Vote for Mansoor can be amended...
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Vote for Mansoor can be amended through service
This letter is one of great concern for the recent election of
Allan Mansoor as a City Councilman for the city of Costa Mesa.
Although I voted for Mansoor, I had not read about his plans to rid
the city of Costa Mesa of the Job Center and charitable organizations
that serve so many needy people.
I would not have cast my vote for Mansoor had I been knowledgeable
of the aforementioned.
Now that I am guilty of assisting to place Mansoor into office by
casting my vote for him, I would like to have the privilege of
expressing my sorrow and concern for my own lack of knowledge
regarding Mansoor’s goal toward the job center and charitable
organizations.
It appears to be a self-righteous and self-centered attitude for
anyone to be so insensitive to the needs of people because the city
is affluent and they want to keep it clean and affluent by driving
people out who are in need. This type of attitude appears to be a
paradox of affluency.
This type of paradox reminds me of the “Trail of Tears,” when the
Native American people were driven out of their homesteads and many
died along the trail on their way to find roots elsewhere. Many died
by the actions of their own people. This appears to run parallel to
the attitude that Mansoor expresses toward needy people.
What is expressed as a desire to clean up the city appears to be
no less than premeditated character assassinations of the
potentiality to build integrity and humanity; to bring hope to people
who have no hope other than, at the moment, a Job Center or
charitable organization.
The challenge, it appears, is to be the hand that reaches out and
helps to build rather than to destroy, people who are in dire need of
acceptance and opportunity.
The hand that reaches out is usually the hand that receives the
fruits of the good seeds that are planted in potential good citizens.
There can be security in a city that will reach out and assist those
in need; a city that is willing to learn to be of maximum, rather
than minimum, service to God and the people about them.
Rather than rid the city of the needed assistance, would it not be
better for the city to assist people to get off the streets and reach
their highest potential, helping them to establish roots so that they
may become all that they have been created to be?
I have asked myself if Mansoor knows what it is like to be in
poverty. I also am curious to know if Mansoor knows what it is like,
and how degrading it feels, to have children who need to be fed, and
be in fear that the only place that you know to go to obtain work to
feed them is contemplating closing because the city wants to clean
up.
Does Mansoor know what it is like to live on the streets because
he was a victim of poverty or other afflictions; because the only
place that he knew to go to be fed had closed its doors because of
your need to be fed?
It appears that Mansoor does not comprehend the reality that there
is poverty and need in this city which affluency could well assist in
making changes beneficial for the good of mankind and our city
without pushing away the dire needs of the people of this beautiful
and affluent city, the city of Costa Mesa.
In no way do I discount the difficulties with which our city is
challenged with the homeless. In looking at the issue with a
realistic view, it appears that the difficulties may have the
opportunity to be turned around into something good, something
profitable for our city, if there were places for the homeless to and
other needy people to go; places where they could be rehabilitated;
not just to dry out or be fed, but to house them; to offer them the
opportunity to be rehabilitated, so that they might reach their
highest potential.
I welcome other readers, who are opposed to Mansoor’s plans to rid
the city of Costa Mesa of the Job Center and charitable
organizations, to contact me. Together, we can pray for a change of
heart and a clean up of a different perspective other than by ridding
the city of Costa Mesa of some of its most promising revenues through
people who utilize the Job Center and charitable organizations.
United, we can assist our city in rising above the demoralization
and degradation that our needy people are challenged with -- the
opposition of the affluent to rid the city of the Job Center and
charitable organizations. We will see changes that are far above and
beyond anything that we, or any of our elected officials, could have
ever imagined.
EFFIE M. RIVERA
Costa Mesa
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