PARIS, FRANCE - OCTOBER 19: A French Forensics Officer examines the cut window and balcony of a gallery at the Louvre Museum which was the scene of a robbery at the world famous museum earlier in the day on October 19, 2025 in Paris, France. France's Culture Minister, Rachida Dati, announced the closure of the world-famous art museum on X due to the robbery taking place just after the Louvre opened to the public. It is being reported that millions of pound with of historic jewellery belonging to Napoleon and Empress Josephine has been stolen (Photo by Kiran Ridley/Getty Images)
**Call Clouseau!**
If Inspector Jacques Clouseau were around today, these bad guys (“Sacré bleu! Louvre looted of gems,” Oct. 20) would be in jail by the weekend—just a thought.
*Jim Grant, Jensen Beach, Fla.*
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**Beyond at W’mart**
It’s great news that Beyond Meat is going to be sold at Walmart (“W’mart deal jolts Beyond,” Oct. 22). I don’t care much about stocks, but I support anything that will stop animal suffering and reduce greenhouse gases. And more people will likely buy Beyond Meat products now that its stock is so popular.
*Heather Moore, Norfolk, Va.*
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**Long-term Effects**
Rafael A. Mangual and Naomi Schaefer Riley’s column takes a myopic and short-sighted approach to child welfare policy (“Saving Kids,” PostOpinion, Oct. 19). Child welfare policy would be easy if we could make decisions based on one data point. But responsible policymaking also weighs the impact on kids later.
Do child protection investigations have enduring effects? Do they make kids healthier in the long run? The cited study does not answer these questions. Research also shows that the child welfare system is traumatizing and causes many negative effects that ripple for years after an investigation.
The authors omit that the study itself says “a large body of evidence shows that both cash and in-kind transfers may have long-term benefits to children.” Strategies like financial support are an important part of child welfare policy solutions in a system that, regrettably, cannot be solved with one data point.
*Allison Green, Port Chester*
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**Figure-It-Out Math**
New York’s new math guidelines suggest that the practice of math facts and standard algorithms are not as helpful as letting students figure out their own ways to do math (“NY does number on math,” Oct. 19).
I can name a few people who have “figured out” ways to do math: Pythagoras, Isaac Newton, and Leonhard Euler, to name a few. But they “figured it out” after decades of perseverance and research.
It’s hard enough for students to understand and retain what has been explicitly taught—why make it harder?
*Jessy Friedman, Marlboro, NJ*
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**Dems Failed Kids**
Here are 154,000 homeless public-school students in New York City (“1 in 7 students without homes,” Oct. 21). Of the students that do go to school, many can’t read, write, or do math at their grade’s level.
This is the result of liberal New York politicians and union chiefs Michael Mulgrew and Randi Weingarten’s policies. They welcomed 238,000 undocumented immigrants into our city since 2022, disrupting schools, health care, and housing—what did they expect?
Shame on Sen. Chuck Schumer, Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, Gov. Hochul, and Mayor Adams. Our children are our future, and not one of the above gives a damn about our youth.
*J. R. Cummings, Manhattan*
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**Jan. 6er’s Threat**
A man who took part in the Jan. 6 Capitol riots but was later pardoned by President Trump has been arrested for threatening to “eliminate” New York Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (“Jan. 6er ‘targets’ Jeffries,” Oct. 22).
The MAGA minion is not the first pardoned Capitol rioter to be arrested on new, separate charges. But he’s the first to be charged with making a violent threat against a member of Congress.
What then will come of the charges? I predict, at worst, a slap on the wrist.
*Vin Morabito, Scranton, Pa.*
https://nypost.com/2025/10/25/opinion/the-louvre-jewel-heist-and-more-letters/