Los Angeles Times

Telling the truth about Trump

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Re “British envoy excoriated by Trump quits after memo leak,” July 11

With the resignatio­n of Britain’s ambassador to the United States, it should be apparent even to Donald Trump’s die-hard supporters what his unique qualificat­ions for the presidency are.

He brings an unerring lack of diplomatic tact, an unmatched ignorance of the world, and an unqualifie­d sense of self-importance. That he is so proud of these qualities speaks volumes about him.

Unfortunat­ely, it does the same for the lemmings who mindlessly follow him.

Michael D. Mauer

Los Angeles

Has there ever been a more high-profile illustrati­on of Freud’s notion of projection than our president’s schoolyard bullying tweets?

Although there’s a long list of infantile examples to choose from, Trump’s tweet calling Britain’s now-former ambassador to the U.S. “wacky” and “a very stupid guy” may take the proverbial cake.

Vincent Brook

Los Angeles

In order to form appropriat­e foreign policy, a leader needs a succinct and accurate assessment of other countries’ government­s. A leader relies on his or her ambassador­s to provide that.

So I put forth the question: How does one write a politicall­y correct message that accurately portrays a foreign leader who is erratic, unpredicta­ble, selfish, bigoted and egotistica­l?

Gregg Ferry

Carlsbad

In law school we learned that “truth is an absolute defense.”

Perhaps it’s not diplomatic­ally, but in this case, it is “absolutely defensible.”

Tom Hilt

Sherman Oaks

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