixon, how can we trust her when she does things like having her sister in her campagne which I know you will say is legal, I would think that with the very suggestion of having her sister have any part in the city gov is a mockery to all honest people of Baltimore, is dixon still being investigate for her so called lack of memory on the company's that got city work that should have been bid on. Or are the dem going to just push lthis under the rug. John
298 agree | 314 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
It's a very good article to understand Korean-American in this region.
359 agree | 632 disagree
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Mr. Mirth Alert said:
The question is not whether the NAACP is relevant to young African Americans but whether it's relevant @all; however, as most natl. orgs. & institutions know, relevance varies among local chapters. If one can argue whether the natl. NAACP is relevant, Doc Cheatham ensures that there's no question about the Balto. chapter. He seems to've struck a fine balance betw. charismatic leader & entrenched worker, a balance lost in the likes of Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton, & too many "natl." characters.
423 agree | 539 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Is the NAACP still relevant in the lives of young African Americans?
392 agree | 406 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
It is senseless that someone who has been successfully teaching in any subject area for several years has to succomb to NCLB. As a Special Educator it is unrealistic for President Bush or anyone else to believe that all of our special ed students will meet the grade. It simply is not true! I am an older adult and career changer who decided to become a part of the Special Education mission in Maryland. I have not received help with my education or quest to become "highly qualified" as a Special Educator. I hold a MAT, in the past I have been teaching, going to school at night, trying to meet the many demands of my principal, and attempting to muddle through the mounds of paper work that is involved in teaching. I just recently graduated. Shouldn't there be a window of time for me to study and prepare for Praxis exams before being terminated? Why should career changers who have had to return to school to meet the educational requirements feet be held to the same fire?
998 agree | 478 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Thats precisely why I'll do the minimum time fiishing my career after the BRAC and then will retire and move on to my next career. I dont deal with long commutes now and it wont become a way of life.
512 agree | 422 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Other than new constuction, baltimore water treatment operators make $10-$15,000 less than the operators surrounding the stae of maryland
715 agree | 439 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
As long as there are restrictions on firearms which denies everyone in Maryland the right to self defense there will be murders. People in Maryland should be fed up with the Mayor's nonsense. More guns-less crime.
768 agree | 423 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
My hearts goes to the parents who lost their love ones. Where I reside at my neighbor has not been out the house since her grandson was murdered and burn. It a shame that our culture is divided, we are the only one. Frank COnway stated it to a golden rule. No more do unto others before it is done unto you. From the Policitians, local officials cut out many resources which may have helped our young children out. All they were concern about was the Inner Harbor which took all of Public school money Ck it out we don't have books. Half of these joung adult can not read or write. It's terrible. Today a police officer killed a young man in the rear of 27 hundrend blk of North ave. U can bet they will paint the picture of him being a terrible young man. In my neighborhood along we had 5-6 killings none solved. The dirt bikes slow ride them you are bound to catch. U cell them, they buy them, everything is made out of this city or country we buy. Corner stor ckic wings, ffs, subs etc
448 agree | 398 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
I understand that they don't know what to do about dirt bikes in city. If they see these people riding in a certain area dress a cop up in there clothes have him ride with them follow them back to where they gather an arrest them.
482 agree | 440 disagree
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Penny Baltimore said:
I read this article and I could feel these Parents pain. I have a similar pain! My son was shot on August 31,2006 which left his paralazed from his neck down as well as blind from the bullet that severed his spinal cord. I feel the pain of those parents because of the fact their children were killed! I get the joy and pleasure of watching my son every day struggle with being cleaned and changed. I get to watch MY son being feed threw a tube and I even get the chance to watch him CRY. I used to say that if he had died the police would have locked up the monster that did this, but, now I no that would never happen, even though they no who did it. I AM SO ANGRY AT WHAT IS HAPPENING TO GOOD KIDS AS WELL AS " BAD KIDS". I pray and wish for miracle for my son and the others SONS that are murdered, jailed or just left to perish by senseless acts of violence. Thanks for letting my let it out!
435 agree | 364 disagree
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Karl Chue said:
Where is the "innovation"? Why will people come forward when they know that criminals will simply be back on the street in a few hours, days, or months AND will know exactly who "snitched"? Why will "youths" turn away from the drug trade when is it the only financially lucrative path they see? How will getting illegal guns off the street make any difference when these thugs are perfectly happy to stab & bludgeon innocent people? If Dixon where really going to make a difference, she'd propose that all seized drugs be given away free to junkies. If junkies can get their fix for free, it would cripple the drug trade financially (which is the only reason it exists). Of course, that would lead to even more poverty in some areas of the city, but that is a better problem to have than thugs running free.
446 agree | 531 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Mayor Dixon has all the best intentions in the world, however Baltimore City does not need another weak save the children program. The youth have already proven they are unwilling to listen. What the the youth of baltimore understand now is violence, which is clearly reflected in the surge of gang violence. If Baltimore is to survive, it's time to stop dancing for the public and get dirty. Mayor Dixon needs to no longer spare the rod and release the unchained fury of the Baltimore police department to take back the City. The number of homicides would fall by hundreds if police were allowed to police. Sometimes a strong hand is best for reproving, not the sit down can we discuss your problem.
992 agree | 433 disagree
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Karl Chue said:
The National Academy of Sciences and the Centers for Disease Control under the Clinton Administration studied 20 YEARS of scientific literature, research studies/ reports and academic books written on gun control laws. Their conclusion, based completely on FACT, not conjecture was that gun control laws could not be shown to have any affect on crime rates. As for "More guns not reducing violence": Switzerland has the highest rate of gun ownership in the world with 75% of people owning them, including a fully automatic military rifle plus 300 rounds of ammunition in every home. Their violent crime rates is equivalent to Japan's where private gun ownership does not exist. We don't punish criminal behavior in this country and thus reap what we sow.
447 agree | 418 disagree
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King said:
Karl Chue needs to go back to school and base his comments on reality, not RNC talking points. Fact: More guns do not reduce violence, EVER.
414 agree | 412 disagree
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Karl Chue said:
This is completely logical given the lack of resolve in crime fighting from the City Council. They can't jail felons for long periods, they won't execute repeat violent offenders, they won't let officers chase reckless suspects, they won't let people defend themselves with firearms (i.e. carry permits), etc. This is the logical result of 60 years of coddling criminals.
1,094 agree | 555 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Why do children have to kill children in Baltimore?
460 agree | 444 disagree
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