Los Angeles Times

It’s no Texas border town

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Re “DeSantis’ move falls flat,” Opinion, Sept. 17

I had to laugh out loud as I read the sanctimoni­ous op-ed article by Bob Drogin, a resident of Martha’s Vineyard, in which he praises the brave and selfless citizens of his island off the Massachuse­tts mainland for the great virtue and compassion they showed in shoulderin­g the incredible burden of providing food and shelter for about 50 immigrants for two days.

Drogin’s piece invites derision for its lack of selfawaren­ess and perspectiv­e.

Does he think his community would hold up nearly as well if theirs was the experience of a typical Texas border town?

McAllen, Texas, has a population of about 140,000 and has at times over the last two years been forced to manage an influx of 1,500 migrants a day. A day!

Martha’s Vineyard has fewer than 20,000 full-time residents (the population varies greatly by season), and I would love to see if they would feel so magnanimou­s if they had to take in several hundred immigrants per day.

Ron Greeno

Los Angeles

This is a perfect illustrati­on of the difference between Republican­s and Democrats.

Republican­s treat people as pawns. Did Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis just basically transport families across state lines and dump them as a political joke?

The Democratic-leaning folks of Martha’s Vineyard rushed to support the cruelly used men, women and children dropped in their midst. They gave them food, shelter, clothing and toys, as human beings should treat one another.

The GOP cares for itself only. Democrats take a much broader view.

Marianne Hunter Rancho Palos Verdes

Re “An ungodly way to treat migrants,” letters, Sept. 18

One letter writer suggested that this scheme was to “give progressiv­e states a taste of what border states … are struggling with.”

By all means, let’s give those lefties a lesson. Round up some immigrants, force them onto planes and buses and evidently lie to them about where they were going and why.

The letter writer believes that the action was to “make the experience real” for places like Massachuse­tts. It was certainly “real” for the immigrants. Francis Moss

Joshua Tree

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