Los Angeles Times

Cancel culture nuance, please

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Re: “Reckoning with Chavez's complex legacy as a hero,” March 29

Across the country statues are being torn down and school names are being changed as the “heroes” of the past are canceled because of the flaws that made them imperfect.

Columnist Gustavo Arellano cites Cesar Chavez’s multiple transgress­ions and shortcomin­gs, but then gives him a pass because this “hero was a man. And that Man, invariably, is no saint.”

Is this an example of cancel culture inequality? Glynn Morris

Playa del Rey

We owe Mr. Arellano a word of thanks for urging us to weigh a hero’s achievemen­ts against his faults, rather than immediatel­y dismissing him.

Having worked in the fields on my parents' farm since age 8 — and knowing what hot, miserable work farmworker­s do — I have admired Cesar Chavez for years. He had serious faults, but I still admire him.

Jesus said: “Let the one who is without sin cast the first stone.” Only perfect people have the right to demand perfection in others.

Looking more closely at Chavez’s record, we may also discover the littleknow­n fact that he championed animals, and was a vegan out of compassion. That fact should be weighed in his legacy as well. Gracia Fay Ellwood

Diamond Bar

Thank you for this wise article. We live in such iconoclast­ic times. Is it because lesser beings envy the courage of the greater. Emily Dickinson wrote: We never know how high we are till we are called to rise and then if we are true to plan

our statures touch the skies. The heroism we recite would be a daily thing did not ourselves the cubits warp for fear to be a king. Eric Searcy Los Angeles

School names are currently being changed because the old ones don't fit our current state of enlightenm­ent and social consciousn­ess.

I remember the farmworker­s’ call to boycott the sale of grapes in the 1970s. Though I still bought them, I thought about the hands that had picked them and how they got to my table. In this Easter season, it'd be good to remember these words — “Those without sin cast the first stone.” Elsa Frausto

Tujunga

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