Conversations with a certain Costa Mesa councilman
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I have learned four major lessons from Costa Mesa Councilman Chris
Steel:
1. Republicans and conservatives are not the same thing.
2. Illegal immigrants are not criminals.
3. Scapegoating is not the same as saying an increasing number of
a certain kind of people are responsible for lowering test scores,
property values and the overall quality of life.
4. Never trust cell phones.
Steel and I have had a very, uh, interesting relationship over the
past two years. It has consisted of one-sided, late-night phone
calls, discussions in the parking lot in the wee hours of the morning
after City Council meetings and the occasional laugh.
Considering the rumors I had heard about the unusually,
nonpolitically-correct councilman before arriving in the Pilot
newsroom, I was surprised to find him, well, endearing. In a weird,
I-know-that-somehow-you- think-you-mean-well kind of way.
Since I started writing this column, however, our relationship has
been a bit strained. While he still smiles at me and throws a
polyester-blend-covered arm over my shoulders when he greets me in
public, his angry, 45-minute messages on my voicemail tell a
different story.
The most recent one, left at 10:41 a.m. April 21, told me I had reached “crisis-level” in misrepresenting his thoughts and comments.
It is a common occurrence for the editors and publishers of the Pilot
to start down the dangerous path of misinformation, Steel contends,
but now I have apparently followed. And he demands corrections.
OK. I give. Republicans and conservatives are not the same thing.
In a Closer Look on partisan politics, I wrote that Steel was looking
for a Republican to fill the seat of former Mayor Karen Robinson
based on his statements in a letter to the editor calling for a
“conservative” replacement.
Another voicemail, left at 5:41 a.m. April 19, started like this:
“Hello, Lolita, you know who this is, how about we call it the
‘Unthinking Allowed’ column?” Steel said. “It’s about ... My God, I
can’t believe it is 5:30 a.m. I haven’t even been to bed yet.”
I know it doesn’t sound so mean, right? Toward the 32nd minute, it
gets into his feelings about my most hurtful column to date, “Where
has all the rhetoric gone?”
“I’m not looking for controversy,” he said in the April 19
message. “I hate to have people upset at me. I am very sensitive
about that.”
Steel was a prominent player in that column in which I called to
question whether views on citizenship and immigration held by certain
politicians and vocal residents had changed after the tragedy of
fallen Marine Jose Garibay, who was not a U.S. citizen when he died
fighting for the country.
“I’m still kind of ticked off about that, as pretty as you are and
as lovely as you look these days,” Steel said in his early morning
message.
This message was mild compared to the original message he left on
the subject. I would quote from it, but I’ve been told numerous times
we are a “family newspaper,” so I don’t think it would be
appropriate.
Steel claims I never called for comment. If any of you are avid
council watchers, or you have happened to have a conversation with
Steel since March 31, you would have heard him call me a flat-out
liar.
“She never called me,” he says.
I called the man on his cell phone because he was in San Diego on
“city business” and left a message that was never returned. That’s my
version of how it went down, but there are always two sides to every
story.
But since many of our so-called conversations have only one side
anyways, I will stick with that theme and offer Steel’s own words in
my defense.
“If you called me on my cell, and that is very possible, if you
left a message, it should still be on there and I will have to figure
out how to access it,” he said.
Steel said he was under the impression his cell phone was not set
up to receive voice messages, but he would have to get over to
Irvine, where he bought it, and have someone help him figure it out.
“On March 27, I got a call on my cell phone, but I couldn’t get to
my phone because ...” I will spare you all the reasons he gave me. “I
saw the number on the caller ID. I will call that back. It was late
in the afternoon and I will call that back. It may be a Pilot number,
but you couldn’t have left a message. I don’t doubt that you called
me, I’ll take that back, but you should have left a message on my
land phone.”
Point taken.
Oh, and Steel said his view on illegal immigrants -- whom he does
not in any way, shape or form consider criminals -- has not changed.
He has always believed they are wonderful people who just happened to
get a bad deal in life. They are hard working and will be rewarded by
a higher power when they are finished struggling here in the secular
world, Steel said.
Garibay was a hero and should be honored, Steel said. And he went
to the family’s home, on his own, to tell the grieving mother just
that. He found a translator and spoke with the mother, uncle and
cousins of the fallen Marine. Steel stayed at the family home for
hours, even after he admittedly wore out his welcome, because he felt
at ease and comfortable around such hospitable people.
He does not blame immigrants for the city’s problems, he said. But
he cannot support organizations and city-funded projects that
continue to attract such diligent would-be heroes.
And I wonder why there is an information gap.
* LOLITA HARPER writes columns Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays and
covers culture and the arts. She may be reached at (949) 574-4275 or
by e-mail at [email protected].
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