MAILBAG - Sept. 21, 1999
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Regarding the article, (“City staff reports criticized,” Sept. 15),
over the last six months, I’ve become well acquainted with Costa Mesa’s
planning department. During this time, I have observed personnel and at
various times they are seriously understaffed. Nevertheless, I have seen
several examples in staff reports of what appeared to be clearly biased
opinions.
I was in attendance at the joint study session of the City Council and
planning commissioners last Monday and was impressed that Planning
Commissioner Katrina Foley brought this issue to the floor.
Over these last few months, I had simply assumed that this was the
political process in action and that there was nothing I could do about
it. Staff reports, in my opinion, need to be more objective and give the
planning commissioners the pros and cons of all possible action. Not
simply have staff choose a side and stack the deck.
DIANE GOMEZ
Costa Mesa
Cannery site should remain open to community
Why are we rushing forward to destroy all that makes Newport Beach
different? Now the Cannery, with its historical significance, its essence
of place, will vanish. We will be placeless.
Many of the citizens I’ve talked to are shocked at this loss of a
landmark. Only the developers and real estate salespeople are rubbing
their hands with glee at a new opportunity to profit from their sales.
Times change, sure, but we need a sense of who we were to remind us of
a simpler time that is our heritage.
I ask the City Council of Newport Beach, all who approve of the idea
of more development, to consider the preservation of such historical
monuments -- our history.
My own vision is for a community center there. A place for citizens to
meet. A day-care center for our children. For seniors, a place to get
their flu shots and visit. I see youngsters taking ballet or salsa
classes. In one room a string quartet is practicing, another is having
art lessons or book discussions. Music in the evenings and the walls
filled with local artists such as Lorraine Edrie, who lives up the
street. By the way, local artists are fond of depicting the Cannery in
their work. They have a sense of soul.
There could be bike repair and lessons in boating and collections for
the homeless. All these things would benefit the community. What else can
we do? Declare a moratorium on all development until we do some thinking.
There’s a big project, a hotel, planned for the Dunes, [and] Crystal
Cove’s new development. Enough is enough!
PATRICIA FROSTHOLM
Newport Beach
Free benefits aren’t really free
How would the Daily Pilot feel, if I circulated 20,000 fliers in
Newport-Mesa announcing -- “Free money at the Daily Pilot offices --
merely show up on Sunday morning at 330 W. Bay St. and apply for free
money and free benefits.”
The Daily Pilot wants everyone to be healthy and have money in their
pockets, so it is generously handing out money and benefits to as many as
1,000 families who show up. Outreach workers will be on hand to help you
fill out the forms.
Now, what do you think of that, guys? Will you promise to give out
the free bennies if I can round up 1,000 families to come to your door?
Yet that is exactly what you did to me and every other unwilling
taxpayer, by running this story (“Latino families urged to sign up for
health insurance,” Sept. 18).
There are no freebies in life. Health insurance is not “free.” It is
paid for by somebody, and in this case, it is paid for by private
citizens who are plundered by the government. The health insurance being
provided is at the expense of innocent citizens against their will.
And you continue to support this plunder.
Moreover, St. Joaquim Church itself is participating in the robbery.
Why aren’t you using your knowledge of how the welfare system really
works by challenging the church and asking them why they would help the
government rob its own citizens?
Doesn’t this church have enough sense to know that the state is
interfering with their own charities and God-given mission? Doesn’t this
church know that taxation is theft and that the church itself is in
violation of its own Ten Commandments?
Doesn’t this church understand that it is compromising its freedom by
assisting government plunder and that it is tacitly surrendering a
portion of its independence to the state?
Doesn’t this church understand that it is slowly being nationalized by
the state?
This is the way churches operate in totalitarian states -- they are
actually part of the “ruling class” and thus help government “rule.” This
is not appropriate behavior for churches in a “free” state.
All churches should refuse “help” by the welfarecrats and tell the
government to mind its own business.
Where are the tough, independent-minded church leaders who have the
guts to “be a Daniel” and refuse to bow down to the king, even at the
risk of being eaten by the lions?
DON HULL
Costa Mesa
Lobster pain is not a gain
Please allow me to respond to Peter Buffa’s column about the police
officers in Irvine who temporarily pulled the plug on Sumo Sushi
restaurant’s Lobster Zone crane game (“A lobster tale the size of
Irvine,” Aug. 6). As Officer Dennis Ruvolo points out, this game subjects
lobsters “to unnecessary, inhumane treatment.”
Well guess what: so does cooking these crustaceans in your own
kitchen.
There is little doubt anymore that lobsters, like all animals, can
feel pain. Most scientists agree that the nervous systems of lobsters are
quite sophisticated. For example, according to neurobiologist Tom Abrams,
lobsters have “a full array of senses.” Jelle Atema, a marine biologist
at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Mass. -- and,
according to The New York Times, “one of the nation’s leading experts on
lobsters” -- says, “I personally believe they do feel pain.”
Indeed, anyone who has ever boiled a lobster alive can attest that,
when dropped into scalding water, lobsters whip their bodies wildly and
scrape the sides of the pot in a desperate attempt to escape. In the
journal Science, researcher Gordon Gunter described this method of
killing lobsters as “unnecessary torture.”
As they begin to understand these fascinating animals, more and more
people are deciding lobsters should be left in open waters, not placed in
a cooking pot. At the very least, surely we can all agree that turning a
sentient being’s death into a game has no place in a compassionate
society.
PAULA MOORE
Staff Writer, PETA
Norfolk, Va.
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