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As I stated, the culture has not changed. The resistance to any information that doesn't back the status quo is loud and drowns out common sense.
Bullsh*t. A&M has continued to change before, during, and after the Bonfire collapse. Most have been for the good and a few have not been so good.
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There are real victims to a close-minded culture, so paranoid of outside information, that they shout down and ridicule said information and those who attempt to make a difference. The result is disaster.
Severe hyperbole there. Those at the Student Bonfire have shown that a Bonfire can be safely built and an appropriate safety-minded atmosphere is not only possible, but maintainable.
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Tim Kerlee is one of of those victims. Look at that picture...crushed and twisted legs...and ask yourself if there is any tradition worth the risk that something like could happen. That's someone's son lying there, mortally injured, due to a cultural defect that wouldn't allow anyone to be heard that could have prevented his and the other deaths. That's a huge chunk of a family's life being torn away from them because of some culturally immature notion that "tradition" for tradition sake has value. Only those posturing, for the benefit of their ego, would answer that question with, "yes, it is worth it".
1. I new Tim. I had class with him. I was at his funeral.
2. I agree that no tradition is worth someone's life.
3. #2 is a bullsh*t comparison as every action involves risk. How many people die playing football? How many people die driving to college? How many die doing all sorts of mundane, simple things that we do every day? The important thing is not to remove every risk out there, but to mitigate as many risks as possible to the max extent possible. Again, Student Bonfire has shown that Bonfire can be done with minimal risk to life and limb. So is one person's life worth it? No, but let's be realistic. We take calculated risks every day.
4. Saying that Tim died because no one would listen is misleading. Some people pointed out the problems. Others whined about the pollution. Others complained about the noise when bonfire burned. Still others thought the wood was being misused and should have been given to the homeless to build homes. My point is that there were a lot of people who thought the Aggies' efforts were bad with respect to Bonfire and those who had legitimate complaints and possible solutions were lost in the mix. This (regrettably) happens in any large organization.
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If what makes Texas A&M communitiy "special" is mindless tradition that puts members of the community at risk of death and serious bodily injury, then it isn't as special as many want to believe.
1. Bonfire was far from "mindless" and was not the only tradition out there (still isn't).
2. I guess football gets some special exception for you? Rappelling? ROTC? Skiing? Driving? as well? All of these involve a "risk of death and serious bodily injury."
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If Texas A&M is to be special, it is the people that make up Texas A&M that have to be special...not some out of control annually repeated activity. If you need tradition to be special...you ain't.
You assume that the activity will always remain out of control and can't be controlled. Student Bonfire has proven the opposite to be possible.