54°F
weather icon Clear

LETTER: We shouldn’t need to rely on the guardrails

Your Jan. 14 editorial (“Biden repels, so he pounds Trump”) admits that the violence which occurred at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021 was a “fiasco” and that Donald Trump behaved “shamefully.” The editorial then incredulously claims that the “guardrails” of American government held that day and prevented the hostile crowd from overturning the results of the 2020 presidential election.

That assertion completely disregards the fact that the violence stopped not because of the alleged guardrails, but only after Mr. Trump reluctantly intervened and told the protesters to leave the Capitol. He did so after acquiescing for three hours while watching the carnage unfold on television and condoning it through his inaction.

It has been said that “an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.” In that light, perhaps Review-Journal readers will realize that it is more prudent to elect someone other than Mr. Trump than it is to elect Mr. Trump again while hoping that “guardrails” would mitigate the harm that he is so capable of infliciting.

MOST READ
Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
LETTER: A note to Mark Wahlberg

Let the film studios fund their own endeavors.

LETTER: Too close to residential

Battery energy storage system plan poses a threat to northwest Las Vegas.

LETTER: Donald Trump’s histrionics

Are retired military and government personnel who criticize this administration now considered “seditionists”?

LETTER: Las Vegas and Oakland sports teams

We’ve already been burned once. I hope this Oakland team doesn’t turn out to be a bait and switch scheme.

LETTER: Universal mail ballot an invitation to fraud

Monday’s Review-Journal headline about the pending Supreme Court case on mail-in voting should be a call to action for all Nevadans and American citizens throughout the country.

LETTER: A story about grade inflation

Mike Obstgarten’s “Academic fraud: Grade inflation is a scourge that must be eradicated” reminded me of a midterm grade I received my first semester in college.

MORE STORIES