Advertisement

U.S.-Israel relations; the GOP presidential debate and climate change; California’s high-speed rail project

Share via

Stress on an alliance

Re “Israel shrugs off allies’ ire,” Sept. 11

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu may well be, as former Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates said, an “ungrateful ally” of the United States; he is also a liability.

Advertisement

His intransigence has made Israel more vulnerable than he realizes. Like the biblical Samson, who found out too late that his physical prowess was no match for the wiles of Delilah, Netanyahu should realize that his inflexible foreign policy makes him as blind to reality as Samson.

The United States needs to vacate the diplomatic edifice it shares with Netanyahu (though not with the Israeli people) before he brings the whole structure down on both of them.

Peter A. O’Reilly

Advertisement

Claremont

Gates called Israel an “ungrateful ally.”

Last month, Israel suffered 178 terrorist attacks, a significant increase from the 53 that took place in July, according to Israel’s security agency.

A question for Gates: How many attacks on the United States would you tolerate before taking military action to stop those attacks?

Advertisement

Furthermore, other than Britain, who among our allies is “grateful?”

Harvey B. Schechter

Beverly Hills

Re “Food co-op turns into battleground over Israeli products,” Sept. 9

I am a liberal Democrat, and I am disgusted by the extreme left in California that uses Israel as a whipping boy for their misguided causes.

These anti-Israel lefties are to the Democrats what the “tea party” members are to the Republicans — and this isn’t a compliment. The fact that a proponent of the boycott of Israeli goods admits that the battle is about more than Israel says everything.

They should stick closer to home in chasing their windmills of injustice.

Bruce Kaye

Advertisement

West Hollywood

Rick Perry, scientifically

Re “He’s no Galileo,” Editorial, Sept. 9

I watched the debate because it was important to see who the Republicans in the audience supported. It was astonishing how many times they applauded the most ridiculous statements, including Texas Gov. Rick Perry’s ignorance about climate change.

But when he compared himself to Galileo, my husband and I turned to each other and burst out laughing. He doesn’t even know what Galileo did or he certainly wouldn’t have aligned himself with him — all that science and all.

And this is who the Republicans consider presidential? He is another Bachmann/Palin retread — simply unbelievable.

Advertisement

Carolyn Crandall

Camarillo

I suppose there are actually some real climate-change deniers. But the majority of “non-enthusiasts,” including Perry, understand that carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas and that our industrial society produces a lot of the stuff. It’s just that we think “cost/benefit.”

How much will it cost to lower the temperature by a few degrees 100 or 200 years from now? What about adapting to inevitable change?

It would be crazy to lay an economy to waste in a crusade for anti-carbon purity.

Zack Kircher

Los Angeles

Advertisement

If you have ever taken your doctor’s advice or driven a car, you trust the scientific process. The majority of Democrats, independents and Republicans (excluding tea party members) believe the climate is changing. If you trust the majority of the world’s climate scientists who say man is largely responsible, it is time to speak up.

Congress is only a reflection of those participating in democracy. Its members do not create political will; they respond to it. Yet denialists are the loudest ones talking.

Economists repeatedly say we need to price carbon. A revenue-neutral fee on carbon would send a clear price signal to clean-tech investors that will encourage lasting jobs.

The disengaged middle of our country needs to snap out of it and call their representatives today.

Amy Hoyt Bennett

Encinitas

Advertisement

Making tracks in California

Re “Deficit could derail bullet train,” Sept. 8

The current plan for California’s high-speed rail shows why government projects are increasingly unpopular. It makes little sense to build the first segment between Chowchilla and Bakersfield, where few people would use it. This could easily become a white elephant.

It makes more sense to build the first segments from San Francisco to San Jose and from Los Angeles to Anaheim or Riverside. We should start in the north and the south and then link up in the middle.

If China can build the world’s most advanced bullet train from the Shanghai airport to the city, why can’t we do something similar?

Roman Nykolyshyn

Advertisement

Pasadena

What possible reason can there be for a commitment that could cost upward of $65 billion? Who would really benefit from the end result?

Perhaps we could all jump on the train and, in less time than it takes to play a baseball game, be in San Francisco. Or we could use a fraction of this money to repair California’s decaying infrastructure and keep our parks open.

Rodney McKinney

La Mirada

In Cuba, it’s about freedom

Advertisement

Re “Lift the U.S. trade embargo on Cuba,” Opinion, Sept. 9

Robert S. McElvaine calls on President Obama to “tear down this wall,” referring to our trade embargo on Cuba’s dictatorship. It borders on disrespectful to use Ronald Reagan’s call to dismantle the Berlin Wall with lifting the embargo on Cuba.

Reagan sought freedom for East Germans and other nations oppressed by the Soviet Union. Ending the embargo would not bring anything close to freedom to the Cubans. It would bring billions in profits for American corporations, which would be allowed to thoroughly exploit Cuban workers.

Meanwhile, the communist dictatorship would still be in place.

Alexis Torres

Los Angeles

As McElvaine points out, the embargo was meant to wreck Cuba’s economy and to get the Cuban people to overthrow Fidel Castro. It hasn’t worked for some 50 years, so why do we maintain it?

Advertisement

The official reason — democracy and liberty for the Cuban people — is irrelevant because we’ve supported much worse dictatorships. Old-fashioned imperialism is a more credible explanation, but our imperial sway is ebbing globally.

Economic problems will compel restraints on our imperium. Recognizing the Cuban government would be a good start.

Roger Carasso

Los Angeles

On two wheels

Re “A car lane is given to bikes,” Sept. 9

Advertisement

As a bicyclist, I found it discouraging that the article claims that new bike lanes “could be politically dubious” and seemed to assume that they must necessarily come at motorists’ expense.

These bike lanes are a win-win for everyone. Cyclists will now have a designated place to ride on the street, which should coax more of them off the sidewalk and spare them the ire of angry, impatient drivers who think they’re holding them up by traveling in the main lane.

Pedestrians will have fewer sidewalk cyclists to deal with and will only have to dodge one lane of car traffic in each direction instead of two when crossing the street.

I encourage The Times to be more cognizant of such factors and to keep things in perspective when covering traffic.

Niall Huffman

Los Angeles

Advertisement

Jobs for citizens

Re “A jobs generator?,” Editorial, Sept. 9

There is a glaring omission in President Obama’s jobs plan. The president spoke of “jobs for people.” I am concerned about jobs for Americans.

If our president would ask Congress to make the use of E-Verify mandatory, millions of jobs held by illegal immigrants would be available to Americans.

Paula M. Heim

Valencia

Advertisement