One of the great losses in public discourse in recent years has been the demise of local newspapers like the Gazette Papers in Montgomery County. The Gazette was a weekly, distributed free to every household in Montgomery County, regardless of ideology. It was supported by advertising, of which there was a lot. When the post-Graham era owner of the Washington Post, which had owned the Gazette Papers, decided to close them down -- and then later to take down the valuable web-based archive -- he did our community a great disservice.
This was brought home to me in the process of doing what so many fellow-septuagenarians must do: Go through old boxes of papers and at least cull them down so that their children will not someday have the burden of doing so.
In 2005, I was involved in the struggle to update the Montgomery County Public Schools' health education curriculum to include accurate information on sexual orientation and gender identity. When MCPS was blind-sided by a lawsuit that derailed the process, there was a huge amount of public debate of the matter, particularly in the pages of the Gazette, which provided a full and fair forum for this debate. That debate, I believe, helped the public make up its collective mind by listening to all sides, and similarly helped public officials -- both elected and appointed -- to figure out the best course of action. As it eventually did, adopting a far more comprehensive curriculum that followed the wisdom of every mainstream American medical and mental health professional association. See here.
Below is a picture (as I note above, the Gazette archive is no longer available) of the May 25, 2005 Community Forum/Letters to the Editor page. Would that there were such widely distributed venues today.
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