What a brilliant play: Get enough votes from desperate states to garner the Electoral College vote for Donald Trump. Watch him disintegrate (as any intelligent person, including many Republicans, knew he would); then very casually play the (sorry) Trump card with this New York Times "anonymous" column, simultaneously reassuring the corporate and billionaire base that their tax cuts are assured and assuring the moderate/undecided/whatever class that sane men are in control. And when the despised liberal elite shriek, "But they're not elected!," unveil the man behind the curtain, the (elected!) vice president.
Nothing unconstitutional about it. Brilliantly (and, for the Republic, disastrously) executed.
NEIL ELLIOTT, Falcon Heights
• • •
A coward wrote the anonymous New York Times op-ed. They claim to have senior status in the administration and say they are part of "the resistance." Really? Did you study American government in school? Have you heard of the peaceful transfer of power (the thing that differentiates us from the many countries at constant war within their governments)? As former President Barack Obama puts it, "Elections have consequences." If you truly disagree with President Trump's ideas, then resign and work for your candidates. That is the American way.
CHRIS SCHONNING, Andover
• • •
I don't understand why President Trump would be so upset about the anonymous op-ed in the New York Times. It's all "fake news," isn't it?
JOHN E. ROWELL, Champlin
HEALTH CARE
Medicine, an art and a science, is now an industry; sad to see
A health care market analyst was quoted in the Star Tribune as saying that "the mantra in this industry is we want to grow" ("Mayo has $800M plan for the South," Sept. 6).
When I was a student nurse in the late 1950s, one of the first things we were taught is that medicine is an art and a science. Now it is called an industry. I consider this a sad commentary on the present state of medicine, particularly in the United States, where too many are priced out of decent health care, precisely because medicine has become an industry.