Los Angeles Times

Why we should believe accusers

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Re “Sex allegation­s make Alabama race a toss-up,” Nov. 13

I am a former high school teacher. During numerous class discussion­s, I listened to many, many students reveal that they were the victims of sexual abuse.

Listening to their stories was heartbreak­ing, and I always wondered why some of them waited so long to “tell.” What I learned was that “kids

never tell.”

I don’t know if it was fear, guilt, confusion or some intuitive sense that what happened was just too wrong to discuss. I heard sexual abuse stories, often, 10 years after the incidents, so I knew for sure that only the atmosphere in the class and the trust they had in me gave them enough courage to confess the abuses they suffered.

I hope the public that has no real knowledge of the vast incidents of sexual abuse does not dismiss these women as liars or having other motives. I know that a victim of any sort of sexual abuse does not react in the same way one would if attacked differentl­y. Please believe them. Phyllis Molloff

Fallbrook

If someone in the entertainm­ent business is accused of sexual abuse in one form or another, industry support is immediatel­y terminated. And so it should be.

If one is running for the presidency or a seat in the United States Senate, political parties feign disgust but continue to support the accused on the chance that the allegation­s are untrue.

Alleged Hollywood abusers, are you listening? All is not lost. There are still career opportunit­ies for you in Washington. Todd Rutherford

Riverside

Can someone help me understand “values” voters? They stress the importance of Christian values, then vote for a confessed sexual harasser for president and support a Senate candidate who is accused of having sexual contact with a 14-year-old girl in 1979.

How can they reconcile these positions? The term “hypocrisy” comes to mind. Charles Lindahl

Fullerton

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