Thursday, 25 Apr 2024

Opinion | Commemorating Jan. 6, and Meting Out Justice

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To the Editor:

Re “Biden Condemns Trump as U.S. Remembers Capitol Riot” (front page, Jan. 7):

Finally! At long, long last President Biden leads the necessary fight. With a brilliant, forceful and stirring speech, the president explained in stark terms just how horrific the insurrection was, what a venal liar the former president is, how complicit the vast majority of Republicans are.

We can only hope this speech stiffens the spines of every Democratic elected official to take up the same battle cry, for make no mistake, this is, indeed, a battle. And let’s hope, against all recent evidence to the contrary, that at least some Republicans will snap out of their Trump stupor, will place country over their personal ambitions and will try to bring their party back to some semblance of sanity and truth.

And, let’s now hope the Justice Department will pursue, with increased vigor, the investigation and prosecution of all those complicit in these traitorous acts, regardless of the position those persons may hold.

MacKenzie Allen
Santa Fe, N.M.

To the Editor:

Re “Garland Vows to Pursue Investigation ‘at Any Level’” (news article, Jan. 6):

Attorney General Merrick Garland’s speech on the Justice Department’s response to the Jan. 6 attack was somewhat reassuring, but less than satisfying. It looks as if the department’s approach is to go after the puppets now, and get to the puppeteers later, disregarding the fact that the election clock is ticking.

If the Republicans win control of the House and the Senate in 2022, as some are predicting, the House committee on the Jan. 6 attack will be quashed, and the attempted coup will be for the history books — that is, if the books aren’t burned. The high-level culprits who masterminded this coup attempt will go scot-free. Only their minions will go to jail.

Subir Mukerjee
Olympia, Wash.

To the Editor:

I was just 8 on the freezing December 1956 night when we crawled across the bridge at Andau, Austria, to freedom. My dad looked back tearfully. Then looking straight at me he said: “If we can’t live in Hungary, America is the country to live in. You and your brother will have the opportunity to live and work and believe freely.”

The United States was the global beacon of hope — the promise of individual rights, democratic governance and economic strength.

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