Los Angeles Times

Rude behavior at the Games

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Re “Korea’s ‘Peace Olympics,’ ” editorial, Feb. 9

I read with tears in my eyes about the combined Korean delegation at the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea. As a Vietnamese refugee, I couldn’t help but profoundly admire the peaceful way that the two Korean government­s are treating reunificat­ion, even if only symbolical­ly.

The fact that the athletes from the north and the south are using one new flag shows some maturity. Furthermor­e, it was so appropriat­e that the organizers selected John Lennon’s “Imagine” to be sung at the opening ceremony.

Meanwhile, facing such a movingly beautiful spectacle, Vice President Mike Pence remained sitting stone-faced, showing the inhumanity of a Trumpist politician. Do Huu Chi

Garden Grove

The “some” who are calling the 2018 Winter Games the Peace Olympics include the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee and the Korean government­s.

And it isn’t just Koreans and Korean Americans yearning for peace — Americans are worried that we might start a war in Korea. As one of the many yearners, I don’t expect a dramatic breakthrou­gh, and I understand that successful diplomacy doesn’t require one.

But I do expect adult behavior and common courtesy from U.S. officials,

as opposed to Pence’s refusing to stand for the unified Korean team of athletes entering the stadium and then his leaving before their two women ice hockey players lighted the Olympic torch together. This kind of undiplomat­ic rudeness and the rest of the Trump administra­tion’s saber-rattling will have the U.S. sidelined on the world stage.

We must demand that Congress do its job and assert its constituti­onal responsibi­lity to weigh in on Trump’s foolhardy plans to “bloody the nose” of North Korea’s version of an impulsive leader by starting another war there. Roberta Medford

Montrose

I would expect that the vice president of the United States, attending the Olympics in South Korea, would be gracious and politely acknowledg­e all participan­ts and representa­tives.

I found Pence’s behavior rude and embarrassi­ng. It certainly betrayed a lack of sportsmans­hip on the part of the American representa­tive in South Korea. Claire Zimmer

Palm Springs

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