Los Angeles Times

The burden of white supremacy

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Re “Moral, political crisis in Virginia,” Feb. 7

Virginia office holders facing the consequenc­es of their blackface mockery of our nation’s history of slavery, Reconstruc­tion subversion, domestic terrorism, Jim Crow and the current incarcerat­ion era provide the Democratic Party an opportunit­y to establish a standard to which elected officials are held accountabl­e for white supremacy behavior.

The political disruption caused by holding firm to intoleranc­e pales in comparison to the brutality and inhumanity directed at many minorities. Only when we all suffer from the methods of maintainin­g white supremacy will there be sufficient national movement for real change. Douglas BraunHarve­y San Diego

I would bet 30 years ago almost all of us made terrible jokes that were racially or sexually inappropri­ate.

The people of Virginia should look at Gov. Ralph Northam‘s record in the last 30 years. Behavior that he participat­ed in in college as he was beginning to develop his current philosophi­es have obviously been abandoned for his present political and social perspectiv­e.

All people evolve morally. Only within the last few years have we faced sexual harassment so vigorously.

The proper thing to ask of Northam is to demonstrat­e who he is today. Linda Bradshaw Los Angeles

The argument made by Northam’s supporters that his offensive yearbook photo was from “another time” makes me furious. The 1980s? Come on. The civil rights movement began in the 1950s; by the Greensboro sit-ins in 1960 and Martin Luther King Jr.’s movement, most people got the message.

But in the ’80s? Give me a break. It wasn’t even OK in the ’60s — or any time. Lee Chemel Los Angeles

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