In the editor: In Jim Crow’s days, it is often said that the rights of states should be respected by the federal government. That same account of the rights of the United States and growing power in the 50 states returned to the 1970s and called Sagebrush rebellion in the west.
Protect states’ rights to make their own laws and put their own regulatory standards a primary republicans leading decades. The federal government has become more powerful, very strong, they say.
So what happened today? US Senate bottles to eliminate California’s planned transfer to electric cars and hybrids (“Senate votes to ignore the landmark landmark in California with new car sale only,” May 22) And the federal government jumps to keep international students with no Harvard, a private university located in the state of Massachusetts (“Trump Administration Bars Harvard from enrolling foreign students,” May 22).
Why is it suddenly ok to hang out with the authority of states? Why is it sudden OK to use a power game against an educational institution not run by the federal government?
Edgar Kaskla, Long Beach
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In the Editor: This is an additional step in the aggressive war of Republicans in efforts to improve the environment and answer the aggravated condition of climate change. The Senate ignores warnings from the government’s accountability office and the parliamentarian about the wrong legal reasoning in their actions.
The basic problems in their way of changing environmental change and change: dishonesty and meaning – spirituality.
Infidelity: Decrease and restrict information while not recognized as much damage to change climate change as shown in excessive scientific evidence.
Definition – Imagement: The ignorance of health and safety of their actions will be imposed on individuals and communities. For example, preventing the development of air quality harms the health of many, including asthma companions, lung disease and heart disease and heart disease and heart disease.
Jack Holtzman and Irwin Rubenstein, San Diego