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Whatever you do, don't make mistakes at Notre Dame

Discussion in 'Sports and News' started by Pringle, Jan 23, 2007.

  1. outofplace

    outofplace Well-Known Member

    Part of the point is to be a smart ass.

    Another part is to point out that not everybody agrees that marijuana is harmless. It is not harmless and it is illegal. When they legalize it, then you have a lot more reason to slam colleges for having draconian rules against it.

    Yes, there are worse substances that can be put in a human body, and that may include alcohol and nicotine, but the law is what it is and the school same goes for the school policy.
     
  2. JR

    JR Well-Known Member

    Smoking a joint is illegal.

    Drinking under age is illegal.

    So, if you get arrested for smoking a joint why aren't cops swooping down on ND football games and arresting the kids for drinking? And then all those kids should be tossed from university. Fucking hypocrites.

    It makes ND look like Poduknville. Oh, wait, it's in South Bend, Indiana. It IS Podunkville.
     
  3. Cadet

    Cadet Guest

    I'm mostly with JR on this one.

    I'm not against the school's policy with regard to marijuana. It's illegal (right or wrong) and the consequences follow suit.

    Where the school comes across as hypocritical is with the underage drinking. Just as illegal for 18-19-20-yr-olds as smoking a joint. But drinking is such a cultural norm at ND, such a part of the lifestyle and, yes part of the "beer and circus," that the school at best turns a blind eye.

    All I know is anecdotal evidence, but I'd love to know how many kids have been transported to the local hospital for alcohol poisoning in the last year.
     
  4. Pringle

    Pringle Active Member

    How great is it, by the way, to be able to have a lively debate without you-know-who showing up to tell everybody what a bunch of bird brains we all are?
     
  5. JR

    JR Well-Known Member

    Thank you.

    Yes, the university is within its right to expel the kid but the policy is not very enlightened and smells like ND doesnt' want to be perceived as being "soft on drugs" in case it jeopardizes funding or alumnae support.

    I'd expect more of a distinguished university.
     
  6. Oh, is it? And you don't think his suspension for the spring semester would have sufficiently gotten that message across? Tell me, how many other major conference college programs would have come down this harshly on a kid for his first offense? This stuff happens all of the time. Guys are benched for a couple of games, suspended, and then they are back. And frankly, that is how it should be. It's a joint, for Christsakes. The kid screwed up. But the way the university handled this for a first offense was incredibly vindictive.

    I love this implicit message being sent by Notre Dame that the university is "above it all" and holds itself to a higher standard when it comes to college athletics, while, as Football Bat says, they reap millions off the NBC football contract. It is such an amazing crock of bullshit.

    BTW, the Sean Williams comparison isn't valid. Because if the kid were at BC, he'd have to be caught eight more times before the university would take some kind of punitive action. With Williams, it was MULTIPLE documented offenses.
     
  7. Pringle

    Pringle Active Member

  8. JR

    JR Well-Known Member

  9. bigpern23

    bigpern23 Well-Known Member

    My point about the arrest being a big part of it is this: The cops aren't swooping and arresting underage drinkers, but the university isn't in control of what the cops turn a blind eye to.

    If the cops swooped in and arrested the kids for underage drinking, would they be booted from school? I have no idea, since I've never read a story about it, nor do I have the student handbook. But again, nobody here knows if random students are expelled for underage drinking (if there is anyone who knows, please feel free to share with the class.)

    I just don't see how you can accuse the university of being hypcritical for enforcing a policy it has on its books. If they didn't enforce it, it would be hypocritical. The kid knew the rule broke it and has to pay the price.

    Argue the policy all you want (in fact, I'd likely agree with you). But you can't argue the punishment when it's explicitly stated in the handbook how the university views marijuana violations.
     
  10. outofplace

    outofplace Well-Known Member

    Can you people please stop making me defend Notre Dame? I hate Notre Dame.

    But it is not vindictiveness to enforce a policy as it is stated in the rules. You all act like this was a surprise to the kid. I guarantee he was told this was the policy.

    And wow, his father thinks the kid has been wronged. I'm a father myself. Parents back their kids, sometimes to the point that they lack disipline (yes, that is an argument from another thread spilling over).

    The kid got ARRESTED in violation of a school policy. This is not an outrage. And believe me, I'd love any opportunity to rip anything Notre Dame does.
     
  11. shotglass

    shotglass Guest

    Suggestion: If you join the debate team next semester, cross this off your list of potential arguments. ;)
     
  12. JR

    JR Well-Known Member

    This is my last post on this subject:

    1) I'd bet my first born that if you were arrested for underage drinking at ND, you wouldn't be expelled.

    2) ND, given that they are a bit of an institution, could force the local Barney Fifes to arrest kids at football games for underage drinking, but then that would fly in the face of what appears to be a pretty strong frat-boy culture.

    3) Without seeing the actual wording of the policy, I doubt immediate expulsion for getting arrested with a joint would have been mandatory. In other words, the university could have used their discretion and suspended the student for however long they thought was appropriate. If immediate expulsion is in fact mandatory, then ND is a clueless organization.

    4) The policy is unbelievably heavy-handed and I agree with the parent's take on it.
     
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