A Question of Morals
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Your article about Cal State Northridge trustees siding with students and faculty who object to Carl’s Jr. because its founder supports the anti-abortion movement begs for comment, especially when a student phrases the issue as a question of good business and bad morals.
CSUN students who equate Carl Karcher’s anti-abortion stand with bad morals should rethink their position. Since when can espousing the survival rights of innocent, unborn babies be considered bad morals?
Yet these CSUN students were successful in getting CSUN’s trustees to reverse their decision to buy a Carl’s Jr. franchise for the campus, which would have earned a yearly profit of $50,000. These students have little regard for the university’s need for funds, less regard for the rights of people whose views they reject and no regard for the lives of unborn babies.
Who has bad morals?
JOHN HOPKINS
Northridge
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