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Virginia Schools Maine On How To Deal With ICE-protesting Students: Suspend, Not Mollycoddle

Virginia Schools Maine On How To Deal With ICE-protesting Students: Suspend, Not Mollycoddle

When students walked out of Maine schools recently, allegedly protesting immigration enforcement, they did so with complete impunity.

But when the same thing happened in Virginia last week, school officials suspended more than 300 kids.

In the Prince William County protest, some kids walked more than two miles to a nearby shopping center.

School officials confirmed 303 students were suspended for leaving school grounds without permission.

Compare that punitive action to Camden, Maine where a recent obscenity-laced ice protest prompted administrators to do nothing more than inform students of the “expectation that they be respectful and peaceful during their protest.”

In Maine the concern of school officials was more over worried parents videotaping and later publicizing the protest than the students leaving school.







Maine Bridge Sculpture From Old Steel Beams Isn’t Passing Muster With Outraged Art Critics

Maine Bridge Sculpture From Old Steel Beams Isn’t Passing Muster With Outraged Art Critics

161 likes, 16 comments - townofbrunswick on February 18, 2026: "🌉 A Piece of Brunswick History Will Live On While the original Frank J. Wood Bridge connecting Brunswick and Topsham has been replaced, its story isn’t ending—it’s being reimagined. 🎨 The nonprofit Brunswick Public Art is planning a unique public art installation that will incorporate pieces of the original bridge into a new sculpture at the site. This project will honor the bridge’s long-standing role in connecting our communities and preserving an important piece of local history. The sculpture will be designed by Seattle-based artist Laura Haddad (a Bowdoin College alum) and constructed by Tom Drugan, bringing both national experience and local connection to the project. 💡 The estimated 0,000 project will be fully funded through private fundraising by Brunswick Public Art, and once completed, the sculpture will become a permanent public asset owned by the Town of Brunswick. This is an exciting opportunity to preserve a meaningful piece of our past while creating something new for future generations to enjoy. Stay tuned for updates as this project moves forward! #BrunswickME #fjwbridge".

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University of Southern Maine Cancels Palestinian Conference That Featured Jew Hater Francesca Albanese

University of Southern Maine Cancels Palestinian Conference That Featured Jew Hater Francesca Albanese

A public outcry over an anti-Semitic speaker has killed a University of Southern Maine conference that was to feature a U.N. adviser who has been highly critical of Israel, according to a Jewish news outlet.

The cancellation was reported by Jewish News Syndicate, which calls itself “the fastest-growing news agency covering Israel and the Jewish world.”

The seminar, which was slated for February 28th, had Francesca Albanese on the guest list.

She has been sanctioned by the U.S. government for her anti-semitic rhetoric.

“The school told Jewish News Syndicate that it had ‘terminated the agreement for the use of USM facilities for the Consequence of Palestine conference after learning that one of the event’s speakers is sanctioned by the federal government and appears on the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s office of foreign assets control’s specially designated nationals and blocked persons list,” the news outlet reports.

That “legally prohibits any U.S. person or entity from exchanging any goods or services with those on the list,” the university told the Jewish news service.

Albanese, UN Special Rapporteur on the Occupied Palestinian Territories, called Israel the “common enemy of humanity” at a recent Qatar forum featuring Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal.

Maine’s Catholic Bishop Calls For Statewide Unity During Lent; Sexual-Abuse Victims Say He’s Out Of Touch

Maine’s Catholic Bishop Calls For Statewide Unity During Lent; Sexual-Abuse Victims Say He’s Out Of Touch

The state’s top Catholic is calling for a “commitment to prayer” amid a continually unfolding sexual-abuse controversy.

“If we as a diocese truly repent, truly believe, truly turn to the Father, then something happens,” Bishop James Ruggieri said. “Our parishes will become even more alive. Our charity will become more credible. Our witness becomes even more compelling. And our unity becomes visible.”

But the leading Maine advocates for victims of priestly sexual abuse are calling Ruggieri out, claiming his words fall short.

Voice Of The Faithful In Maine see the bishop’s Ash Wednesday homily’s excerpt calling for “forgiveness to replace resentment” as ironic.

“Why is he refusing to meet with two baptized Catholics?” asked Paul Kendrick of Freeport.

Kendrick is co-founder of the abuse advocates group seeking what it describes as “reparations and justice for victims of childhood sexual abuse.”

The organization is calling on the bishop to meet with them to discuss their concerns.

Kendrick and co-founder Michael Sweatt of North Yarmouth have unsuccessfully sought a meeting with Rev. Steven Wright of Falmouth.

They say they want to talk with Wright about greater involvement of the lay parish in running the church as well as a private matter that they haven’t discussed publicly.

Wright has canceled two meetings with Kendrick and Sweatt and the bishop has told all diocese priests not to meet with them.

Showhorse Maine Democrat Gubernatorial Hopeful Nirav Shah Claims We Need To Be Protected From Trump?

Showhorse Maine Democrat Gubernatorial Hopeful Nirav Shah Claims We Need To Be Protected From Trump?

A member of the broadening field of Democrats who think they can be the state’s next governor actually thinks Donald Trump is our problem?

Nirav Shah issued a campaign primer on what an alleged problem the president is, according to the website BiddefordBuzz.com.

Shah apparently missed the part of the movie where he is the one we need protection from.

“There has never been a candidate for Maine governor who has proven by their actions to be more utterly unqualified for the job more than Nirav Shah,” historian and former Maine Department of Education Commissioner Tom Desjardin said.

Desjardin analyzed Shag’s candidacy in a piece for The Maine Wire late last year, writing that Shah has a history of utter administrative failure – not only in Maine but in his previous jobs.

Shah is best known for leading the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention through the COVID-19 pandemic.

He also held a role with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in the failed Biden administration before returning to his home state.

“Shah’s background demonstrates a staggering inability to effectively manage or communicate in the field of public health,” Desjardin also wrote in a column three years ago.

Shah was director of the Illinois Department of Public Health in 2015 when an outbreak of Legionnaires’ disease resulted in 13 deaths and 74 infections at the Illinois Veterans Home.

Shah was among several Illinois officials heavily criticized for their response to the outbreak, and a 2019 state audit report of the incident indicated that the Illinois CDC did not visit the facility until nearly two weeks into the outbreak.

Shah insisted that the agency followed all federal guidelines and moved quickly.

Illinois U.S. senators Dick Durbin and Tammy Duckworth called for Shah’s resignation, but he remained in his position until the governor who appointed him lost his re-election bid in 2018.

The state of Illinois six years ago reached a $6.4 million settlement agreement with several families of veterans who died in the outbreak.

After Democrat Gov. Janet Mills appointed Shah as disease-control director in 2019, he became a media darling of the legacy press because of his unending series of “news conferences.”

“Shah received fawning praise from local left-wing media outlets for quoting popular music while promoting cooperation with draconian and invasive pandemic-era restrictions and mandates, many of which, such as masking and social distancing, have now been shown to be ineffective or arbitrary,” Seamus Othot of The Maine Wire wrote last August when Shaw first started threatening a bid for governor.

The dog-and-pony shows staged by Shah frequently included song lyrics and Dad jokes in an attempt to bring levity to his pandemic reports.

And he’s the same guy who now says Trump is a danger?

“Trump is a threat to our country, our state, our democracy, and our values,” Shah warned in his new campaign commercial. “I’ve stood up to Trump to protect our state before, and I’m ready to do so again.”

The question really is whether Shah is able to protect Maine from himself.

Chellie Left Maine To Inspect ICE Detention Center In Massachusetts – So Now She Represents Two States

Chellie Left Maine To Inspect ICE Detention Center In Massachusetts – So Now She Represents Two States

When U.S. Democrat Rep. Chellie Pingree needed to finger ICE, she apparently couldn’t do it in Maine.

Funny how a congresswoman supposedly representing a Maine district has to leave the state to do her job.

Maybe she thinks Maine is still a part of Massachusetts.

Gotta be. But then again it’s been 206 years since Maine broke away from Massachusetts to become the 23rd U.S. state.

Chellie held a “news conference” Friday to publicize her investigation of federal-immigration holding centers.

Unfortunately the Democrat paper that she relies on for her publicity never asked her why she couldn’t do her work in Maine instead of going to Massachusetts.

But coming from the Portland Press Herald that’s really no surprise.

Chellie said she just had to go to Burlington, Massachusetts because she had heard horror stories about the detention center.

The congresswoman had to admit at her press gaggle Friday that she really found the center to be pretty much up to snuff.

So much for a wasted out-of-state junket.

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