![]() |
Quote:
was still right. |
I still live in the Cleveland area and the local news pasted the letter out to residents in Ward 11 and received nothing but positive feedback on the letter. The residents are tired of the thugs taking over the neighborhood. I for one wish more public officials would contact the bad seeds in the neighborhoods and tell them like it is because someone needs to!
|
Quote:
The representation theme remains constant, just substitute fraternity/sorority for ward. How many members of GC would be comfortable with the president of their national org. writing to someone in this format? Leadership has to set a higher standard ....that's why they're leadership. |
Tony06,
FYI, the president of my organization has written a letter that was beneath her office and I haven't been active since. But she wasn't dealing with someone who has made a career out of engaging in illegal acts. And the mother is as stupid as the kid, she's obviously not familiar with freedom of speech or libel laws, the only defense against libel is the truth. |
Quote:
But if you want to compare Darryl Matthews (btw, nice fellow--I met him during the Kappa Klave) to your city council member then go ahead. Personally I wouldn't do that with Soror Rice. |
Quote:
I'm not stretching at all, because my point is about the standard of representation, not the group of people being represented. Would you ever approve of Ms/Mrs. Rice, in her capacity as sorority president, penning a letter like the councilman's to anyone? For any reason? I doubt it. My comparison of frat/sorority leadership to councilman is not a comparison of job function, but of representative leadership. Mode of election has nothing to do with anything. I've met Bro. Matthews several times, most recently a few months ago. He's a good brother. However, I suspect that if he ever wrote a letter like that in his capacity as general president of Alpha Phi Alpha, (which I'd seriously doubt he'd ever do) he'd hear about it. Quickly. And Repeatedly. |
Tony06
I don't know what you consider "beneath the leadership" but your President's letter (publicy distributed) directed to the members of the fraternity who produced Stomp the Yard was WAY WORSE than a locally elected politician's rant against someone with whom they obviously have history. The president of your fraternity boo hoo ing to the public about a movie was a &^*ch move if I've ever seen one. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
I'm interested to know too though, how would we feel if one of our leaders addressed us this way? I'm really asking, why shouldn't our councilmen be held to the same standards as our organizational leaders? |
Quote:
Job function and mode of election has everything to do with your comparison which is why it is apples to oranges. I will vote for a grassroots city council member over a bureaucrat any day--I am radical like that. But then like I said that is the way it is here in the Twin Cities. Heck we elected Jesse Ventura as governor. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
But again, the Twin Cities is not for the faint of heart politician. |
Quote:
But back to that letter.... In the words of Saaphyri from CS...."whoa, you mad huh?" He was pretty "charged" as they say... |
Quote:
Point blank. If your national president wrote a letter like that, on sorortity letterhead, to whomever, for whatever reason, would you think it appropriate? |
Quote:
|
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:22 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.