Los Angeles Times

Foul mouths and their president

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Re “County leaders hear f lood of [ expletives],” April 22

It isn’t any wonder that the incidence of profanity and brutish disregard for other people attending L. A. City Council and County Board of Supervisor­s meetings has risen so drasticall­y.

The threats, namecallin­g and profanity that spew from the mouth of the president of the United States have inspired the angriest, most destructiv­e members of our society to embrace their lowest impulses and intentions.

President Trump did not invent hatred, greed or disrespect, but he has recognized their usefulness and put them to work to aggrandize himself in the eyes of a certain subset of Americans at the expense of the rest of us.

INA SCOTT

Lancaster

Government officials are helpless to curtail profanity because they have been told by judges that such abusive language in public meetings is protected speech.

But do the same judges tolerate such abusive speech in their own courtrooms? Of course not. Even though courtrooms are intrinsica­lly just another type of public meeting, they are also the last ves

tige of royalty in which members of the public would be instantly held in contempt for using such language.

Perhaps officials could pass an ordinance that all public meetings should be conducted with freedom of expression, subject to the same degree of decorum as in public courtrooms.

CYRIL BARNERT

Los Angeles

It’s a sad state of affairs when people attending meetings of the Board of Supervisor­s and the Los Angeles Police Commission can use slurs and profanity. It’s a reflection of the general lack of civility in our society.

The use of this language demeans the public hearings to the point where people who want to attend will instead skip these meetings because they do not want to subject themselves to this disgusting behavior.

The U. S. Supreme Court has ruled there are limits to our freedoms of speech and expression. This problem is serious enough that the county and city must appeal any court losses to the highest courts of the land.

ROBERT NEWMAN

West Hills

Perhaps people shouting expletives are simply channeling Mayor Eric Garcetti.

At a public celebratio­n of the L. A. Kings winning profession­al hockey’s Stanley Cup in 2014, Garcetti said to the crowd, “This is a big f------ day.” It was heard loud and clear.

NORM ZARESKI

Palos Verdes Estates

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