Skip to content
Link copied to clipboard

Letters to the Editor | Dec. 27, 2022

Inquirer readers on blinding headlights, taxpayer money and Title 42.

Blinded by the lights

I have been double flashing oncoming vehicles for driving with what I thought were their high beams, only to be flashed back with beams of double intensity. Newer vehicles are sporting headlights that are blindingly bright to oncoming traffic. The height of SUVs and pickups magnifies the problem. The intense headlights tend to target your eyes, not the road. So much so that you must shield your eyes or look away. That’s dangerous. I know I’m not alone with this concern. It’s as if headlights are being used to make a statement rather than light the way. How do we dim this new trend?

William Powell, Philadelphia, willipow@msn.com

A hand up

Homelessness occurs when folks, due to illness or difficulty getting a foothold, lose their last vestige of stability. Anyone who resents the use of taxpayer dollars to raise up “the least of us” lacks an understanding of our current economic system. Many large corporations pay no federal taxes at all due to our loose tax laws and the corporate lawyers who exploit loopholes, making CEOs across America billionaires on the backs of law-abiding working people. Our current economic system rewards the rich and leaves those of us in need wanting. What happened to “love thy neighbor as thyself?”

Marilyn Frazier, Ambler

The truth about Title 42

Title 42 is a provision that, temporarily, because of a public health crisis, allows the government to close our borders. Prior to 2020, the provision was rarely invoked. When the pandemic hit, President Donald Trump used it to expel migrants from the border, regardless of whether they were legally seeking asylum. The number of people seeking to enter our country has risen over the last decade as climate change and consequent economic and political instability have increased displacement worldwide. The myth that if Title 42 is lifted, our borders will be overrun with people requiring massive amounts of federal and state resources, is just that, a myth. If Congress issued immediate work authorization to those eligible to enter the country, rather than forcing people to wait months and years for this, few federal and state resources would be required, as people could seek and obtain employment immediately upon entry. We all know the economy needs people.

There are staffing crises in every single industry. Birth rates have been declining for more than two decades, mortality rates are increasing, baby boomers are retiring in droves, and our increasingly anti-immigrant rhetoric has pushed immigrants elsewhere. Our democracy is also in crisis. The leading cause of death for children is gun violence, and hatred — of Jews, of immigrants, of LGBTQ persons, of people of color — is on the rise. Immigrants, who are usually fleeing persecution, be it political or based on their religion, their sexual preference, their race, or their ethnicity, are desperate to build lives based on the freedoms that many of us take for granted. Immigrants are our country’s strongest hope. Without them we come perilously close to losing everything for which we think this country stands.

Cathryn Miller-Wilson, Esq., executive director HIAS Pennsylvania

Join the conversation: Send letters to letters@inquirer.com. Limit length to 150 words and include home address and day and evening phone number. Letters run in The Inquirer six days a week on the editorial pages and online.