Re: “Advocates still hoping to protect canyonlands<\/a>,” Feb. 9 news story<\/p>\n
Andrea Martinez, Cortez<\/em><\/p>\n
Re: “Trump’s assault on transgender rights isn’t a sign of strength,” Feb. 16 commentary<\/p>\n
Like so many things President Donald Trump does, the cruelty is not simply a byproduct but the entire point of his executive order on transgender rights. I agree that it is a profound act of cowardice by a petty, ridiculous man.<\/p>\n
I am afraid that it will only be with time, and perhaps a fortuitous personal connection, that the leadership of the Republican Party will recognize it is on the wrong side of history on this issue. Ronald Reagan could not possibly have cared less about federal funding for research on HIV\/AIDS — until his old Hollywood chum, Rock Hudson, died of it. Dick Cheney, as rock-ribbed a conservative as ever there was, parted ways with the GOP on the single issue of gay rights. His daughter came out as a lesbian.<\/p>\n
One might think that the party of Abraham Lincoln, who issued the Emancipation Proclamation (the executive order of its day) freeing an entire race from bondage, might occasionally wonder whether gratuitous discrimination against a powerless and oppressed minority, no matter how politically expedient at the moment, might one day come to be regarded with a similar contempt and disgust as the institution of slavery itself.<\/p>\n
Ross Buchanan, Denver<\/em><\/p>\n
Re: “Let the girls have their restroom privacy<\/a>,” Feb. 16 letter to the editor<\/p>\n