Opinion

GUEST EDITORIAL: To our fallen colleagues & Reunite

Saturday, June 30, 2018 -- We honor these men and women for the sacrifice they made in the name of a free press. They lost their lives for printing the truth. Please support your local media. Their work is vital, and as this week's events show, the stakes are high.

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EDITOR'S NOTE: The following editorials appeared in The New York Times
TO OUR FALLEN COLLEAGUES
Rob Hiaasen
John McNamara
Rebecca Smith

Wendi Winters{{/a}}

These dedicated employees of the Capital Gazette lost their lives on Thursday serving their community. The Times Editorial Board has urged lawmakers to take action to prevent such tragedies: strengthen background checks, take guns away from stalkers and domestic abusers, enact red-flag laws and ban assault weapons. Such moves are still needed. But today we honor these men and women for the sacrifice they made in the name of a free press. They lost their lives for printing the truth.

Please support your local media. Their work is vital, and as this week’s events show, the stakes are high.

REUNITE

The marches taking place across the country this weekend are really about the soul of America. Forcibly separating children from their parents is not about “deterrence,” or the legal technicalities of law, or illegal immigration, or anything else President Donald Trump has claimed to justify his latest and most odious outrage. It’s about “Cruelty & perfidy scarcely paralleled in the most barbarous ages, and totally unworthy the Head of a civilized nation,” to borrow from the Declaration of Independence.

No, the United States does not have clean hands: It has tolerated many inequities and atrocities throughout its history, toward Native Americans, blacks, Japanese and women, among others. Yet against that is the tradition in American law, culture and practice to defend the weak, to welcome the other, to give refuge to the oppressed and to refuse to acquiesce when a government acts against basic dictates of conscience.

The Trump administration has committed a gross offense. It is the duty of every decent American to demand that it promptly reunite these children with their parents.