Will Westside ‘industrialists’ get raises? The ninth...
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Will Westside ‘industrialists’ get raises?
The ninth word into M. H. Millard’s indictment against Westside
Costa Mesa business in Saturday’s Pilot was “industrialist.” So was
the last word in that same letter. In between were another 20 or so
references to industrialists or industry. It’s as if a disgruntled
group, disappointed that their efforts thus far to gain traction with
the argument that the Westside needs to be purged of all business,
got together in a little room and came up with a plan. Eureka.
They’ll call them industrialists. It seems they’ve decided that all
of these businesses, large and small, will henceforth be referred to
in their frequent diatribes as industrialists. It’s true, isn’t it,
that if you repeat a lie often enough it becomes the truth?
I don’t know about you, but when I think of “industrialists” I
think of Henry Ford or Andrew Carnegie or Jay Gould. I don’t tend to
think that sailmakers or auto repair shops or even Roger Craig’s
nifty boat-building enterprise qualify as industrialists. I drove all
over the Westside yesterday and, with exception of the Cla-Val plant
on Placentia, I couldn’t find anything that could qualify remotely as
“industry.” I’m thinking, if this new strategy doesn’t work, members
of this group might kick their efforts up a notch and begin referring
to Westside business owners as “robber barons.”
Let’s dispense with one of the fallacies right away. Most Westside
businesses are not owned by Newport Beach millionaires who dump their
trash in Costa Mesa so they can kill our children. Most of these
business owners work in Costa Mesa and live in Costa Mesa, just like
me. Secondly, when goats roamed the bluffs in Costa Mesa, Costa Mesa
wasn’t a city. Once incorporated, Costa Mesa’s leaders developed
codes and rules and regulations regarding zoning, and these Westside
businesses, as far as I know, are conforming to the laws as they are
written. And any that aren’t should be punished to the full extent of
the law. Those that are should be left alone to the quiet enjoyment
of their property (that’s called “property rights”).
Next, most of these businesses, mine included, don’t pollute. The
owners of those that do should be arrested and prosecuted under
Environmental Protection Agency laws currently in effect. I’ve lived
and worked on the Westside for years, and I’ve yet to see or smell or
suffer the ill effects of the toxic cloud of killer fumes about which
these people suffer such vibrant, palpable paranoia. I might add, I
don’t know of a single soul advocating the building of dynamite
factories or nuclear power plants or giant pig farms on the bluffs.
This sort of over-the-top rhetoric is so representative of those
otherwise unable to make coherent arguments in support of their
narrow points of view.
Lastly, I have come to believe that the unspoken undercurrent
providing the impetus for this merry little band to try to redesign
the Westside according to their own agenda may be
not-too-thinly-disguised racism. If all businesses on the Westside
were eliminated, there would be no employees in those businesses.
Without employees, there would be no chance that the “working poor,”
a euphemism for illegal immigrants, I believe, could be among them.
Without immigrants, illegal or otherwise, there would be no need for
charities to feed and clothe them, or a Job Center at which they
could loiter and spoil our otherwise pristine view.
Viola. No more problems. No problems other than how would the city
replace the lost tax revenue from hundreds of now defunct small
businesses. Or, how will these business-less people now make a
living. Or, where will thousands of the newly unemployed find work.
Or, who will buy all those nice new sterile houses and condos popping
up like mushrooms on the breezy bluffs. Is it worth breaking promises
and turning inside out the entire fabric of the Westside just to get
rid of immigrants? To some, I think it may well be.
By the way, if artists want to build an artists’ village on the
Westside, I suspect they’ll decide to do that all by themselves.
That’s the way it generally happens in a democracy.
Geoff West and Eric Bever have recently advocated a basic posture
in this debate with which I wholeheartedly agree. How about we go
hunting with a rifle instead of a shotgun? If a property is blighted,
let’s go after that property owner to make sure the problem is
immediately corrected. If a business pollutes, let’s use the law to
put that business out of business. If a business or property owner
proves by their actions that they are impinging upon the rights of
others, then let’s deal with that business or property owner
individually.
The City Council should enact laws permitting this type of
targeted enforcement so as to both improve our quality of life and to
simultaneously defuse the vitriol of those among us with
not-so-hidden agendas.
By the way, if I’m an industrialist, do I get a raise?
CHUCK CASSITY
Costa Mesa
Newport could use more human relations
Thanks, Joe Bell, for your suggestion that Newport Beach needs a
Human Relations Commission. It does indeed. But, we may also need a
course given by Miss Manners, so our councilmen can learn that it’s
“mannerly” to answer constituent’s letters, even if it’s to decline
an invitation. Mercy, what would their mothers say to such bad form.
P.S. I would be happy to serve on the commission.
NORA LEHMAN
Newport Beach
The great Fairview ‘useless’ land grab
A group of homeowners whose properties extend into Fairview Park
have requested the city give them this “useless” land.
With the exception of two homeowners, the encroachment of their
properties could have been solved through the existing permit
process. Obviously, this was not on their agenda.
With the support of some of the big spenders on the council, a
series of “studies” will be proposed, $15,000 of which having already
been spent. These studies are to determine how this taxpayer land can
be transferred to these homeowners.
Oh, how the money goes.
MIKE BERRY
Costa Mesa
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