It Means Nothing to me if You Don't do the Right Thing
My Uncle Al was the first graduate, in my family to graduate Burbank High School; 1927. He did everything froms sports to glee club.
As proud as I am of my adopted family's genealogy which includes a long residency in the city of Burbank and many graduates of Burbank High School; my Burbank & Bulldog pride is overshadowed by the disappointment that I live around residents & workers that when one of their own break the law do any of the appropriate people, in charge, come forth and do the right thing ... not one!
Relative to the Basso, Munari, and Casella legacy, are the present day people who are more concerned with protecting their four law breakers along with their obvious profit-margin focus.
You've lost your way, losing sight of what's right so that the city and school's mission align with a student-focused moral compass.
One-hundred ten years or 20, it has no meaning to me, not anymore.
I don't know who you people are but you're not cut from the same cloth as the proud Burbankers that I grew up with.
Nice to know at my 10-42 that White Privilege exists in Burbank; had it been an Hispanic or Black employee that helped thenselves to White student records in hopes to remove them from the neighborhood, heads would roll, period!
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