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Terrorism expert Brian Jenkins; new graphic warning labels on cigarette packs; Sarah Palin on JFK and other subjects

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The danger dots

Re “Patt Morrison Asks: Brian Jenkins,” Opinion, Nov. 20

Brian Jenkins agrees with Condoleezza Rice that “security has to be right 100% of the time but terrorists only once.”

Actually, as Jenkins points out, it seems that terrorists don’t have to be “right” (successful attacks) at all anymore. Just by attempting attacks, they send us into a fear-driven frenzy of responses that disrupt our society and economy without making us significantly more secure. In other words, they terrorize us into acting against our own interests.

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Ever since the 9/11 attacks, I’ve been puzzled as to why our leaders don’t advocate one of the most effective responses to terrorism: refusing to be terrorized. How about a national gut (and head) check, so that we can meet the challenge of terrorism intelligently and soberly, measuring the threat and understanding it for what it is.

Don Dwiggins

Northridge

Jennings demonstrates the lack of depth in his work on the whole question of “terrorism.”

Jealousy of our way of life is not a motivation to commit suicide attacks. So-called terrorists are motivated by deep anger at our bullying tactics to impose our political and economic system. The British did it once, and now America is continuing the practice.

We can fight them with armies and security measures until we are bankrupt, but it is a losing strategy. Or we can stop our bullying tactics. The latter is simpler, safer, kinder, more just and cheaper.

Jack Waddington

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Santa Monica

In her interview with Jenkins, Patt Morrison shows her bias. She accepts, with no hard counter-questioning, Jenkins’ renunciation of torture. She gives no hint of questioning security policies that would give preference to intelligent profiling over intrusive “junk” violations and full-body scanners.

Jenkins objects to

waterboarding and any form of torture. He suggests that lawyers who tolerate waterboarding be themselves waterboarded. I’m no lawyer, but I’d take a waterboarding if it would save the life of my wife or my daughter.

Morrison’s subtle bias is not “risky business,” but it lends a sour taste to the bulk of her interview, which lives up to her usual

extraordinary skill.

John A. Saylor

Long Beach

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Apparently Jenkins is one of the few with even the slightest clue as to what he is talking about, as well as what to do in this frustrating matter of responding to terrorists. I fully agree with him in this interview, especially his thinking on the media, experts and his opposition to torture.

I am a retired Marine and think his idea that lawyers undergo waterboarding before they issue relevant opinions should be mandatory. I agree that torture has done us no honor.

Shel Simonovich

Ridgecrest

It worked in 1968

Re “Scared smokeless,” Editorial, Nov. 22

When I was in the fifth grade, my father, a gastroenterologist, came to my classroom to present a slide show about the health effects of cigarettes. It was pretty gruesome; the most graphic slide showed an entirely black lung on an autopsy tray.

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Many years later at a high school reunion, a few of us were chatting when someone suddenly thanked me for having my father come to class that day. He recalled the impact that single slide had on his choice never to start smoking. To my surprise, others recalled their visceral reaction to the lung photo.

It may not have deterred everyone in the room that day in 1968, but it clearly made a life-altering difference for some.

Jacqueline Jacobs Caster

Pacific Palisades

Great editorial on smoking. Most everything was included. Being a dentist, I talk with patients on this subject if they are willing to engage.

Two additional points come to mind. First, we all pay for smokers’ unhealthy habit in taxes and insurance rates, as smoking contributes to so many diseases.

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Second, smoking in some movies is over the top. Studies have shown that young people are more likely to light up after watching movies in which smoking is prevalent. I asked a director recently about that; his reply was that’s the way society is. I don’t think so.

Barry Erbsen

Studio City

Putting up with Palin

Re “On pop culture and politics,” Nov. 20

Sarah Palin’s conclusion that John F. Kennedy’s faith did not inform his politics is correct.

In 1960, while attending a rally in Gonzaga University’s crowded gym, I watched a young, handsome, charismatic presidential candidate work his political magic prior to securing the Democratic nomination in Los Angeles. We all believed he shared our values, and we agreed with his view that he could be both a good president and a good Roman Catholic.

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In retrospect, voters should not have worried about his religion in the first place. JFK was never a convicted Catholic, merely a cultural one. Had he undergone the level of personal scrutiny that dogs candidates today, he never would have been elected.

Kay Hastings

Hacienda Heights

In all of my 76 years, I have never before been subjected to the rantings of such a stilted, pompous, self-important, peacocky, sensation-seeking person. Is there no escape?

As a dedicated citizen of the world we live in, I strive for fairness, open-mindedness, cooperation and understanding from those who represent me in government. Never before have I been more concerned for this country’s safe and sane future with the likes of Palin bombarding us in every medium.

JoAnn Broecker

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Upland

In her latest book, Palin trots out the Jeremiah Wright- President Obama bromide.

Obama repudiated Wright, apparently not to Palin’s satisfaction. Perhaps if Obama had refudiated Wright.

Larry Lasseter

Brea

Down under

Re “And the election winner is … who?” Nov. 20

Australia, one of the most stable democracies in the world, has used the preferential voting (ranked-choice) system since 1918. This allows voters to vote for third- (and fourth- and fifth-) party candidates, and to be assured that their votes are not immediately meaningless.

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The Australian democratic process is also assisted by having voting days on Saturdays and by making voting compulsory. This has worked extremely well since 1925.

Many Americans object to compulsory voting, arguing that it would remove their freedom not to vote. What it does do is ensure that an election result has legitimacy and makes it much harder for special-interest groups to vote themselves into power.

Oh, by the way, Australia also uses paper ballots as the only way to ensure accurate vote counting and provide true auditing of election results.

Laurie Pane

Burbank

The writer is on the board of the American Australian Assn.

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It’s taxing

Re “Fresh thinking for lean times,” Opinion, Nov. 19

There is nothing refreshing about Sen. Mark Warner’s thinking on tax cuts when American corporations are sitting on more than $1.6 trillion in cash.

These businesses do not need any more incentives to produce.

What is needed are plenty of financial incentives put into the pockets of ordinary workers who will spend the money, which would then encourage the corporations to increase hiring.

I am most surprised because Ronald Brownstein usually seems to champion the economic interests of workers, not big corporations.

America looks a lot more like a tale of two countries. One is inhabited by the upper 1% that owns almost 24% of the nation’s wealth. The other consists of the majority of the American people, whose incomes are falling behind.

Why would Brownstein advocate continued tax cuts for the wealthy when we have big deficits?

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Harry Sauberman

Newport Coast

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