Opinion | America is playing with fire when it comes to Donald Trump – The Washington Post
Regarding the Jan. 22 news article “In Kaplan’s New York courtroom, Trump risks blowback with his behavior”:
As an independent and former Republican, I believe that once the wheels start coming off the Trump bus, it will happen at a quick pace. Former South Carolina governor Nikki Haley should remain in the race for the Republican nomination for president. Former president Donald Trump is an adjudicated financial fraud in three recent trials, was ordered to pay writer E. Jean Carroll more than $83 million for defaming her, and is facing 91 criminal charges. Voters are owed these trials before the election.
Also, I will not vote for anyone who supports Mr. Trump for president. Full stop.
Keith Wilson, Charlotte
Regarding the Jan. 26 news article “After Trump wins, congressional Republicans fall in line”:
Sen. Ted “Lyin’ Ted” Cruz (R-Tex.), Sen. Marco “Little Marco” Rubio (R-Fla.) and Florida Gov. Ron “Meatball Ron” “Ron DeSanctimonious” DeSantis (R) have all endorsed former president Donald Trump’s candidacy for president, even though he mocked them by giving them these names. Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) has as well, despite Mr. Trump’s courtship of neo-Nazi white supremacists, some of whom he called “very fine people.” It is hard to have much respect for any of them when they seem to have so little respect for themselves.
Many of us knew a guy in high school who would get enormous pleasure out of making fun of other people. He would delight in his power over them — at their public humiliation and their fear. There was no way anyone in my school would have elected him to any position at all, much less one to lead our country.
And yet, the party of Abraham Lincoln is about to anoint such a cruel, hateful bully, someone with no discernible moral center, someone who seems to desire only absolute power and having everyone fear him. The ultimate question for our country is whether such a person, with the power to wield nuclear weapons if reelected, constitutes a grave and lethal threat to our country and the world. I believe very strongly that he does.
Eric Chivian, Boston
The writer is co-founder of International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War.