
Letters: The real story is why Padilla wanted to question Noem, not his removal from the room
Regardless of what one may think of Sen. Alex Padilla's actions during Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem's press conference, we should keep foremost in mind what elicited his reaction: Noem's statement.
'We are staying here to liberate the city from the socialists and the burdensome leadership that this governor and that this mayor have placed on this country.'
Noem is saying the Trump administration is attempting to use military force to overthrow the democratically elected leaders of Los Angeles and California.
Maya Angelou famously said, 'When someone shows you who they are, believe them the first time.' Trump and his administration have told us many times: They want to overthrow our democracy and replace it with a dictatorship.
It is time the rest of us believe it and do everything we can to stop it. The controversy over Padilla is just a convenient side show to keep us distracted from the real danger.
Why wasn't Noem's statement the story rather than Padilla's reaction to it?
Jeffrey Kaplan, Berkeley
Dems' stance correct
Every Democratic politician he quoted denounced violent protest and property destruction. Meanwhile, our Republican president has pardoned those who attacked police and vandalized the Capitol.
I also have to ask, who exactly is initiating the violence in the current round of protests? I have seen video of a police officer in Los Angeles casually firing a rubber bullet at a broadcast reporter in the middle of her live report and heard reports of federal agents dragging people out of their immigration hearings. Is it only violence when Waymos burn?
Finally, I don't understand why Gavin Newsom should pay attention to how his words are received in some mythical rural heartland when he is right now the governor of the fourth-largest economy in the world.
Please, Joe, back up and look at the bigger picture; you are lost in the details.
Mary Mazzocco, Oakland
Keep the peace
Regarding 'Manny Yekutiel: When hate masquerades as protest, we all lose' (Open Forum, SFChronicle.com, June 13) and 'Will Democrats finally stop defending protesters who turn to thuggery?' (Joe Garofoli, SFChronicle.com, June 15): Manny Yekutiel and Joe Garofoli speak wisdom.
If those who attacked Manny's cafe were at the demonstration against immigration arrests on June 9, I doubt their sincerity in being there for a just cause. I suspect they are of the mentality of the Waymo burners, those providing grist for the right-wing social media, as are those with 'F— Trump' signs.
At the Hands Off demonstration on April 5, Indivisible advised us not to react to hecklers who benefit from videos they take of violence after they've incited it. Joe Garofoli reminds us of this.
What I saw at San Francisco's No Kings march was peaceful except for the ubiquitous 'F— Trump' signs, which seem trite, especially compared to the much more inventive 'No Faux King Dictators.'
Tina Martin, San Francisco
Better to unite
Regarding 'Forget the American flag. These are the flags to fly on July 4 to celebrate liberty' (Open Forum, SFChronicle.com, June 15): I disagree with Joe Mathews' suggestion. This country is as divided as it was during the Civil War. This is not the time to fragment and break up the union.
We must fight to preserve the United States of America as one nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.
Here's a suggestion. No matter which side you're on, you surely know someone with the opposite point of view. Call them and see if you can't get them to agree that this country, for all its problems, is worth preserving.
Let's stop bickering and name-calling. Let's stand together for liberty and justice. Then let's get to work and work out the details.
Ted Tilton, Sunnyvale
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Washington Post
an hour ago
- Washington Post
Former Michigan House speaker joins increasingly crowded GOP primary for Michigan governor
LANSING, Mich. — A former GOP state lawmaker who served as speaker of the Michigan House of Representatives is joining a crowded bench seeking the Republican nomination for the 2026 gubernatorial race in the battleground state. Tom Leonard , who served in the state Legislature from 2013 to 2018, announced his bid for governor Tuesday. He joins three other Republicans in the state who are seeking the office and likely also the endorsement of President Donald Trump.


CNN
an hour ago
- CNN
Trump: 'Evacuate Tehran Now!' - CNN This Morning with Audie Cornish - Podcast on CNN Audio
Trump: 'Evacuate Tehran Now!' CNN This Morning 48 mins Attacks intensify between Israel and Iran as President Trump leaves the G7 summit early with a warning to "immediately evacuate Tehran now!:" Plus, how authorities will try to get inside the mind of the man accused of stalking and killing a Minnesota lawmaker. And: How has ICD changed their tactics to reach Stephen Miller's goal of 3,000 arrests a day?
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Marjorie Taylor Greene Calls Fox News And New York Post ‘Propaganda' Supporting ‘Foreign Wars'
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) slammed right-leaning news outlets Fox News and the New York Post on Monday, accusing them of brainwashing Americans into supporting U.S. involvement in a conflict between Israel and Iran. 'We've watched propaganda news for decades. I'll call out Fox News and the New York Post. They're known to be the neocon network news,' Greene told former Florida GOP lawmaker Matt Gaetz on his show on One America News Network. 'We have propaganda news on our side, just like the left does, and the American people have been brainwashed into believing that America has to engage in these foreign wars in order for us to survive, and it's absolutely not true,' Greene continued. Greene's comments came a week after Israel launched attacks aimed at a nuclear and military site in Iran, killing some of the country's top generals. In response, Iran launched missiles at Israel. President Donald Trump said he knew Israel's attacks on Iran were coming, even calling them 'excellent.' While Trump said the U.S. is not directly involved in the conflict between the two countries, he did not rule out future involvement. Greene went on to criticize Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who blasted U.S. reluctance to get involved in the conflict with Iran. 'Today, it's Tel Aviv. Tomorrow, it's New York,' Netanyahu said in an interview with ABC News on Monday, adding, 'Look, I understand 'America first.' I don't understand 'America dead.'' The Georgia Republican told Gaetz that Netanyahu's remark 'sounds like a threat to me,' adding that 'a Middle Eastern war will pull America back 20 years.' 'In order for America to not be dead, it's to stay America First, and this is what the American people want,' Greene said. 'It is not antisemitic to say that we do not want to go to war against Iran or any other country. That is not antisemitic at all.' Greene reiterated that she is 'completely opposed to this war' before criticizing Israel for launching the first strike against Iran. 'Of course, we don't want to see the people in Israel bombed, but they're only being bombed because Israel attacked Iran first, and that's the truth that we need to be talking about,' she said. Can Trump Prevent A Massive Middle East War? Trump To Depart The G7 Early As Conflict Between Israel And Iran Shows Signs Of Intensifying Trump Escalates His Feud With Tucker Carlson Over Israel And Iran