Los Angeles Times

Brave and anonymous?

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Letter writers to the Los Angeles Times know they cannot get away with sharing their opinions but not their names (and, of course, their cities of residence). I’ve had to explain the rules of disclosure to readers uneasy about putting their ideas and identities into public discourse more times than I can count.

So it isn’t surprising that the vast majority of our letter writers, many of whom likely consider themselves part of the “resistance” to President Trump, are unimpresse­d by the senior administra­tion official who wrote anonymousl­y in the New York Times of the “resistance inside the Trump administra­tion.”

We’ve already published a handful of letters about the op-ed; most of them agreed with the writer’s character assessment of Trump but strongly questioned his or her motives. That opinion — that the op-ed was a self-serving apologia for high-level staffers in the administra­tion, evidenced by the writer’s anonymity — was shared by most of the few dozen readers who sent us letters on the topic.

— Paul Thornton, letters editor

Francis X. Fashing of Palm Desert wants Republican­s to “grow a spine”:

I expect senior officials to be able to confront the president openly, but to thwart his decisions by

subterfuge is as anti-American as voter suppressio­n and colluding with foreign adversarie­s.

If members of Trump’s Cabinet are pursuing an agenda contrary to the president’s — something that cannot be denied considerin­g how often his proclamati­ons have been rejected by those around him — there are constituti­onal remedies.

When is the GOP going to grow a spine and put country above party?

Laurie Jacobs of San Clemente prefers an electoral remedy:

The anonymous administra­tion official identifies as a member of the resistance inside the White House. These people see themselves as heroes, but they are no such thing.

They know this country is threatened by an erratic and ill-informed president, and yet they try to work around Trump’s dangerous behavior in an effort to keep the administra­tion running and the Republican Party in power. They want us to appreciate the administra­tion’s “accomplish­ments” and trust them to keep us safe.

The officials who keep a dangerous president in power for the sake of their party are betraying the American people. The only solution is to vote the Republican­s out of office.

Michael D. Leventhal of Rancho Mirage checks in on the aftermath:

It appears that members of the White House staff are, in an attempt to appease their leader and save their jobs, now rushing like lemmings to the cliffs to declare, “I am not Spartacus.”

P.S.: I’m not anonymous.

Carolyn Adamick of Valencia repeats Trump’s “gutless” remark:

I think it is truly scary that gutless Republican­s can’t confront Trump. They all know he is unfit for office and needs to be removed, the sooner the better.

 ?? Mark Lennihan Associated Press ?? TRAFFIC PASSES in front of The New York Times’ Manhattan headquarte­rs on July 22, 2008.
Mark Lennihan Associated Press TRAFFIC PASSES in front of The New York Times’ Manhattan headquarte­rs on July 22, 2008.

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