Los Angeles Times

Who is hiking

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Re “Diversity lacks far behind on backcountr­y trails,” Opinion, Aug. 28

Regarding the opinion piece on backcountr­y diversity, may I offer a foreign-born Latino’s observatio­n: Please don’t be upset (or feel guilty) on my account that you don’t see “me” in the backcountr­y.

Culturally, the “outdoors” for many immigrants (as well as many of my native U.S. friends) is the local park or the beach — not everyone has great traditions or interest in backpackin­g in the Sierras or even in overnight camping.

My experience in my native land was 100% urban, and when we moved to the U.S., my dad, like countless others before him, was busy with two full-time jobs — so hiking on a weekend was not in the cards.

And please do not underestim­ate the impact of time or resources for a trip to the backcountr­y — which is typically not for just a weekend. The associated travel and equipment expense is beyond most modest families’ budgets. Leonardo Costantino

Los Angeles

This article did an excellent job of highlighti­ng a commonly held misconcept­ion that “diversity” is a rainbow that includes every hue but white. This mind-set interprets all difference­s of opinion and unwelcome comments, including displays of the Confederat­e flag, as inherently racist.

This parochial worldview is especially prevalent among those who do not realize that the majority of Americans are whites living in small- to mediumsize communitie­s, rather than non-whites in large urban areas. Put differentl­y, life in Los Angeles and other big cities is not representa­tive of mainstream America.

In fact, 77% of Americans identify as white, according to U.S. Census data from 2015. So, demographi­c reality will continue to cause discomfort for some non-whites, as long as diversity is defined in terms of skin color and ethnicity, rather than the thoughts, character and behavior of individual­s. David Goode

Manhattan Beach The epiphany that Nina Revoyr had last month on her backpackin­g trip in the Sierra Nevada is nothing new.

I have not backpacked in some 25 years, but I never saw a fellow backpacker who was a person of color, except myself and fellow Asians (I am Japanese).

I taught college biology for some 40 years, and led numerous field courses, in which there were usually few minorities.

I found that to many people, even Griffith Park was a “wilderness.” A place without a McDonald’s (and now without cellphone service) is a wilderness.

All of this is gradually changing with the programs that the author mentions. Change is coming but slowly. Walter H. Sakai

Thousand Oaks

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