Letter to the Editors

This letter is written in response to a column in last week’s issue about the passing of Joe Paterno:

Once I read the headline “Paterno deserves respect, not hatred from public,” I thought I had somehow picked up a copy of the Onion. In no way does Paterno deserve my respect. Just because someone has a good football record does not mean he can ignore the abuse of children happening right under his nose. The article was so rude and disrespectful that I honestly cannot believe it was published, especially at a school that I thought held more intelligent and caring students.

Joe Paterno deserved to be fired because what he did was unthinkable. He was extremely involved in the incidents at Penn State. To say that Paterno was “a man of true character that every individual should aspire to imitate” is so offensive that I honestly cannot believe it was published. To ignore something that ruined the lives innocent children because you care more about how your team looks is not something that anyone should ever aspire to imitate. It is reprehensible.

The article is offensive, not just to me, but to anyone who has ever been sexually abused or assaulted, and to anyone who knows someone who has been abused (and that probably includes you). I would even go so far as to say it is offensive to anyone who cares about children more than a sports team.

Sandusky did not merely ruin “his own life and the reputation of the program.” He ruined the lives of over 50 children. To say that it was a selfish act is extremely true, but that does not mean that he alone deserves the blame. To discover something like this and not report it to the authorities is just as bad, if not worse, than the original act. To not report it says that you do not care or that what happened does not matter. Paterno was only thinking of his team when he chose not to alert the authorities. He was being selfish by not thinking of the children who had been violated by someone they thought they could trust. For these reasons he deserved to be fired from his position and he deserves no respect after his passing.

 

Sincerely,

Evelyn Clarke, ’13