Los Angeles Times

Police tactics and COVID-19

-

Re “A pandemic double standard?” editorial, June 5

I see a double standard — in your editorial.

Where is your concern about members of the Los Angeles Police Department, including Chief Michel Moore, not wearing masks, in violation of the local order to do so in public? About police firing tear gas into crowds, increasing the risk of transmitti­ng COVID-19? About the arrests of thousands of people based on inaudible unlawful assembly declaratio­ns (and therefore violating the law) and unconstitu­tional curfews that were not announced far enough in advance?

Further, many protesters were held for hours in close quarters, raising their risk of infection.

In 1992 (Rodney King), 2000 (the Democratic convention) and 2007 (May Day), the police unleashed violence on protesters; now they add an increased risk of the contagion already ravaging communitie­s. When will this cycle of reckless police violence be broken? Leone Hankey

Los Angeles

As the civil unrest that’s been ignited by the killing of George Floyd inevitably scales down, we must be reminded of the fact that a deadly pandemic is still ravaging this nation, with the U.S. nearing 2 million confirmed cases and 115,000 lives lost.

To refresh everyone’s memory, the coronaviru­s does not care about protests, personal freedom or businesses reopening. It does not consider boundaries. It doesn’t care about ideology, the economy or the latest numbers from Wall Street. It is neither bipartisan nor political.

The coronaviru­s cares about one thing: finding a host. That’s you and me.

The question is, are we as hosts smarter than and able to outmaneuve­r a microbe? Or are we more concerned about everything I’ve listed above? If it is the latter, God help us. Blaine Ziolkowski

Thousand Oaks

HOW TO WRITE TO US Please send letters to letters@latimes.com. For submission guidelines, see latimes.com/letters or call 1-800-LA TIMES, ext. 74511.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States