Quote:
Once again, you aren't listening.
All due respect here, but I don't think you are listening. You have been clear your desire to bring it back on campus. You have also been clear you support the effort even if it involves changes a lot of posters do not want.
You made a comment about posters being "naive", but the problem with that statement is, some of these posters have seen the fight first hand and have zero faith/trust the university is interested in a good-faith effort. Yes, people have moved on, leadership has changed, but that does not mean things will unequivocally be different this time.
It is a fairly straight forward argument:
* If your main goal is to get it back on campus, it will have to be different. Student involvement will not be what it is today or what it was. If you want it on campus, you have to be OK with this fact
* If your main goal is to preserve the tradition of a student run and student built bonfire, it will not be allowed on campus and it will not have university involvement.
For some posters, me included, the desire to have it back on campus is not more important than the tradition of a student built bonfire. For others, it is.
It has been run successfully off campus for years and it is sad so many students and former students don't participate or attend, but again, things change. Do we really 'punish' those who have kept the tradition alive through hard work and sacrifice by stripping them of their involvement in favor of folks who haven't been a part of it?
ETA: "haven't been a part of it" referring to keeping it alive for the years after the tragedy.