Los Angeles Times

20 years later, little to say

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After she died in a Paris car wreck 20 years ago this week, Princess Diana — everything about her, including her royalty, love life, charity work, funeral and the circumstan­ces of her untimely death — filled The Times’ letters pages for weeks. But in 2017, when media treated the 20-year anniversar­y of Diana’s death as an important news event, few Times readers had much to say.

The somber occasion drew several letters to the editor, to be sure, but the number of submission­s and their tone seemed awfully restrained given the outpouring of grief and anger by readers that appeared in The Times after Diana’s death on Aug. 31, 1997. Here are some letters sent to us this week.

— Paul Thornton,

Berta Graciano-Buchman of Beverly Hills still tries to make sense of the princess’ death:

Princess Diana may have well been the precursor of today’s fascinatio­n with reality shows, but the impact her untimely death in Paris two decades ago has had in the world is a clear statement of how strong the emotional connection we can feel for someone that letters editor

most of us never met in person.

This connectivi­ty has often eclipsed reason, and I, like millions of people, cried on that awful day 20 years ago upon learning of the accident that took the lives of Diana and her friend.

Although two decades have gone by, many of us are still trying to make sense of her reported last words: My God, what happened? Betty Turner of Sherman Oaks says the lives and deaths of long-ago royals isn’t news:

While no fan of the cult of celebrity, I don’t begrudge The Times for running reports and opinion pieces reflecting on the legacy of Diana. I understand there’s an audience for fluffy articles on anachronis­tic British royalty.

But come on, can’t The Times reserve its front section for real news? The British royal family’s peccadillo­s may provide fodder for gossip pages, but they do not affect life on this side of the Atlantic.

It’s true, as op-ed article writer Autumn Brewington aptly noted, the rubberneck­ing didn’t stop with Diana’s fatal car crash. So let the cheesy tabloids exploit such vapid voyeurism.

In Santa Monica, Lawrence Booth examines the infrastruc­ture that contribute­d to Diana’s death:

The largely unreported cause of Diana’s death was not the sobriety of her driver or the paparazzi chasing the car. The actual cause was the incredibly dangerous condition of the Pont d’Alma tunnel in Paris.

The tunnel was built with pillars separating one side from the other. With highspeed cars in use, this design became unsafe: If a car swerved into a pillar instead of sliding along, say, a rail protecting the pillars, it would destroy the car. That is exactly what happened with Diana’s vehicle, which was turned into a mass of smoking metal.

Only one person survived because he was in the right front and not just because he was the only one belted. If the princess had been wearing a seat belt, her fate might not have been any different, since the car was almost totally crushed.

 ?? Kirsty Wiggleswor­th AP ?? IN LONDON, people gather near Kensington Palace on Thursday to pay tribute to Princess Diana.
Kirsty Wiggleswor­th AP IN LONDON, people gather near Kensington Palace on Thursday to pay tribute to Princess Diana.

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