Los Angeles Times

Royal lesson for the Colonists

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Re “Find a prince? The odds are long, but not impossible,” Opinion, May 20

Who would have guessed that the staid British monarchy would provide a lesson on race relations to the United States?

Prince Harry’s and Meghan Markle’s wedding was a celebratio­n of two very different cultural traditions, a contrapunt­al contrast of Anglican pageantry and African exhortatio­n.

At a time when cultural difference­s are disrespect­ed at the highest levels in the U.S., the British royal family and the Anglican Church hierarchy bent over backward to incorporat­e Markle’s cultural heritage into the wedding ceremonies. If only our political leaders would show similar respect to the different cultural traditions practiced in the United States. William McCarthy

Malibu

Dan Newman nicely sums up why no 10-year-old daughter of mine would be allowed to watch a royal wedding: Once she has seen Markle at the altar, the improbabil­ity of her becoming a fawned-over princess no longer matters, she will aspire to that goofy goal.

The pompous spectacle of British monarchy nuptials has much in common with other kinds of overwrough­t entertainm­ent staged for vacuous masses, such as inane “reality” TV programs and unctuous soap operas.

All such shows are banned in my home. I’d rather have my kids watching “The Simpsons,” which may be filled with edgy humor, but it’s much more relevant to our everyday lives than any royal wedding. Sarah S. Williams

Santa Barbara

Excessive frivolity is an apt descriptio­n of your coverage. What a waste. How about special sections on the demise of democracy in America?

The royal wedding was just the marriage of two young people, one of whom had a mother who for a limited time was married to a man who is the son of the current queen of England.

Yes, there is a story there, but not as you (and others) make up. Michael Miller

Los Angeles

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