U.F. resident stands up for right to support candidates

Bryan Scheff, I don’t understand the need for your public personal attacks on my right to do all of the things you claim I have done in your letter to the editor in this past issue. You join a long line of people who have lost credibility in Upper Freehold and Allentown [and] who try to stop people from voicing their opinion and exercising their right to campaign for their candidate by publicly attacking their credibility. Fortunately, you underestimate the intelligence of the people who live in our area.

Mel Gibson would be proud of your “conspiracy theories.”

Your “60 Minutes” approach to the timetable and events are misleading and abusive toward a private citizen whose only “crime” is a substantial disagreement with your politics and the people you support.

Your letter to the editor is typical of those who don’t have intelligent arguments to promote their agendas. If you can’t beat them with intelligent arguments, attack them personally to discredit them. Again, Upper Freehold residents are more intelligent than you give them credit for and will comprehend the reasons for your personal attacks toward me.

And how stupid do you think the Upper Freehold voters are to believe your last statement that your letter had nothing to do with this election? You wrote about my timing. The timing of your public personal attacks toward me in the last issue before Election Day makes your statement toward me hypocritical.

By the way, I wrote my letter to the editor just before the Monday afternoon deadline, well after many people in Upper Freehold knew of Jennifer Coffey’s pulling out of the race. Again, “conspiracy theories” on this point are misleading and factually incorrect.

Bryan, I just got out of the hospital due to another blocked artery, one year to the week of my triple-bypass operation. Your typical tactic of public personal attacks to discredit private citizens you disagree with hurt people. I hope you don’t take pleasure in adding to the difficulty in recovering from [my] illness – an illness you were well aware of.

John Nanni Upper Freehold