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July 1, 2025

Talbot Spy

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3 Top Story Point of View J.E. Dean

Gratitude on the Eastern Shore by Maria Grant and J.E. Dean

November 24, 2021 by J.E. Dean and Maria Grant

As Thanksgiving approaches during this challenging year, we want to focus on the positive and remind ourselves that, even in a challenging year, there is much for which to be thankful.

This year we have a lengthy list, in part because the pandemic appears to be waning but also because America is moving toward stability and sanity. A case in point:  There has been no attempt to overthrow the government since January.

There is, of course, much more to life than politics. Most items on our list fall into that category.

First, fall foliage. This year, it is magnificent. We enjoy the vibrant yellows, oranges, and reds. We are grateful that this year’s fall leaves are even more brilliant than usual.

We are also grateful to again spend face-to-face time with family and friends. Last year we made exceptions. This year we moved back to close-to-normal practices, still exercising caution but nonetheless again enjoying dinners and get-togethers the way they are meant to be enjoyed—in person.

Living on the Eastern Shore. Notwithstanding the pandemic, the Eastern Shore keeps raising the bar. Farmers’ markets, art galleries, fish markets, bakeries, food trucks and shops continue to abound. And options for quality restaurant dining are increasing. We are grateful to shopkeepers and restaurateurs who persevered and give a gold star to all who opened a new establishment in the middle of a pandemic. That takes courage. 

We attended this year’s Waterfowl Festival and remembered how much we enjoy it. It was great to see so many people enjoying the art, food, and yes, the dock dogs and raptors. We are grateful for everyone’s efforts which made this Festival so successful. Great job! Thank you!

A special interest of ours is the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum. We are thankful that it has survived the pandemic. The return of the antique and classic boat show was a clear sign that things were getting back to normal. The museum is a gem.

We are grateful for to the Prager family for opening the Prager Family Center for the Arts and giving Chesapeake Music a permanent home. The Ebenezer Theater is is a true treasure. We look forward to hearing future concerts there–without a mask. 

A special interest of ours is reading. Many amazing books were published this past year. We will mention only two– Cloud Cuckoo Land by Anthony Doerr and Lincoln Highway by Amor Towles. Good books helped us get through the pandemic, but we don’t need a pandemic to keep reading. We are grateful to the authors who continue to entertain, educate, and inspire. 

And we permitted ourselves only one political salute. We are grateful that the infrastructure bill has been enacted into law. Thanks to our representatives in Washington who supported the bill (that is all of them except the guy who represents the First District), significant resources are being allocated to clean the Bay. That is something for which we all can be grateful.

One final note of thanks. As we hope you know, Dave Wheelan is the editor of The Spy Community Newspapers. While we are privileged to have the opportunity to write for The Spy, we are even more grateful for the opportunity to read it. We have come to depend on The Spy as a primary source of information about culture, politics, and life on the Eastern Shore. We are grateful to Dave and to the writers and editors who work so hard to make The Spy such a tremendous resource.

And finally, we thank those of you who read our columns this past year. We appreciate your reading our work. We are especially grateful to anyone who comments. It is a privilege to exchange ideas with you.

We wish you a happy and safe Thanksgiving.

Maria Grant was principal-in-charge of a Federal human capital consulting practice of an international consulting firm. She currently is the HR Director for Politics and Prose Bookstore in D.C. While on the Eastern Shore, she focuses on writing, reading, piano, gardening, nature, and travel.

J.E. Dean is a retired attorney and public affairs consultant writing on politics, government, birds, and other subjects.

Both Grant and Dean  love goldendoodles and recommend the breed to anyone looking for a good dog. 

 

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 3 Top Story, J.E. Dean

So Many Reasons to be Grateful this Thanksgiving by J.E. Dean and Maria Grant

November 26, 2020 by J.E. Dean and Maria Grant

As we celebrate our national day of Thanksgiving in a truly miserable year, we should set aside the negatives, even for a day. There is much to be thankful for even while remembering that millions of us across the country face an economic crisis rivaling the Great Depression and that more than 1,000 of us die from COVID-19 each day.

Here is our list:

Vaccines on the horizon. We have not one, but three (as of this writing) vaccines that, pending FDA approval for emergency distribution, could be available as early as December.  It will be a little longer for most of us to get our shots, but there is light at the end of our pandemic tunnel.

Health care workers.  The sacrifices these heroes make every day are truly remarkable. How can we ever repay them for helping us through this crisis?  The answer is we cannot, at least not to the extent they deserve.  We can send them our thanks.  Thank you nurses, doctors, first responders, and everyone else who offer help and compassion to the more than 12 million who have been infected.

Service workers.  Every time we visit the grocery store, we are thankful to those who make daily sacrifices to keep the food supply chain working.  Given that it is impossible to protect oneself totally from infection, the people at the cash register and who bag our groceries are heroes.

Dr. Fauci.  Our candidate for Time Magazine’s Person of the Year is Dr. Anthony Fauci. We consider him part of our personal medical team. Tony, thank you.

Food banks.  It is not easy watching lines of 400 to 500 cars waiting in line for food.  It is a lot harder if you are in one of them.  Fortunately, there are food banks and emergency distributions of food to our neighbors who need it. We all should be grateful for this.  Of course, much more needs to be done.  The food banks are but a temporary measure.  We need to get another stimulus bill passed and money out to those who need it.  In the interim, thank you food banks and everyone behind them.

My neighbors following the CDC guidelines.  All of us should be afraid of the virus. Unfortunately, not all of us are, which makes leaving one’s home a risky venture.  Fortunately, most are following the CDC guidelines on face masks, social distancing, and handwashing.  To all in that majority—thank you.   

Voters.  The 2020 elections were brutal. We learned a lot about ourselves, both positive and negative.  One of the positive takeaways from the election is that we voted in record numbers–a confirmation of faith in our democracy. Everyone who voted, even if they voted for the “wrong” candidate, should be thanked.

The election outcome. Although all are not happy that Joe Biden and Kamala Harris will take office in January, their election means, among other things, that addressing climate change will again be a national priority.  Given predictions that the entire Spy readership area could be under water in less than 100 years, we are grateful for the election of leaders who want to prevent that.  Enough said.

Governor Hogan. During the pandemic, every state needs a level-headed, no-nonsense leader who rises to the challenges faced by current crises. Fortunately, Maryland has such a leader in our governor, Larry Hogan.  His sound advice has saved the lives of hundreds of Marylanders and made us proud.  If every state had a governor like Hogan, we would not be looking at more than 260,000 deaths nationally. Thank you, Governor Hogan.

Spy Media.  Our community is blessed with a resource that makes us unique—Spy Media. We are grateful every day at 3 PM when our Daily Intelligence Report arrives.  Thank you, Dave Wheelan for making it happen. And thank you to all who support The Spy via contributions and by simply being regular readers.  (Personal note, we would be thankful for The Spy even if we did not write for it.)

A safe, healthy, and happy Thanksgiving to all.

J.E. Dean of Oxford is a retired attorney and public affairs consultant. For more than 30 years, he advised clients on federal education and social service policy. Maria Grant served as Principal-in-Charge of the Federal Human Capital practice of Deloitte Consulting. Since her retirement from Deloitte, she has focused on writing, the piano, reading, travel, gardening and nature. 

 

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Op-Ed

Election 2020: Hope has Re-Entered the Building by J.E. Dean and Maria Grant

November 8, 2020 by J.E. Dean and Maria Grant

Hope has reentered the building with the election of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. The official call took a bit longer than some of us had hoped, and the President has not yet conceded, but the time to break out a bottle of champagne and celebrate Biden’s win has arrived.  Congratulations, Mr. President-Elect!

Joe Biden has called for national unity and promised to govern not just for those who voted for him but for the more than 70 million Americans who did not. We are confident he will attempt to do just that.

We are hopeful for the future. We expect the President-Elect to choose experienced, competent individuals to serve in the new government. We expect science to regain its proper position as a guide to addressing COVID-19, and we expect the new President will behave in a manner that won’t have to be apologized for to foreigners.  And our long, national tweet-nightmare is finally coming to an end.

The challenges facing the new President are huge. The four most pressing challenges should guide his decisions on what legislation to press for in his first 100 days:

Addressing the pandemic. Build on efforts already underway to develop a safe vaccine and widely distribute it to Americans.   Redouble efforts to get everyone to follow CDC guidelines as a means of addressing the current spike in infections.

Pass additional stimulus legislation. Millions of Americans are hurting economically.  Passage of an additional stimulus bill is essential. Ideally, with bipartisan cooperation, one will be passed even before Inauguration Day.  If not, passage of such a bill should be the new President’s top priority.

Revive the fight on climate change. The risk to our future from climate change far exceeds that of the coronavirus.  We are relieved that the new President has promised to rejoin the Paris Climate Accord on his first day in office. The President-elect also has promised to make climate change legislation one of his top priorities.  We all need to support him.

Racial justice. The Black Lives Matter protests of the past summer were not just about police murders and misconduct. They were about long-standing and systemic racism. The new President must make racial justice a top priority of his administration.  He needs to do this not just because of the overwhelming support he received from African Americans during the campaign, but because it is the right thing to do.

We are excited about our future. We hope all of us, including those of us disappointed in the election results, will join together to give Joe Biden a chance to lead.  A united America is a stronger America and, given the mess we are currently in, we need as strong an America as is possible.

J.E. Dean and Maria Grant are Spy Columnists.  

 

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 3 Top Story

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