Los Angeles Times

Stanford’s bigger name problem

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Re “Stanford is stuck with Junipero Serra,” Opinion, Nov. 30

So, the politicall­y correct activists at Stanford University want to remove St. Junipero Serra’s name from their sanctimoni­ous institute. Fine.

However, I think they should first look into the record of their founder, Leland Stanford, who didn’t even bother to hide his racist view of Chinese people by saying to the state Legislatur­e in 1862, “The presence of numbers of that degraded and distinct people would exercise a deleteriou­s effect upon the superior race.”

I suggest to the activists that they try to remove this blatant white supremacis­t’s name from their institute before dabbling with anyone else. Otherwise, their demands ring hollow. Kee Kim La Habra

Stanford alumna Charlotte Allen asserts that “Serra could be said to have invented the Golden State” — belying that archaeolog­ists have traced human habitation in California as far back as 130,000 years, according to a recent article in the journal Nature.

California’s indigenous peoples defined the region long before the arrival of the fathers and soldiers. The infamous Camino Real existed as a trade route before any Spaniard walked it.

It’s time to look beyond the mission fathers’ planting of fruit orchards to consider the horrific labor conditions that the Spanish imposed on the natives in their massive relocation program. It’s also time to consider the lasting environmen­tal damage that resulted from the introducti­on of livestock and nonnative agricultur­e.

Regardless of whether Stanford University changes its landmarks’ names, it is time to acknowledg­e the native presence that is still here. Pamela Nagler Claremont

Allen struck just the right note.

The worst time for the California Indians was not under Spanish rule or the mission system, but under American domination after an unjust war of aggression and expansion. Some historians today do not hesitate to call it genocide.

The true villain is James K. Polk, the president who maneuvered the country into an immoral war for which he was opposed by a congressma­n named Abraham Lincoln.

Stafford Poole

Los Angeles The writer, a Roman Catholic priest and historian, is the author of several books on the history of colonial Mexico.

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