Las Vegas Review-Journal

Searching for civility

Mobs should not rule politics

- Huntington Beach, California

SCREAMING at people who disagree with you is an unbecoming habit for a two-year-old. It should be an unacceptab­le one for adults to engage in when their political opponents are eating dinner at a restaurant.

Yet over the last week that’s exactly what has happened to members of the Trump administra­tion.

A fellow customer at a Mexican restaurant berated White House adviser Steven Miller as a “fascist.” Two days later, Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen left a Mexican restaurant after a mob started screaming at her. They congregate­d around her table and yelled things like, “If kids don’t eat in peace, you don’t eat in peace.” After several minutes of verbal abuse, Nielsen left the restaurant, and the rabble-rousers claimed victory.

In a statement, Megan Mclaughlin, a member of the Metro DC Democratic Socialists of America Steering Committee, said Nielsen “should never be allowed to eat and drink in public again.”

That attitude is concerning enough coming from a fringe group. But over the weekend, mob intimidati­on received a congressio­nal endorsemen­t.

“If you see anybody from that Cabinet in a restaurant, in a department store, at a gasoline station, you get out and you create a crowd and you push back on them, and you tell them they’re not welcome anymore, anywhere,” Rep. Maxine Waters, D-calif., told a screaming crowd.

This type of behavior is illegal. You don’t have the right to harass your political opponent when they are in someone else’s private establishm­ent. People who do should be arrested and charged.

That’s different from what happened to White House press secretary Sarah Sanders over the weekend. Sanders and her family went to a restaurant in Virginia to eat, but the restaurant’s owner refused to serve her and asked her to leave.

Ironically, the left wanted to deny this same right to Colorado baker Jack Phillips, who was at the center of the recent Masterpiec­e Cakeshop Supreme Court decision. That baker, however, was happy to sell the gay couple anything in his store. He was only unwilling to bake them a custom cake for an event that violated his religious beliefs.

Sanders left the restaurant and then tweeted about what happened. This is how it should work. Two individual­s exercised their rights without threatenin­g each other with violence.

Even a country that is divided by politics can have some civility if there is respect for the political freedoms of one’s opponent.

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Fax 702-383-4676 intelligen­t than we give them credit for and also have a lot compassion and feelings. All one has to do is to watch any of the “Planet of the Apes” movies to see their potential.

Kenneth L. Zimmerman

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