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The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: Trump and his honesty are the only ways to save the United States

Editor, I strongly agree with Ms. Woods’ assessment of Donald Trump and his comments. He is one of the few politicians speaking what they think and meaning it. I may not agree with everything Mr. Trump has to say, but the fact that he is speaking honestly to the silent majority of people in this great country of ours is more admirable than I have the words to verbalize about.


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: Support for Trump's hatred of immigrants not backed by facts

ntolerance is courageous? I grieved to read Rev. Mary Woods’ letter “Donald Trump shows courage in illegal immigrant comments.” As director of the NM Faith Coalition for Immigrant Justice, I dread ministers promoting intolerant messages so disconnected from Christianity. The heart of Rev. Woods’ message — that recent events have ignited discussion around racism bringing us to a crossroads — holds truth. Our country has skirted race for too long, and the imperative to address it is now. For someone experienced with racism to justify supposed “protective racism” is counterintuitive.


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: It's only a matter of time before Trump backers are disappointed

It was with a great deal of disgust that I read Rev. Mary E. Woods’ letter entitled “Donald Trump shows courage in illegal immigrant comments.” Trump’s focus and forte center on only political non-correctness. Just because he can yell and scream like a brat, a certain segment of the population thinks that’s cool.


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: Donald Trump shows courage in illegal immigrant comments

Recent events in America have ignited some serious discussions around racism and placed our country at the crossroads of social and political divide. As a Christian, providentially called and ecclesiastically ordained minister and board-certified chaplain, I am impelled to pen my sentiments during this trying time in the history of these United States of America. From my vantage point as an African-American of Cherokee and Blackfoot Indian descent, raised in the Jim Crow city of Birmingham, Alabama, I have always viewed racism as overt and covert; that there could be no reasonable rationale for this social stigma. Yet the remarks attributed to Donald Trump regarding Mexican immigrants led me to entertain the idea of “protective” racism, which can fall into either category cited above. In stating that “Mexico sends its rapists, drug dealers, et. al., to the United States,” I contend that he was speaking out of the realization and concern that steps need to be taken to rein in runaway immigration practices by our neighbors to the south, who somehow feel that they have an entitlement to the services and benefits that we citizens have struggled for years to enjoy.


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: Blocking threats from the world blocks beneficial sharing

When you put together the recent large-scale hacking of classified U.S. personnel data by the Chinese with the extraordinary number of Chinese nationals at American universities today, you see a blurring of the lines between researching for purposes of pure scholarship and malicious spying. In that hack, the Chinese were allegedly looking for our spies operating in their country. But we spy on China well enough to tell that it is they who are spying. Then we have been known to block participation by Chinese scientists in international conferences held here, thereby stifling the growth of purely scientific and benign knowledge which can only happen these days if totally non-political research nerds can share discoveries and data openly without intimidating visits by national security agencies. We have even blocked the mutual sharing of scholarly scientific findings, even for medical benefit, with tiny Cuba.


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: Daily Lobo's new direction may lead away from loyal readers

Just because everybody in the media world is jumping off the cliff like lemmings to join the digital world doesn’t mean the Daily Lobo has to as well. Clearly, this is an economic decision and I wish the editorial staff of the Daily Lobo had the huevos to simply come out and say it: Printing on paper with ink costs a hell of a lot of money. On the other hand, because just about everybody and their dog is going digital, the printed word has an impact like never before.


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: Safety for Indian students is in jeopardy throughout US

What do the following international graduate students from India in the United States have in common: Chandrasekhar Reddy Komma and Kiran Kumar Allam, both of Louisiana State University; Randhir Kaur of University of California, San Francisco; Sai Kiran of Miami Atlantic University? They were all innocently going about their business, working hard pursuing advanced degrees, and were murdered.


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: Special session Legislature must reconsider education funds

On June 8, the New Mexico Legislature was called back into a special session to reconsider passing the $295 million capital outlay bill that died in the final days of the 2015 legislative session. The special session requires that lawmakers return to Santa Fe to reconsider spending on capital projects critical to higher education and communities throughout rural New Mexico. Not only does capital outlay provide improvements to public facilities in local communities, but it also provides much-needed jobs through the construction and improvements of facilities in a state that currently ranks 48th in job growth. The special session is an opportunity to restore some of the funding request made my colleges and universities throughout New Mexico. Gov. Susana Martinez and House Republicans had proposed a 44 percent cut to institutions of higher education throughout the state during the 60-day regular session — now is the time to restore these cuts. Some of those cuts included building and infrastructure improvement such as roof improvements to the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, a tech center at UNM Gallup, and improvements to UNM’s Health Education Building. Smaller institutions critical to the state mission of higher education, such as Southwestern Indian Polytechnic Institute, also depend on capital improvement funds to maintain buildings, and have requested $500,000 to upgrade a fire alarm system to be in compliance with fire regulations.


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: Religious extremism should be rightly classified as psychosis

Now that we acknowledge drug-induced psychosis, we should also acknowledge psychosis induced purely by religion. After all, ISIL among the Muslims, the KKK among the Christians, and the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh among the Hindus are all gangs of violent psychopaths. The problem is that any religion is very clever at broadcasting that it is the corresponding non-believers who have this or that delusion, not they. Take climate change. Well-funded Christian fundamentalists, even in this scientifically advanced country, claim that climate change is delusion. In reality, it is they who are delusional about man-made climate change as fact — the most obvious causative factor to anybody breathing being the plumes of pollution blanketing the sky throughout the thin skin around Earth we call the atmosphere. But self-proclaimed Christian “scientists” get into government and say things like “You only have to reflect God, and you can breathe anything and you will never fall sick.” Then they take their hats off to the likes of the Koch brothers, who toss in more change. Or Christians imagine some “God” to be pulling the strings and sending down lightning with pinpoint accuracy in the manner of laser-guided missiles, and thus effecting climate change, not man.


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: City promotes inequality by rewarding pay disparity

Some say the city has taken a step forward by giving preferred treatment on city contract bidding to employers who pay women within 10 percent of what they pay their male employees for the same work. So, let me get this straight: if you pay women less than men, you get preferred treatment in city contracts? Am I missing something here?


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: Groups like the Islamic State misrepresent claimed labels

UNM student Samuel Ryu’s Monday letter possesses some really ill logic. Is President Obama both a socialist and a secret Muslim? (He seems like more of a pragmatist and secret atheist to me?) How do Obama’s “secret Muslim beliefs” square with his strong support of human rights for women and gays? Is that all part of the conspiracy? How many infidels has the POTUS beheaded today?


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: Senators' sensitivity does little for the suffering of Palestine

Referring to the protracted equivocation on the part of our ASUNM Senate to pass the resolution to divest from certain American multinationals implicitly supporting the effective imprisonment and brutalizing of an entire demographic just because they are Palestinian: Imagine a hypothetical ASUNM having a similar session back during World War II. The resolution demands UNM divest from companies, like IBM and Ford, that were supporting Nazi Germany, which was imprisoning and brutalizing an entire demographic just because they were Jewish.


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: No matter who says otherwise, Islam isn't a religion of peace

I commend Dean of Students Tomas Aguirre for bravely stating that the ISIS panel denounced ISIS. Apparently his authority position gives credibility to this claim. But we do not need to settle for this. In fact, we should look higher — to our commander-in-chief/comrade-in-chief/secret Muslim (take your pick) in the White House. After all, isn’t this the ultimate authority figure in our nation who has claimed that Islam is a religion of peace? The problem is that these claims have no Islamic basis for justification. Simply claiming this or that without substantiation means nothing. However, we should keep in mind that these people are human beings too, and that they have made an error about “the religion of peace.” Muslims cannot explicitly deny jihad without discrediting authentic Islamic sources. Simply stating opposition to ISIS could actually mean frustration that a Muslim group has gone too fast and too far ahead of the rest of the umma — in this case, the likes of ISIS and al-Qaeda. Obviously, a more subtle approach such as civilization jihad is necessary, as advocated by the Muslim Brotherhood and recently by an ISIS manual on deception for Muslims.



The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: Physicians' incomes come from sources beyond salaries

It is important to note in your revealing “the top 10 highest salaries this year at UNM” that every single top earner listed is a medical doctor. In academic medicine, it is important not to confuse “salary” with income; the annual personal professional income of such staff is in general much higher because in addition to their paycheck from UNM, they can bill for patient care by doing a run of the wards as consultants and seeing multiple patients each time. They can also additionally make megabucks by conducting studies on, say, an investigational medication, and getting handsomely reimbursed by Big Pharma that wants them to prescribe that particular drug, all from their office on campus.


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: Panel discussions and other events aid UNM's mission

Earlier this month the Muslim Student Association hosted a panel discussion about ISIS in the Student Union Building. This was not a “pro-ISIS” panel as some individuals have incorrectly suggested; if anything it was an “anti-ISIS” panel where panelists spoke against the atrocities committed by ISIS and the disconnect between their practices and the values and teachings of Islam.


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: Families of fallen UNM students touched by support

We would like to offer our most heartfelt thanks for the outpouring of love and support we have received from the UNM community following the tragic accident on the late evening of Nov. 21, which injured Julia Thompson and Joe Mendoza and resulted in the loss of our sweet Briana Hillard and Matthew Grant. Such tragic events are difficult to bear, but the strong, unfailing support we have received has always reminded us that we are not alone. Clearly they were loved by so many. This realization in itself is comforting, and the UNM community has put its arms around us all. The moving and loving memorial service arranged by Pi Beta Phi and SAE was attended by thousands of people. We cannot thank them enough and will always be glad that Matthew and Briana were part of such a loving Greek family.


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: Divestment in fossil fuels needs Daily Lobo's support

During the Board of Regents meeting on April 10, 350NM co-leader Tom Solomon and State Sen. Jerry Ortiz y Pino urged the regents to divest UNM’s fossil fuel holdings, which make up approximately 5 to 10 percent of its $415 million endowment. Fifty “Fossil-Free UNM” supporters — including UNM students, faculty, and staff — attended the meeting to rally support for fossil fuel divestment. To the surprise of many in attendance, the regents were receptive to the proposal.


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: Businesses, students must collaborate to find success

Let’s be honest. Times are different. The economy is not where it was before the 2008 crash, and finding a good job in this market is more competitive than ever. I was born in a time when a personal computer was unheard of and cell phones resembled bricks more than communication devices. Yet our world requires not only the new skills of evolving technology, but also the traditional skills that form the foundation of our society. So I did what so many others have done: I went back to school to get the skills needed to make a difference in this world and give my family the opportunities that I took for granted. As a mother, wife and citizen of this country, being stretched thin has become the norm more than the exception. To be competitive and provide for your family, a person needs more than just a degree or certification under his or her belt. Let’s look at some quick facts: According to a recent Gallup survey, 96 percent of college graduates feel they are ready for the workforce, even though only 11 percent of business leaders would agree with that assessment. Most business leaders, as the source of their concerns about college graduates, cite a lack of professionalism and foundational competencies, as well as an absence of implementing those competencies. College graduates need experience and foundational interpersonal skills in order to bridge the gap between the generations that make up our society.


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: Claims of God's benevolence are false advertising

I wish we had a fair, loving, all powerful parent God who would rescue all who fervently prayed for help   from war, starvation, cancer, addiction, tornadoes, drought, drunk drivers, rape, family violence, blindness, false charges, drones, torture and much more. Hundreds of millions of people throughout human history have prayed desperately to God the best they knew how and received no help. Did Jesus of Nazareth actually live? If he did, did the writers of Mathew, Mark, Luke and John in the Bible accurately tell Jesus’ teachings and actions? In centuries since, did those people who copied and translated the original writings do a good job and make no important mistakes? Huge questions! Who knows for sure? The Bible says Jesus spoke often about God as a loving Father who would answer prayers and give what we ask for.

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