Readers write: North Korea a different situation?, Stephen Curry not alone

Letters to the editor for the June 6, 2016 weekly magazine.

Golden State Warriors' Stephen Curry (l.) drives to the basket as Oklahoma City Thunder's Russell Westbrook defends in Game 7 of the 2016 NBA basketball Western Conference finals in Oakland, Calif.

Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP

June 4, 2016

North Korea a different situation?

Regarding the April 23 online article “North Korea tests submarine-launched ballistic missile: Is that unusual?” (CSMonitor.com): The United States claimed that it attacked Iraq because of the threat of Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction. Saddam Hussein denied that Iraq had such weapons. In addition, there was no clear evidence that Iraq was preparing for war.

North Korea openly admits it has weapons of mass destruction and is preparing for war. There has been little discussion of a US attack on North Korea. Why the difference? Iraq had oil. The evidence is clear that obtaining control of Iraqi oil was the real motivation for the US attacking Iraq. North Korea has to import oil from China. 

Democrats begin soul-searching – and finger-pointing – after devastating loss

This suggests that the US does not go to war to defend itself. It goes to war for oil.

Stephen Krashen

Los Angeles

Stephen Curry not alone

Regarding the April 18 cover story, “The Curry phenomenon”: I was very impressed that you had a story about Stephen Curry. I’ve been following basketball for quite a while and appreciate what this player brings to the sport. Fine story. 

What Trump’s historic victory says about America

However, I thought the subhead on the cover, “Stephen Curry has become a virtuous superstar – just when sports needs one,” was terrible. The implication that sports needs a superstar is a false opinion and provides a false impression to those seeing that subhead.

Perhaps there are players who have problems. Other media may well be carrying those stories over and over again. However, the percentage of those problems is not very high. Take a look at what many NBA players give back to their community in time and money.

How about a story about hero superstars at some point? Surely the NBA players aren’t the only ones giving back, either.

Let’s not buy into the view that more virtuous superstars are needed. Let’s share the view that virtuous superstars are out there.

Roberta Sperling

Corvallis, Ore.