To the Editor:
Re “Teachers Saved My Life. Why Do We Scorn Them?,” by John B. King Jr. (Opinion visitor essay, June 1):
As a retired secondary faculty instructor and college administrator who now serves as a neighborhood faculty trustee, I commend Mr. King for his private reflection on how lecturers grew to become his lifeline as he navigated the superior challenges of his younger life.
Greater than that, I applaud how he repaid these lecturers a thousandfold by his lifetime as an educator who clearly sees how the Trump administration is attempting to destroy public training with no concern for the irreparable injury its actions are taking over the lives of younger folks.
Whereas there may be little hope that this administration will heed Mr. King’s name for the federal authorities to guard and speed up the transformative energy of training, all of us whose lives have been positively modified by nice lecturers ought to make our voices heard in each attainable discussion board to problem the Trump agenda to dismantle public training. The way forward for our nation will depend on us.
Peter Schmidt
Phillipsburg, N.J.
To the Editor:
John B. King Jr. isn’t the primary and positively not the final particular person whose life has been saved by a instructor. That’s what lecturers do: broaden our lives and our outlooks, and open new worlds.
The devoted nuns who taught me in our small Catholic faculty and the professors who opened new worlds of literature and arithmetic might not have saved my life, however they definitely expanded it manyfold. And maybe the most effective present I acquired from them was a love of studying.
The Trump administration is aware of nicely that an informed inhabitants is the dying knell for the MAGA motion and should not be permitted to develop. Completely different viewpoints should not be tolerated, and controversial matters should not be taught, lest the folks grow to be conscious and, God forbid, considerate. Training isn’t any pal to dictators.
John T. Dillon
West Caldwell, N.J.
Standing As much as Trump
To the Editor:
Re “President Finds a Rival Who Can Punch Back” (information evaluation, entrance web page, June 7):
Donald Trump eventually seems to have discovered an adversary who will stand as much as him, or so it appears. Many people are cheered by the sight of somebody going toe to toe with the president, unintimidated by his threats, not less than for now.
However, like all the things else within the Trump period, it’s truly a miserable sight, not a cheerful one. The one that lastly stood as much as Mr. Trump, Elon Musk, isn’t a senator, not a member of the Home, not a governor, however somebody like Mr. Trump himself, a inconsiderate billionaire who, not like Mr. Trump, was not even elected.
And he’s standing as much as Mr. Trump not as a result of he believes it’s the proper factor to do, or to save lots of the nation from a president who desires to be a king, however as a result of he additionally desires to be a king, and Mr. Trump stands in his approach.
Tim Shaw
Cambridge, Mass.
Homeless Boomers
To the Editor:
Re “Heightened Risk of Homelessness Is Stalking a Generation” (information article, June 4):
Late child boomers’ wrestle with homelessness might certainly be attributed to recessions, drug abuse and the failure of a so-called security internet to offer working- and middle-class Individuals sufficient medical care, inexpensive housing, sufficient wages and union pensions. Because the article suggests, insufficient assets extra harshly have an effect on folks of colour, who already wrestle to realize monetary fairness.
But a big piece of the image, not absolutely addressed in your article, is psychological sickness. Deinstitutionalization has left many financially strapped households with a Hobson’s selection: Both shelter a mentally ailing relative who could also be disruptive or self-medicating with road medication, or let that particular person grow to be homeless.
If a household isn’t sufficiently prosperous to pay for an house, or the relative is simply too disabled or disruptive to be taken into one other residence, when a father or mother or different major caregiver dies, that particular person can be on the streets.
Whereas the outdated establishments have been snake pits, we have now not developed — and funded — viable alternate options to long-term, inpatient therapy for the mentally ailing. The so-called late boomers are merely the primary post-deinstitutionalization era to age into homelessness.
Rita C. Tobin
Chappaqua, N.Y.