Editor, Sun-Sentinel:
When I was in grammar school, we had drills in case of a nuclear attack. We had to put our arms over our heads and get under our desk.
This was what we were told to do, and we did it. This was in the ’60s, during the Cold War. We never saw a nuclear bomb, but we knew what to do.
Well, the bomb is here. People say their civil rights are being violated, but when you are in a store and you don’t have on a mask, you are threatening my life and the lives of others.
How can you live in this country and not know the seriousness of this? How can doctors and nurses work as hard as they do and still see hundreds die in a day?
There was a protest in the capital of Maryland, and protesters were shouting, “No more house arrest!” The governor put it into perspective when he said there were a lot of protesters, but more people died of coronavirus that day than there were protesters.
I’m sure all those who died would much rather be home.
Betty H. Rogers
Enid