Meh, you sign it because you support the original message. The comments is just everyone's individual takes on the situation. And with 600 people someone is going to crack a joke and someone else is going to have some incoherent rant that doesn't seem to fit. Just don't hit the like button and they fall towards the bottom where almost no one is going to dig down and read.
Originally Posted by GOD
When it's third and ten, you can take the milk drinkers and I'll take the whiskey drinkers every time. -Max McGee
“I really thought you had to run the football to control the game,” Erhardt once said. “You had to throw the football to score but had to run the football to win.” - Ron Erhardt
The most disappointing thing here is the school is supposed to answer to its students, faculty, alumni, community. In that order.
At no point is the school supposed to be beholden to some semi-political committee or a legislature.
As an alum, where does my voice fit? I mean, our only recourse is to withhold support from the university but that would play right into their hands.
Cathy Neset is an oil hack, nothing more.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
To each their own, it's your right to do it or not. What's odd is you seem to support the petition and the original message and the general idea, but a couple comments you don't agree with are keeping you from signing it.
What's frustrating to me, is the President of NDSU is being investigated because a wildly known NDSU hater has uncovered some text messages that maybe, certainly not certain, may have known more about the restrictions than he initially led on to. Now Forum Communications six months removed from photoshopping NDSU fans and mocking them, and Mr. Port are calling for his heads. This is after he (I do believe he knew more than he lead onto and I could care less) and Matt Larson caved and took off the restrictions which greatly favors the FCC.
We can't find 700 folks that see that and go "hey, that's not right."
When it's third and ten, you can take the milk drinkers and I'll take the whiskey drinkers every time. -Max McGee
“I really thought you had to run the football to control the game,” Erhardt once said. “You had to throw the football to score but had to run the football to win.” - Ron Erhardt