Lunch counter sit- ins starting in 1960 are indelible part of history
READER FEEDBACK
Your guest opinion piece lauding students for leading today’s anti- gun movement deserves praise for acknowledging other student- led initiatives that have brought constructive social change (“Young people have led way to change before,” Sunday). May their efforts prevail.
However, the examples of notable prior student actions is embarrassing for omitting one of the most far- reaching in our nation’s history: the lunch counter sit- ins starting in 1960 in Greensboro that snowballed into the civil rights crusade, culminating in the toppling of de jure Jim Crow in America.
They endured threats, insults, physical assault and jail time but did not falter or yield.
Along with other student protests, it remains an indelible part of American history, reminding us that “black history” does not exist in a vacuum, or only during the month of February, but is part and parcel of American history in toto, immutable, irreversible and with us always.
Ted Z. Manuel, Hyde Park Misinformation
Frankly I am appalled that the Sun- Times would allow itself to be an instrument for the misinformation and misrepresentation campaign of the far right. The opinion piece by Sally C. Pipes (“False promise of ‘ Medicare for all’ roars back”) is typical of the fake analyses produced by so- called conservative think tanks such as the Heritage Foundation, American Enterprise Institute, and Pipes’ operation, the Pacific Research Institute.
These organizations cherrypick the data to paint the issues and programs they oppose in the most negative light. They make no attempt to provide the public with a balanced viewpoint. Thus, according to Pipes, Sanders’ “Medicare for all” would be an absolute calamity with no positive attributes. For the Sun- Times to provide a full page to such biased blather is mind- boggling.
Wylie Rogers, South Shore
Cynical calculation
Republicans seem remarkably indifferent to the mounting evidence that Russian- linked computer criminals have been actively influencing election outcomes both here and abroad. I suspect that their indifference arises from the cynical calculation that such efforts favor Republican candidates and causes. Once again, Americans are seeing the cancer of political party trumping country.
Mary F. Warren, Wheaton
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