Los Angeles Times

Leave Abraham Lincoln alone

Re “San Francisco puts Lincoln’s legacy under a microscope,” Jan. 2

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I cringe a bit whenever I read articles like this one.

People live in their own time and place, not in some unknown future. There are no “reset” or “delete” buttons. Neither the participan­ts nor the events for which they’re known can be erased. They are part of history. They are part of our collective conscience.

Reevaluati­ng motivation­s is part of our growth process as human beings. However, understand­ing newly discovered facts does not make us superior beings capable of casting permanent judgment on all that came before us. Toppling statues and renaming institutio­ns are merely the first steps in denying that these people and events ever happened.

Those who came before us were not f lawless, and neither are we. Rememberin­g the past and learning from it should remain a part of the legacy that we leave for future generation­s.

Betty Rome Culver City

So San Francisco is looking into removing the name of our 16th president from its public schools.

We now know ( although we always did) that “Honest Abe” was not an absolutely perfect human being. Despite all of his laudable accomplish­ments, Lincoln had faults and made mistakes just like every human being ever born in this world.

Apparently, it is now pointless to try to name any school after any actual human being. San Francisco should follow the time- honored tradition ( at least in New York) of naming its elementary, middle and high schools with numbers.

I cannot wait to root for Public School 31 to beat Public School 48 in the football playoffs. Leonard Venger

Tarzana

While a committee of the good citizens of San Francisco is considerin­g social justice for Lincoln, it might review an issue far more close to home.

The early Spaniards who visited what is now California enslaved local natives and forced Christiani­ty upon them. The church in whose name such actions were taken enshrines Francis of Assisi as one of its most holy figures.

Why glorify his name when it represents such oppression? Louis H. Nevell

Los Angeles

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