海角大神

海角大神 / Text

Readers write: New perspectives 鈥 from diction to socializing

Letters to the editor from the August 7 issue. Readers examined pushes for social interaction, violence in the South, careful word choice, and more.

By Monitor readers

Accidents or crashes?

Thank you for the deep look at India鈥檚 challenges with its rail system in the June 9 Daily article 鈥淲hy India lags behind in rail safety 鈥 and where it goes from here.鈥

Recently, I鈥檝e seen billboards placed by my state鈥檚 Department of Transportation that make a point by crossing out the word 鈥渁ccidents鈥 and replacing it with 鈥渃rashes.鈥 That point, of course, is that crashes are avoidable, as opposed to the sense of accidents just happening and not being preventable.聽

I think that the founder of the Monitor might agree that 鈥渁ccident鈥 is not as useful as other, more specific terms that leave out the notion of chance. Perhaps the Monitor could consider this in future reporting.

Jerry McIntire
Elk Rapids, Michigan

Thriving with less, not more

It would have been thought-provoking if the article 鈥淥ne is the loneliest number: What will help people connect again?鈥 from the July 10 & 17 Weekly issue had looked into how those who are not dependent on social interactions (some would label them 鈥渋ntroverts鈥) actually thrived during the lockdowns.聽

This perspective can point to a new way of thinking! The whole current push seems to shout 鈥渟ocial, social, social鈥 without end. Maybe it鈥檚 time to think about this again, and the Monitor is just the vehicle to do that. Often, the world鈥檚 greatest works are done alone. There are many examples, and they are encouraging, and telling these stories strengthens and supports those who honestly do thrive with less, rather than more, societal contact. For the Monitor鈥檚 founder, that meant alone with God.聽

Please lead the way and consider balancing this out for a world that needs it.

Elena Toft
Falls Church, Virginia

An annual reminder

I agree that it would be nice to have an 鈥淚nterdependence Day鈥 as聽described in the recent piece 鈥淗appy Interdependence Day!鈥 in the July 3 Weekly issue.聽

However, this should not be at the expense of our Fourth of July celebrating our country鈥檚 independence! The remarkable truths put forth in Thomas Jefferson鈥檚 Declaration of Independence established a standard that has called to the hearts and minds of people all over the world since 1776. In the United States, we are still working to live up to these standards.

To drop the annual reminder of those remarkable words and the standards they set 鈥 not just for the early Colonists, but as it has turned out, for the whole world 鈥 would be, in my opinion, a huge blunder.

Nancy Walden
Medford, Oregon

Holding the South together

As a somewhat child of the South (born in Louisville, Kentucky; grew up partially in Virginia), I, too, have wondered why the South seems so much more violent.聽

This question was amplified when close friends of mine moved to Atlanta and felt the need to carry concealed firearms, though they had never done so before 鈥 and these people are not gun enthusiasts.

Thank you for probing, in your June 5 cover story, 鈥淓xposing the roots of violence,鈥 whether there is something truly unique about the South that makes it the way it is 鈥 beyond its very challenging legacy.聽

Can there perhaps be a follow-up story, or more of a focus on the need for better institutions to promote our togetherness, employment, health, and education?聽The need for better institutions and common glue is not limited to the South, but, for whatever reason, these have not taken root.聽

There鈥檚 more here, or rather, there鈥檚 more to the explanation for the lack of progress than poor alignment of the stars.

Stuart Page
New York