In President Trump's recent news conference, one that felt more like watching a mugging, Trump fatuously tried to explain away his train wreck of an administration by explaining that he had "inherited a mess" ("Trump delivers a heated defense of his first month," Feb. 17). When Barack Obama took office in 2009, there were two unfunded wars raging; Osama bin Laden had not been brought to justice; unemployment was more than 8 percent and headed upward; all of the major banks were insolvent; the three major American car companies were bankrupt, and the Dow was at 8,000. The laughably incompetent Donald Trump not only has no understanding of the American system of government, he can't even distinguish a sweet deal from a mess.
Stephen Kriz, Maple Grove
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Trump "inherited a mess" — yes, a mess created by the founders of the country. It seems he is discovering that the presidency is not an autocracy in which he can give orders without consulting anyone, heedless of the Constitution, and they will be obeyed. Perhaps he thought the office was like being host of a reality TV show. I guess he thought he assumed the office as soon as the vote totals were in. As I recall, he was cautioning Obama that he should no longer be making agreements or decisions, including Russian sanctions, before the inauguration even took place. It would not surprise me if he instructed his former national security adviser, Michael Flynn, to contact the Russian ambassador about the sanctions. The ties between Trump and Russia must be thoroughly investigated.
John Geddes, Minneapolis
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Trump spent much of the time at his news conference attacking mainstream media, repeatedly calling their product "fake news." When challenged on one of his lies about the Electoral College, he replied that "I've seen that information around." It's clear that he's the real consumer of fake news and accepts it without factual analysis. A manipulable American president who lives in an alternate fact world is a threat to everyone.
Paul Oman, Brooklyn Center
STADIUM MANAGEMENT
Those perks handled. Next?
Concerning the controversy over management of U.S. Bank Stadium ("Suite use topples 2 stadium officials," Feb. 17), what a tempest in a Teapot Dome! Everyone knows all those suites are supposed to be reserved for fat cats who can write off the costs as a business expense. And while we tut-tut about such perks, to be consistent let's also tax everyone who receives special benefits that go with a job, like family members of airline employees who fly for free.
Richard A. Virden, Plymouth
SCHOOL DISCIPLINE LEGISLATION
The real problem gets shrouded by one that really doesn't exist
I listened with great surprise Thursday while waiting to testify in opposition to HF905 before the Minnesota House Education Innovation Committee when a school district attorney testified that the Minnesota Pupil Fair Dismissal Act's prohibition against dismissing students for unintentional behavior created "a higher standard than criminal prosecutors face." I am even more surprised to see that same statement printed without challenge in "Legislation inspired by pocket knife case riles anti-suspensions crowd" ("Class Act" blog, StarTribune.com). Every first-year law student learns that virtually every crime, with very limited exception, requires a showing of intent in order to obtain a conviction. Further, the state must prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt in a criminal matter, where school districts seeking to expel a student must show only that it is slightly more likely than not that the student committed the offending act.
We have a problem in Minnesota, and it's not that we can convict a criminal more easily than we can dismiss a student. The Minnesota Department of Education reports that there were more than 47,000 dismissals in our schools during the 2015-16 school year, a statistic that includes a disproportionate number of students of color and students with disabilities. Students who are dismissed from school are more likely to experience a host of negative outcomes, which no doubt contribute to the racial achievement gap. We are not helped in addressing this very real problem when we are distracted, in testimony or in print, by ones that do not exist.