The Economist - USA (2021-12-18)

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20 The Economist December 18th 2021
Letters


Britain’sroleinEurope
YourarticleonLordFrost,
Britain’schiefnegotiatoron
Brexit,ratherunderplayedthe
extenttowhichthepolicieshe
ispursuingrepresenta break
withBritain’sroleinEurope,
notjustinthepastfewdecades
butinthepastfewcenturies
(“Portraitofa Brexiteer”,
December4th).Afterall,a
successionofleadersfrom
MarlboroughthroughPittto
LloydGeorgeandChurchill
strovesuccessfullyandat
considerablecosttoensure
thatBritainexerciseda partin
shapingthepoliticsandecon­
omyofthecontinenttowhich
webelong.Nowthatobjective
seemstohavebeenabandoned
withouta thoughtastothe
unintendedconsequences.
Moreover,theglorification
ofnationalsovereigntywas
triedinEuropeafterthefirst
worldwarandit didnotend
terriblywell.Nearlyallofthe
Americanpresidentssince
1945,andcertainlythepresent
incumbent,havetakena
contraryviewonBritain’srole
inEuropeandthedangersof
unfetterednationalsover­
eigntyinthatcontinent.
So,quitea fundamental
rupture.Whetherornotthose
youdescribed,somewhat
dismissively,as“theoldguard
ofthediplomaticservice”in
facthateLordFrost’sgutsis,
frankly,irrelevant.What
mattersiswhetherheisonthe
rightsideofhistory.
davidhannay
HouseofLords
London

Nary starry night
We read your article on how
bright satellite constellations
are blocking the view of the
cosmos for astronomers
(“Goodbye darkness, my old
friend”, November 27th). In
America the Federal Commu­
nications Commission has
already approved licences for
thousands of satellites and
associated Earth stations. In
doing so, it has failed to meet
its legal responsibilities under
the National Environmental
Policy Act, which requires
agencies to analyse environ­

mentaleffectswithpublic
inputbeforetakingsuchac­
tions.Invirtuallyallinstances,
thefccauthorisessatellites
withoutanysubstantive
environmentalreview.
Realandpotentialenviron­
mentalharmfromproposed
satellitemega­constellations
gobeyondinterferingwith
astronomy.Lightpollutioncan
affectmigratingbirds,sea
turtlesandpollinatinginsects.
Italsodegradescelestialviews
sacredtomanythroughout
history.Thesatelliteswilladd
significantamountsofdebris
andchemicalstotheatmo­
sphere,includingonethat
depletesozone.Butthefcc
continuestoauthorisethese
satellites,fundamentally
changingthenightskyfor
everyone.
ruskinhartley
Executivedirector
InternationalDark­Sky
Association
Tucson,Arizona
ericarosenberg
FormerattorneyattheFederal
CommunicationsCommission
Washington,dc

Apinch of salt
A point missed in your leader
about the deduction on state
and local taxes (salt) in Amer­
ica is that states with high state
taxes generally contribute
more in federal taxes than they
receive in federal funds (“salt
in the wounds”, December
4th). States with low state
taxes generally receive more
from the federal government
than they contribute and are
more dependent on the federal
purse.
I live in California and pay
significant state taxes as well
as the regular federal taxes.
California chooses to finance
its own social programmes
whereas other states choose to
rely on federal handouts.
California residents thus
subsidise the low­tax states.
Without saltwe get to pay
twice: once for ourselves and
once for the deadbeat states.
Kentucky is a fine example.
Low state taxes, federal sub­
sidies and poverty. The sena­
tors from Kentucky despise
socialism but their state sub­

stantiallyreliesonfederal
supportfromotherstates.I
willnotdrinktheirwhiskey.
clivemccarthy
SanFrancisco

Cheesefortheseason
I tookexceptiontoyour
disparagingcommentsabout
Americancheese(Obituary,
October30th).American
cheesehadplentyofvarieties
andqualitybeforeAnneSaxel­
by,whomyousaidhad“no
domestic­cheesecultureto
buildon”.Poppycock!Mostof
theearlycheesepractitioners
wereofEuropeanoriginand
theirdescendantscarryon
thoserichtraditionswiththeir
owninnovations.
I tookparticularumbrageat
yourcommentsaboutour
cheddar,“paleattempt”
indeed.I urgeyoutotrysome
topqualityAgedNewYork­
stylecheddarfromCabot
Creamery,someWisconsin­
stylecheddar,orgreat
TillamookCreameryWest
Coastcheddar.Allthreeare
distinctlydifferentanddareI
saybetterthantheoriginal.
Ifyoureallywanttogetthe
flavourofAmericancheese
youshouldattendtheWorld
CheeseExpoinMilwaukee
nextApril.Itholdsa cheese
championshipwith3,
entriesfromallovertheworld.
jeromelippert
Formerpresident
Nelson­Jameson
Marshfield,Wisconsin

That last-minute gift?
I read with interest your article
on Apple making a Damascene
conversion by allowing
customers to repair its devices
(“iMac, iPhone, iRepair”,
November 27th). One trailblaz­
er in the world of mobile­
phone repairs is Fairphone.
The same iFixit website you
referred to gives Fairphone top
marks for repairability. 
There are arguably down­
sides to the ease of repair,
however the series of Fair­
phones have come along in
leaps and bounds in terms of
performance and reliability
over the past decade. It seems
only fair to give Fairphone due

credit for having led the way
over these past years, waiting
for the rest of the industry to
wake up and take notice.
ulric schwela
Director
Salus Mineralis
Thornton, Lancashire

Heading for the exit
“Safeguarding art” (November
27th) looked at how museums
decide which pieces of work to
save in the event of a fire. The
director of a big gallery in
London was once asked which
one work he would save. After
a moment’s reflection he said,
“the one nearest the door”.
keith collard
Ilkley, West Yorkshire

You say tomato...
The obituary on Stephen Sond­
heim (December 4th) quoted a
line from “Could I leave you”, a
song he penned for “Follies”,
as: “Could I bury my rage/with
a boy half your age/in the
grass?/Bet your arse!” The last
word of this line is actually
“ass.” The two words do mean
the same thing on opposite
sides of the Atlantic, but “ass”
rhymes with “grass” (not to
mentions “pass” in the
previous line). 
As an advocate of true
rhyme, Sondheim would never
have used “arse” here.
brad beaver
Long Beach, California

So this is Christmas
“A long and winding ode”
(December 4th) reviewed Paul
McCartney’s recent 960­page
memoir. Sir Paul’s essays on
his lyrics apparently aim “to
affirm his status as a writer”,
and “he makes a strong case
for treating his work as poetry.”
That is why we all like John
Lennon more.
matthew draper
Charlottesville, Virginia

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