78°F
weather icon Partly Cloudy

LETTER: Letting wildfires burn isn’t an option

In response to Chip Henry’s recent letter on wildfires: Saying Native Americans did not manage forests, yet America didn’t burn down. ignores two big facts. First, paleontologists have found events of colossal fires over the millennia, so fires occurred. Second, millions of people did not live in and around these areas even 100 years ago. and human accidents or arsonists were not around to cause fires either. Now there are both.

Regardless of whether one believes climate change is caused by human activity or not, the 30-year-plus Western drought is undeniable. Having many millions of humans living in or near forests requires we manage wilderness areas if we want to keep them. This is called conservation, a notion championed by Teddy Roosevelt 100 years ago, long before “climate change” became an issue.

Coupling the growth in population with drought means management is even more urgent. “Let it burn” ignores the likelihood more lives will be lost, more animals will die and more acres of precious, often protected, wilderness will be lost. It is irresponsible.

THE LATEST
LETTER: Sonia Sotomayor, retirement and race

Using race to justify or condemn the action of others is simply wrong and, some would say, the definition of racism. We are all one people.

LETTER: Is there another Joe Biden out there?

Both the front-runner presidential candidates should step aside and give us some choices who are younger and have fresh ideas to get us out of the $35 trillion debt.

LETTER: Deciphering progressive jargon

I noticed recently that euphemisms are commonly used by progressives in order to make the agenda they support seem less harsh or unpleasant.

LETTER: Biden ignores the Supreme Court on student loans

Biden is constantly harping on how Trump is a threat to democracy and will be a dictator, eliminating our freedoms. It is Biden, however, who has proven himself the dictator who is threatening democracy.

LETTER: More on 1968

As a cop who was at not only at the 1968 Democratic convention at the Conrad Hilton on Michigan Avenue, but also the Chicago arson fires on the west side, I feel there were many reasons why the city was a tinderbox.