Los Angeles Times

Will we listen to the Dalai Lama?

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Re “We need global, secular ethics,” Opinion, Nov. 13

The Dalai Lama speaks wisdom in this time of madness. The concept of “educating the heart” is long overdue in our culture.

I am so weary from our competitiv­e, materialis­tic society. How can one preach God-fearing family values while promoting profit-atany-cost-capitalism?

We are seeing in our own country what has long been wrong with the world: heightened emotion, hate and distrust of others, fear of terror and putting up walls — not physical walls but walls between people who should see each other as brothers and sisters.

As the song goes, “You’ve got to be taught to hate and fear.” If you can teach hate, you can teach love. Which would you rather have? Betsy Rothstein

Long Beach

The message of the Dalai Lama is simple and timeless, and if history is any precedent, it will be disregarde­d just as similar messages have from principled men and women throughout the recorded history of our species.

Americans are a violent people. We worship a game that glorifies violence and causes brain damage. We fought a civil war that resulted in monumental death and destructio­n. We ended a more recent war by using a weapon that has the power to eradicate civilizati­on.

Rodney King, no stranger to violence himself, asked the same question as His Holiness: “Why can’t we all just get along?” According to a respected balladeer of our time, “The answer, my friends, is blowin’ in the wind.” Louis H. Nevell

Los Angeles

Global secular ethics — I wonder if that’s what the authors of the Constituti­on were really writing about. They separated church and state and hoped that a secular government would succeed.

Thanks to the Dalai Lama for including all of us, believers and atheists, in his moral vision. I’ve always thought secularism made sense, and I can’t understand why it isn’t embraced worldwide. Ellen Eubanks

Monrovia

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