Word: goldinger
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To the editors: David Golding’s comment (“A Defense of Prejudice,” Nov. 2) opens a very interesting line of argument which seems at first to be a breath of fresh air. Certainly any person is free to think about any religion as...
To the editors: David Golding, in his comment of Nov. 2 (“A Defense of Prejudice”), states that he “embraced” his prejudice against voting people with certain religious affiliations into political office. He then justifies his stance by saying that his...
I am not sure whether David Golding was being deliberately provocative or just asinine in his comment “A Defense of Prejudice” (Nov. 2). Evidently, he subscribes to some bizarre theory of psychology according to which belonging to a religious group is equivalent to renouncing independent...
Unless Golding is really trying to say that he would never vote for a candidate that belongs to any religion at all, the kind of prejudice he is advocating amounts to a validation of guilt by association—in other words, you share a religious affiliation with some people...
David L. Golding ‘08, a Crimson editorial comper, is an English and American literature and language concentrator in Dunster House.