Finger-pointing at St. Pat’s Parade
Mar 15, 2009 | 835 views | 2 2 comments | 16 16 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Dear Editor:

The suggestion to ban the St. Patrick's Day Parade from Hoboken is an utterly absurd gesture. This parade celebrates the traditions and pride of the Irish American people. Punishing any group, whatever race, creed, religion, sex or national origin is against all American principles

There are absolutely no evidences linking the founders of the parade or their ethnicity, which makes them guilty of initiating or condoning these outlandish accusations of immoral public behavior, which would justify the parade’s demise. This unacceptable behavior is being used as a tool to escalate unjustified bias, prejudice and fear, relating their mitigating baseless agenda.

Do the citizens of Hoboken, who are against the parade, actually think this will cease or reduce the celebration? Do they actually think that abolishing this event will eliminate individuals, who are intoxicated, urinating and performing immoral sexual acts in public, loitering and littering by miraculously spreading a magic carpet of morality?

I am not of Irish descent nor a resident of Hoboken but I feel compelled to offer my protest and outcry of a situation unfairly geared on pointing fingers based and filled with empty assumptions and no substance.

Remember the immortal words of Pastor Martin Niemöller who wrote,

When the Nazis came for the communists,

I remained silent;

I was not a communist.

When they locked up the social democrats,

I remained silent;

I was not a social democrat.

When they came for the trade unionists,

I did not speak out;

I was not a trade unionist.

When they came for the Jews,

I remained silent;

I wasn't a Jew.

When they came for me,

there was no one left to speak out

William P. Frasca

Jersey City

Comments
(2)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
forward
|
March 17, 2009
ultimato, the writer already stated that this behavior was unacceptable, and eliminating the parade unfortunately will not stop the partying. Hoboken has become a young yuppie/college town, full of places to eat, drink and be merry. Did you ever go out and walk the town on a Friday or Saturday night? These individuals don't need an excuse to be immoral. These foul things descriped can be seen any weekend in Hoboken. This brings in busuness and money, so you wont get any sympathy from the politicians or the business owners. Don't forget Hoboken always had the repetition of having the most bars per square mile in the Guiness Book of World records. Years ago it was a blue collar, long shoremen place to live which is now converted to a white collar arrogant, all for me town.
ultimato
|
March 15, 2009
Do you have a batter idea how to stop the drunken takeover of our town every year when this parade takes place? If it's not going to be canceled, then something needs to be done to stop the thousands of drunks who damage property, urinate and vomit wherever they want, make noise for nearly 24 hours and harass residents and TAX PAYERS. The parade is only an excuse for them to pretend they are coming here to celebrate Irish pride. The real reason they are coming here is because no one is stopping them from acting like maniacs. Are you OK with that part of it or do you agree something needs to be done?