P.H. Dexippus said:
Ag_0112358132134 said:
CDUB98 said:
Hell will freeze over first.
Not really. There's no reason they can't bring it back and just take additional precautions, which is what they should have done in the first place.
Completely false. As someone involved with leadership Student Bonfire/Unity Project 2002, it was recognized from Day 1 that if Bonfire were to ever return to campus, it would only be a hollow shell of its former self due to the liability concerns.
It would not be student cut, student load, student stack, student lead. Which is the whole point of the endeavor. The pep rally at the end, Burn, is not what builds the comradery, leadership skills and memories. I would rather it stay off campus forever than come back just as another over-produced tradition exploited by powers that be (see our football gameday experience).
FYI- if all you care about is the Burn, you can still see it each year just a short drive from campus.
Sorry but that says more about you and those who are well intentioned but have actually lost what Bonfire is all about. What is it about?
Bonfire was about bringing all Aggies together to share their love of Texas A&M and their burning desire to Beat the Hell Outta tu. No where in there does it say it should only be built by students. Even among the fallen were Former Students. Professors and outside contractors have also been heavily involved providing guidance and equipment in the past. The only question is how much and where the line is drawn.
I admire the work that those who have kept the tradition alive with Student Bonfire but it is at best a pale shadow of what it once was. It's more of a service project combined with a nostalgia event. I have been and honestly just walked away sad though I know many feel differently. You simply can't overstate the importance of having the school involved. That means the football team and Yell Leaders are there. It means it's on campus and you have far, far more attendance. It means the school will push it and publicize it and people will come from all over to see it.
I get it. The cool part about Bonfire is how it is student run and all the things we did when building it but that has evolved over time. I worked on Bonfire all 4 years. My Dad was in charge of Bonfire as a Yell Leader in the '50s. There is a limit to how much it can be sanitized before it loses its meaning. That said I think the current Bonfire is more about just the people who build it and it isn't about the school or the original meaning. Like I said, it's a service project (a very cool one) with a lot of nostalgia.
It just amazes me how the people who seem most resistant to Bonfire coming back on campus are those who are building it now because they will lose control of it. They have this idea of purity around it that while I do understand it as someone who did it I think also has lost the real point of Bonfire to begin with. It's about bringing all Aggies together not about the nuts and bolts of how that happens. There seems to be very little compromise with the folks doing it now, they want it to be exactly the way they are doing it or not at all. I also understand why they feel that way based around how things went down 25 years ago after the collapse be but that's the whole point, time has passed and we have a chance at a new beginning if people are willing to compromise.
Or it can just stay a small event off campus that 80-90% of current students are barely aware of and won't ever attend.
"The most terrifying words in the English language are: I'm from the government and I'm here to help."
Ronald Reagan