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Joe Reisert

Reisert Joseph Reisert Joseph Reisert teaches in the Government Department at Colby College, where he has worked since completing his Ph.D. in political science in 1996. He went to college planning to become a lawyer, but after he took his first course in political thought, he knew had found his calling -- arguing against liberal professors. His favorite thinkers are those, such as Jean-Jacques Rousseau, whose paradoxical arguments can't be perfectly pigeonholed as either liberal or conservative. Reisert lives in Waterville with his two children and his wife, who thinks he's wrong about pretty much everything.
Recent columns by Joseph Reisert

Here's a question for each of us: Are we qualified to be citizens?
[Oct. 2, 2009]
Politics hasn't suddenly gotten nasty, it's just from the other side
[Sept.18, 2009]
College students need solid, uniform base before learning what they want
[Sept. 4, 2009]
Lack of trust keeps health-care solution just out of reach
[July 24, 2009]
Constitution belongs to the people, not judges
[July 10, 2009]
People create governments first to establish public order, safety
[May 15, 2009]
Whether to go to college, not where, is the better question
[May 1, 2009]
'We should not deny difference to honor it'
[April 17, 2009]
Obama's no socialist and capitalism is not dead -- or dying
[April 3, 2009]
GIVE Act provides tangible reward for volunteers who serve
[March 20, 2009]
Stimulus may be good politics, may not be good government
[March 6, 2009]
Partisanship isn't pretty, but it sure beats the alternatives
[February 20, 2009]
More central Mainers finding Nordic skiing is the way to go
[February 6, 2009]
Obama takes page from McCain in 'spirit of service' philosophy
[January 23, 2009]
According to Constitution, Burris should be a senator
[January 9, 2009]
The word 'meltdown' conjures image of planetary damage
[December 26, 2008]
U.S. businesses need better regulation of risks, rewards
[December 12, 2008]

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OPINIONS SPECIAL PROJECTS HENRY DAVID THOREAU
Most men lead lives of quiet desperation and go to the grave with the song still in them. Not Thoreau. 150 years ago he ventured into Maine's woods. The high drama of the nature Thoreau encountered made its way into the equally dramatic prose of his book, The Maine Woods. We mark the 150th anniversary of Thoreau's 1857 trip as well as the legacy of this transcendentalist, nature lover and, as author Ted Williams writes, contrarian who loved Maine in its wildest and most rugged incarnations. For more, click here.

SPECIAL REPORT: Hunger Series
"For I was hungry," a seven-part editorial series, documents the depth and breadth of hunger in Maine, from the dramatic increase in food pantries to the thousands of children who come to school hungry to the elderly with bare cupboards. For more, click here.



Our local columnists Publication schedule Dan Billings: Thursday, monthly Theo Kalikow: Thursday, monthly David Offer: Tuesday, weekly Kay Rand: Thursday, monthly Joe Reisert: Friday, bi-weekly George Smith: Wednesday, weekly Liz Soares: Thursday, monthly Denis Thoet: Friday, bi-weekly* Gordon Weil: Thursday, weekly *during the growing season

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paper Writer's feature
From local writing workshops: Words about life
[January 27, 2008]
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