To the editor: I’m amazed on the analysis visitor contributor Martin Seligman and Noah Love did in inspecting the diploma to which the occasions that occurred within the Fifties and Sixties had a optimistic impact on how Individuals, particularly Black Individuals, considered their sense of non-public company throughout these years and persevering with as much as the current (“Civil rights era changed how Black Americans see themselves,” June 18).
This op-ed makes me marvel what they might discover in the event that they performed an analogous examination of the sense of non-public company amongst white evangelists.
It seems to me that the present majority of the Supreme Courtroom is making a set of rulings, notably on the Voting Rights Act, which are notably geared toward satisfying the calls for of this section of the American citizenry alone, on the expense of residents who’re neither white nor this type of evangelist.
The dialogue on this op-ed provides us a brand new goal to intention at: the sensation of non-public company that all of us have as Americans. It appears to me that it ought to be our goal as a nation to push for ideas that allow members of each subgroup to hunt this sense, but additionally to respect the best of members of teams to which we do not belong to achieve this sense as effectively.
Steve Wooden, Ventura
