Letters to the Editor
By Daily Bruin Staff
Oct. 15, 2006 9:00 p.m.
Angelides is out to help the students
Phil Angelides is the only gubernatorial candidate to actually
show his support for students by speaking directly with them.
He is not just a weaker version of Arnold Schwarzenegger.
His background in the California Democratic Party and what he
has done for the group is amazing.
He will bring these talents to the table as the next governor of
California.
He really is the stronger candidate, and he has made it clear
that students are one of his primary concerns and that he will
fight for us in office.
Katie Strickland’s column (“Surprise: I’m
Voting for a Republican,” Oct. 12) makes all of UCLA look
bad.
We students need to stick together and vote for the candidate
who will help us most.
What we do not need is someone to make statements about how
Angelides is under-qualified to be our next governor.
Taylor Kayatta,
Third-year, political science
Bruin Democrats webmaster
For the animals, be more humane
As an alumnus of UCLA, I was embarrassed to read Kenneth
Hurst’s opinion (“Animals vital to research,”
Oct. 13).
Hurst’s callous disregard for animals’ lives and
their physical well-being, seen through comments such as
“animals should be treated no differently than any other tool
at a scientist’s disposal,” is alarming, morally
bankrupt and completely unethical.
His assertion that “the only truly ethical treatment of
animals is to use them for our benefit” is a truly twisted
and deranged defense of an inhumane mind-set.
If a serial killer were to defend his actions with this sort of
statement, the insanity would be much more readily apparent to the
mainstream.
I would go so far as to suggest that Hurst be legally barred
from keeping companion animals. Furthermore, I would keep my own
pets and children away from someone so pathologically disturbed as
to be unable to feel our commonalities with animals.
Instead, Hurst sees them as no different than the tools used to
give them alien diseases and to vivisect them in university
laboratories.
I would be suspicious of anyone who asserts that the millions of
animals used in laboratories every year promise a cure for diseases
we have been fighting for decades, especially when so many diseases
can be prevented through lifestyle and dietary choices.
In addition, many of these animals’ lives are expended for
tests that do not save human lives, such as drugs meant to enhance
erections.
When did life become so cheap?
Our treatment of animals as a society betrays much about
ourselves, and therefore, animals deserve our consideration as much
for their own desires as for our own good.
After all, as the great Mahatma K. Gandhi asserted, “The
greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the
way its animals are treated.”
On that count, our nation deserves a grade of F.
Eric Prescott,
UCLA class of 1993