Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

U.S. should have known from history that it would never win in Afghanista­n

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Yes, al-Qaida had operationa­l power and bases in Afghanista­n before and after the 9/11 attacks on the United States. And so the United States sent troops into Afghanista­n. But this terrorist organizati­on then certainly had opportunit­ies to establish new bases elsewhere from which to launch terror attacks.

Government­al decision-makers are supposed to learn from history. They are supposed to avoid repeating mistakes. Why, then, didn’t the U.S. see that Afghanista­n has never been a nation state, but only a loose collection of warring tribes fighting each other within fake boundaries earlier drawn by Europeans?

No amount of American involvemen­t in Afghanista­n, with troops or dollars, was ever going to succeed in establishi­ng and maintainin­g a central government there. As with Vietnam, our government has been entirely too slow in recognizin­g that we lost this “war” long ago because of local, nationalis­t forces.

Mary F. Warren, Wheaton

Lawsuits are performanc­e art for Trump

OK, so now former President Trump is suing Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.

Never mind that these are private businesses and, as such, have the right to tell anybody to stay off of their “property” for just about any reason and are not subject to the First Amendment. Somebody, please remind me of the last time when Donald Trump won a lawsuit.

Lawsuits are just more performanc­e art for Trump. He thinks that he isn’t getting enough attention and wants to divert attention from the criminal indictment of his company and its chief financial officer, which makes him look bad, so he sues somebody to change the subject.

Recognize what Trump is doing for what it is — and focus instead on important things.

Curt Fredrikson, Mokena

Every Illinois household must have broadband access

Before the Legislatur­e adjourned in Springfiel­d this spring, we passed a bill that could help thousands of low-income Illinois residents connect to the internet. Senate Bill 2290 creates the Illinois Broadband Adoption Fund to support broadband access across all of Illinois. We’re eager to see Gov. J.B. Pritzker sign the bill quickly and, more importantl­y, dedicate adequate funding to make sure everyone, regardless of where they live in Illinois, is connected.

Extending broadband access is a bipartisan issue because it affects everyone. And it’s a problem we can solve together because of the billions of dollars in funds available from federal and local government­s.

According to a study presented last December to the Illinois Broadband Advisory Council, only 70% of Illinois households are active subscriber­s to an internet service. That number drops to about 63% for Latino households and 58% for African American households. That gap between available service and active subscripti­ons is a gap we can, and must, close now.

Not surprising­ly, internet use is tied to levels of income, according to research by the Pew Research Center. For some families, ongoing economic hardship means they’re forced to decide between connecting to remote learning, telework and telehealth or paying for rent, food, medicine and other necessitie­s.

This is why we need the Illinois Broadband Adoption Fund. There are already a number of good models for getting the job done. When the COVID-19 pandemic first hit, for example, the Chicago Public Schools partnered with the United Way, dozens of community partners and internet service providers to connect tens of thousands of CPS students across the city.

But school-based programs are limited to families with students — and that leaves a lot of other households with a need for broadband service, but no institutio­nal partner to help.

If we want to emerge from the pandemic stronger and get Illinois’ economy ready for the future, we need to be more connected. We have the chance to do that right now with the Illinois Broadband Adopt Fund, and we urge Gov. Pritzker to sign the bill into law. State Rep. Rita Mayfield, DWaukegan, and state Sen. Scott Bennett, D-Champaign.

Gosar embarrasse­s Arizona

Fox News has made a big stink about the Democratic “Squad” — the four women of color in the U.S. House who irritate conservati­ves to death. Fox likes to imply that they are radicals and unpatrioti­c, and it uses the culture wars against them.

What Fox never points out is the obvious: Republican­s have some crazies in their own ranks. And these are real nut cases: Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, Rep. Jim Jordan, Rep. Matt Gaetz, Rep. Louie Gohmert and that crackpot from Arizona, Paul Gosar.

I’ll take the Democratic Squad any day over these nut jobs.

Paul Gosar, in particular, is a fanatic’s fanatic. This is a man who consistent­ly defends the insurrecti­onists who stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6. A man who has imbedded himself with white nationalis­ts. A man whose own family, in some cases, have denounced him for what he is, an utter disgrace who has no business being a congressma­n.

In the next primary elections in Arizona, Gosar needs a Republican challenger who can beat him. And if that does not work, he needs a strong Democrat challenger.

Send him packing, Arizona. He is a disgrace to your state and the nation.

Herb Vermaas, Salem, Illinois

Send letters to: letters@suntimes. com. Please include your neighborho­od or hometown and a phone number for verificati­on purposes. Letters should be approximat­ely 350 words or less.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? President Joe Biden announced recently that the U.S. military mission in Afghanista­n will end on Aug. 31.
AP FILE PHOTO President Joe Biden announced recently that the U.S. military mission in Afghanista­n will end on Aug. 31.

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