Local professor: Collecting care packages for troops is 'shameful': MyFoxBOSTON.com
A Suffolk University law professor will not collect items for United States troops overseas and thinks it is "shameful" to do so.
Law professor Michael Avery sent a five-paragraph e-mail to colleagues in response to a school-wide appeal for care packages for deployed soldiers.
"I think it is shameful that it is perceived as legitimate to solicit in an academic institution for support for men and women who have gone overseas to kill other human beings" wrote Avery.
Avery also wrote that he believes sympathy for troops in harms way is “not particularly rational in today’s world.”
The e-mail did not stop with Avery’s objection to the care packages. Avery went on to question the schools intent of the American flag hanging in the atrium:
“Since Sept. 11 we have had perhaps the largest flag in New England hanging in our atrium. This is not a politically neutral act. Excessive patriotic zeal is a hallmark of national security states. It permits, indeed encourages, excesses in the name of national security, as we saw during the Bush administration, and which continue during the Obama administration” wrote Avery.
Students and faculty all over campus are talking about the controversial e-mail, but have mixed emotions.
Suffolk University has received several complaints from students, Alumni, and others regarding the email and in response the acting President of the school posted a statement on the law school website.
“I don’t think it reflects the over all feelings of Suffolk Law in general. I mean we are a patriotic school, we have a huge American flag up in the Atrium,” one law student told FOX 25.
Most disagree with the professor’s sentiment and explain that his views do not represent the public opinion on campus.
Avery did not wish to comment any further on the matter.
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