BRONX TIMES REPORTER, J BTR JAN. 21-27, 2022 13
letters & comments
Supporters of U.S. President Donald Trump clash with police offi cers in
front of the U.S. Capitol Building in Washington, U.S. January 6, 2021.
Photo by REUTERS/Stephanie Keith
Can’t blame Trump
for Jan. 6 riot
To the Editor,
Re: Pasqual Pelosi’s most
recent opinion piece stating
that Donald Trump told the
Big Lie and incited the insurrectionists.
A previous job involved
having an elementary knowledge
of medicine and medical
abbreviations. I bought a
book by a doctor
advocating to eliminate
them. The doctor recounted a
story in which a nurse treating
a bad wound read TAB
(triple antibiotic) on the prescription
as the soda “Tab.”
There being none available,
the nurse instead irrigated
the wound with Pepsi.
How does this relate to
Donald Trump? Simple. If a
nurse is so lacking in common
sense, he/she feels it is
all right to irrigate a wound
with soda and risk hurting
and further infecting a
patient, who shoulders the
blame?
It is very diffi cult to ascertain
if Trump was or was
not responsible for the Jan. 6,
2021, insurrection, although I
fi nd it telling that he has not
been charged with anything
more than a year later. Time
will tell. However, even assuming
for the sake of argument
he 100% incited the riot,
how can you possibly blame
him for the stupidity, ignorance
and lack of common
sense of his followers?
Peaceful civil disobedience
has had a role in our history
(Rosa Parks is a fi ne example).
There is nothing — I
repeat, nothing — worth committing
violence over, risking
lives and engaging in wholesale
property damage. There
is nothing — I repeat nothing
— worth exposing yourself
to arrest and possible federal
charges. If Trump’s followers
are so lacking in common
sense that they don’t understand
this, who is to blame?
Mr. Pelosi in his excoriation
of the Frank Vernuccio’s
column makes a number of
points that are if not valid, at
least debatable. I cannot possibly
blame Trump for this
riot. I blame the people that
participated in the riot.
Nat Weiner
LET US HEAR FROM YOU
Letters to the editor are welcome from all readers. They should be addressed
care of this newspaper to Laura Guerriero, Publisher, the Bronx Times Reporter,
3604 E. Tremont Ave., Bronx, NY 10465, or e-mail to bronxtimes@cnglocal.com.
All letters, including those submitted via e-mail, MUST be signed and with a
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Note that the address and telephone number will NOT be published and the
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No unsigned letters can be accepted for publication. The editor reserves the
right to edit all submissions.
To the Editor,
Re: Nat Weiner’s letteri n
the Jan. 14 edition of the Bronx
Times Reporter and Bronx
Times.
Thank you for your attention
to my newspaper contributions,
Mr. Weiner. I would
like to point out that my name
is Pasqual, not Pascual. Dr.
Spiegel does not need to visit
the border to study data regarding
the health of individuals
crossing the border,
after all he is not a politician
seeking a photo-op but an internationally
renowned physician
who has published more
than 100 peer-reviewed articles
on humanitarian health
and migration. Also, please
note that Michael Bloomberg
is not an advocate of open borders,
though he does favor reforming
our broken immigration
system. The comments
of Dr. Spiegel can be found at
https://www.nbc.news.com
immigration-border-crisis.
A study by Ruben Rumbaut,
published as Appendix
D at Police Foundation.org,
concludes, “… data from the
census and a wide range of
other empirical studies show
that for every ethnic group
without exception, incarceration
rates among young men
are lowest for immigrants…”.
As you know, the census covers
the entire country. Obviously,
we are not at the point
where we can rely totally
on clean power, though we
should be doing much more
to reach that planet-saving
goal.
Finally, I fi nd your statement,
“Parents shouldn’t
necessarily decide curriculum,
but have a real voice in
it,” puzzling. I cannot fathom
what this means or how it
would work. Please amplify.
Pasqual Pelosi
Point,
counterpoint
View of the fence along the USMexico
border from the California
side looking into Tijuana, Mexico.
File photo
VISIONS/Services for the
Blind and Visually Impaired
has been selected as a benefi -
ciary of the Stop & Shop Community
Bag Program for the
month of February.
The Stop & Shop Community
Bag Program, which
launched in May 2019, is a reusable
bag program that facilitates
community support with
the goal to make a difference
in the communities where
shoppers live and work.
VISIONS was selected as
the February benefi ciary of
the program by store leadership
at the Stop & Shop, located
at 691 Co-op City Blvd.
VISIONS will receive a $1 donation
every time the $2.50
reusable Community Bag is
purchased at this location
during February, unless otherwise
directed by the customer
through the Giving Tag
attached to the bag.
“We’re excited to have
been chosen and hope the public
will learn more about the
amazing services VISIONS
has provided for 96 years,”
said Nancy D. Miller, executive
director/CEO of VISIONS.
“Donations from this
fundraiser will be used to support
VISIONS free services in
the Bronx and Westchester.”
VISIONS/Services for the
Blind and Visually Impaired
is a nonprofi t based in New
York City, Founded in 1926,
VISIONS mission is to develop
and implement individualized
programs to assist
people who are blind and visually
impaired of all ages to
lead independent and active
lives, and to educate the public
to understand their needs
and capabilities. Learn more
about VISIONS by visiting
www.visionsvcb.org.
For more information on
the Stop & Shop Community
Bag Program, visit www.
stopandshop.bags4mycause.
com.
-Bronx Times
The Riverdale Choral Society
invites singers of all
levels to join us for rehearsals
for our spring season. Because
of the pandemic, we
have changed the date when
our rehearsals will begin.
Open rehearsals will be
held on two Wednesdays,
Feb. 2 and Feb. 9, at 7 p.m. We
welcome all voice ranges: soprano,
alto, tenor and bass.
Rehearsals will be conducted
by Music Director John Lettieri.
Singers who join the Choral
Society will be preparing
for a concert on Sunday, May
22, at which we will perform
“A German Requiem” by Johannes
Brahms. The concert
will offer the audience an opportunity
to hear beautiful
music right here in the Riverdale
area of the Bronx.
The spring season rehearsals
and concert will
take place at Christ Church
Riverdale, 252nd Street and
Henry Hudson Parkway
East, where there is on-street
parking and easy access to
public transportation.
Since 1964, the Riverdale
Choral Society has been
bringing joy to the community
through performances
of high-quality choral music.
Our welcoming, diverse
group of men and women rehearses
weekly under professional
artistic direction,
singing both traditional and
contemporary repertoire.
Through live concerts and
community outreach, the
chorus enriches the cultural
life of the greater Riverdale
area.
If you love singing and
can read music (you don’t
have to be able to sight read if
you have a good musical ear),
please consider joining us.
Rehearsals will be held every
Wednesday from 7-9:30 p.m.
Additional information
can be obtained at the RCS
website www.riverdalechoral.
org or by calling 718-543-
2219.
-Bronx Times
VISIONS selected
for Stop & Shop
Community Bag
Program
Riverdale Choral
Society invites
singers to
participate in
spring season
link
/www.nbc.news.com
/www.visionsvcb.org
/www.stopandshop.bags4mycause
/www.stopandshop.bags4mycause
/www.riverdalecho-ral.org
/www.riverdalecho-ral.org
/www.riverdalecho-ral.org
/www.nbc.news.com
/Foundation.org
/www.visionsvcb.org
link
link
/www.nbc.news.com
/www.visionsvcb.org
/www.stopandshop.bags4mycause
/www.stopandshop.bags4mycause
/www.riverdalecho-ral.org
/www.riverdalecho-ral.org
/www.riverdalecho-ral.org
/www.nbc.news.com
/Foundation.org
/www.visionsvcb.org
link