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Letters to the Editor, 10-23-09

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Published: Friday, October 23, 2009

Updated: Friday, October 23, 2009

 No exceptions should be made for American flag

The McIver/Flag debacle is a perfect example of how far the US can be led out of its way when it comes to matters of symbolism and old glory. In a diplomatic response to McIver’s childish complaint, ResLife Director Scott Chesney suggests that he is “not comfortable changing policies mid-year,” leaving the mind free to speculate if policy will be changed in the future. What if the flag in question had displayed a hammer and sickle, or a crescent moon and star? Would we have seen such openness to the idea of changing the rules?
It is suggested in your opinion piece (Flag debate another case of too much media from Oct. 20 edition of TNH) that a “hole in the UNH policy has been exposed.” Really? The long-standing rule seems straightforward to me. Nothing is to be hung or displayed outside the windows. The intimation that the “any other objects” wording of the rule is merely a “soft way” to cover all eventualities ignores the fact that it also creates a robust rule that protects the safety and interests of all students, regardless of their nationality.
Whatever Mr. McIver’s father has been honorably fighting for all these years, it is not the right to break the rules when we feel like it. Veterans need to be celebrated, but slinging a flag out the window seems to me like a generic and half-hearted way to do this, and if an exception is made for the hanging of American flags throughout campus, will this not further trivialize the gesture? If McIver wants to honor his father, why not contribute to making the UNH Office for Veterans Affairs a bigger and better resource? Or volunteering with the National Department of Veterans Affairs, instead of working to undermine university policy in the name of foggy-minded patriotism.

Dennis Lees
Newmarket, NH


Police should leave marijuana users alone

In response to the article: Protesters take to the streets for marijuana awareness (published in the Oct. 20 edition of TNH),
The main focus for all law enforcement should be to serve and protect the people of our country. When we look at the big picture of the war on drugs, we know that it is dangerous in terms of major drug dealers, money and people getting hurt, and therefore, law enforcement should be involved.
Then when we think about someone smoking a joint when they get home from work, much like someone who drinks a beer when they get home from work, we see why there is not major issue that needs to involve the law. Why are taxpayers going to waste their money on people getting arrested for something as minute as smoking marijuana?
In Manchester, protesters for legalizing marijuana have spent many days smoking the drug on busy streets in the city. The police officers in Manchester have done nothing to stop them. The police officers claim that there is no actual marijuana being smoked, but that is not what the protesters say. So, if there is actual marijuana being smoked in public, in a busy part of the city, and the cops are not doing anything about it, then is it really that big of a deal?
If people were running around shooting each other in public, I would hope that law enforcement would do something about that. Obviously shooting people is extremely dangerous and so it needs to be stopped.
Law enforcement should be more concerned with the dangerous drugs that are flowing through our cities. Marijuana is an everyday drug, just like alcohol, and many people use marijuana. If marijuana were legalized, then maybe there would be more money for towns to spend on bigger issues such as cracking down other drugs, like cocaine or OxyContin. The only way for this to happen is for the law enforcement to stop arresting the marijuana smokers and to stop spending the money to send them to court and jail.
Basically, if marijuana was a dangerous and serious issue then police officers in Manchester would have done something to “protect” the city, but it is not, so marijuana should be legalized and the world should move on to bigger and better things.

Heather Marshall
Junior, Communication Sciences and Disorders

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