Readers write: caution about 'smart cars'; replacing Justice Scalia; employing 'unschoolers'
Letters to the editor for the March 7, 2016 weekly magazine.
Google's self-driving car during a demonstration at the Google campus in Mountain View, Calif.
Tony Avelar/AP/File
Not so sure about 鈥榮mart cars鈥
Regarding the Feb. 22 article 鈥Self-driving cars get ready to roll鈥: Unless car manufacturers and their engineers can test for every condition, I鈥檓 not sure 鈥渟mart car鈥 technology or self-driving cars can be all that they鈥檙e promised to be. While I understand the goal (to prevent accidents), someone needs to be thinking very carefully about imperfections in computer coding and engineering, and the limitations in quality assurance testing. A better solution might be to invest in mass transportation alternatives.
Sheila Muters
Marietta, N.Y.
What would Justice Scalia do?
Regarding the Feb. 29 One Week article 鈥What Obama can do on nomination鈥: I wonder what Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia would think of the current 鈥渃onstitutional crisis鈥 brought on by his death. In this justice we saw a person who felt strongly about American law and looked deeply into our Constitution in each of his rulings. As an originalist, he felt obliged to interpret the Constitution as the framers would have intended. So, in this constitutional crisis over whether the next Supreme Court justice should be confirmed in an election year, I ask, what would Justice Scalia do? I suggest that he would argue, given his originalist leanings, that the current vacancy 鈥 notably his 鈥 should be filled, and filled in a timely manner.
William Lewis
Seattle
Employing 鈥榰nschoolers鈥
Regarding the Feb. 15 cover story, 鈥Unschooled鈥: Was the endgame left out? Some of the children benefiting from unschooling in their earlier years are likely to discover in later years a yen to participate in a wider arena of sports, education, or technology in which an employer or admissions office requires preliminary demonstration of a certain skill level, e.g., by certificate, diploma, or transcript. It would have been useful to read how coaches, deans, or corporate employers have responded to unschooled applicants.
Charles S. Phelan
Millington, N.J.