All politics, even from D.C., are local, sort of
- Share via
JOSEPH N. BELL
I’ve just finished going through the considerable pile of newspapers
awaiting me when we returned from our trip to North Carolina. They
took longer this time than usual because the Asheville daily, which
our friends take, tended to push anything that wasn’t local to the
back pages -- if they covered it at all. (Just like our editor at the
Pilot, who keeps telling me to keep it local.)
So, while picking my way through Newport-Mesa news when I returned
home, I had to catch up on the big scene, as well. And right there,
front and center, was the predicament in which Karl Rove finds
himself. I think it is a wonderful irony that a Time Magazine
reporter was prepared to go to jail rather than expose Rove -- not
exactly a soul mate of journalists -- as the leaker in the outing of
Joseph Wilson’s wife as a CIA operative. All that changed when Time’s
editors chose to turn over their reporter’s research notes and memos
to a federal grand jury. And, lo and behold, up came Rove.
So where’s the local angle?
At the risk of stretching a bit, all this reminds me of a
pre-Watergate collision I had with the Nixon administration many
years ago, when I was doing my intrepid-journalist number. I was in
Washington, D.C., tracking down two stories: the tactics of Vice
President Spiro Agnew in dealing with the American Indians’
occupation of Alcatraz Island and the disappearance of a study of the
social impact of pornography, done under Lyndon Johnson and allegedly
personally killed by Nixon.
Apparently I irritated enough low-level people that I was kicked
upstairs to John Dean in the White House for soothing. All I wanted
to know was why Nixon killed the study or a denial if he didn’t. What
I was offered was what Dean referred to as “deep background.” When I
asked him what that meant, he said that information he gave me could
be neither sourced nor quoted. When I told him that I considered
anything he said to me to be on the record, I got brushed off.
I bring this up because Rove’s attorney was quoted in the Los
Angeles Times as saying that “Rove was sharing what he knew ... on
double super secret background ... but with the specific
understanding it would not be disclosed.”
This is a device -- both a blessing and a curse -- used frequently
by public officials to make reporters co-conspirators in getting out
information the politicians want exposed while avoiding any personal
responsibility for its disclosure. But it also provides a channel for
whistle-blowers like “Deep Throat” to pass along information vital to
the public interest. So it’s a gray area in which the reporter has to
decide if he or she is just being used or if the public interest is
also being served. And every once in awhile, it turns around and
bites the leaker.
Meanwhile, back at the farm:
* I note that the attorney for Terri Schiavo’s parents showed up
in Newport Beach while I was away. Since he is also a preacher, he
celebrated the Fourth of July weekend as guest speaker at a special
patriotic Sunday service at the Liberty Baptist Church. According to
a Pilot news story, he described Terri’s final hours in detail and
repeated many of the claims that she both recognized and responded
emotionally to visitors and “was as alive as any person sitting
here.”
This saddens me. The yearnings of her parents are understandable,
but how long will they ignore the results of a thorough autopsy that
found Terri had massive brain damage, was in a persistent vegetative
state, was blind and whose apparent reactions were automatic
responses and not evidence of either thought or consciousness. Said
the doctor who performed the autopsy: “The damage was irreversible,
and no amount of therapy or treatment would have rejuvenated the
massive loss of neutrons.”
So can’t we now allow this lady the peace that was denied her for
15 years?
* AirFair members, about whom I wrote some months back, are
attracting increasing local attention by symbolically taking a stand
on the runways at John Wayne Airport against any further expansion of
the airport. They have been criticized for not getting in the fight
when El Toro was still in play and for not now suggesting alternative
sites to accommodate the continuing steady growth of passenger
traffic.
I sympathize with the first criticism more than the second. The
need for a larger airport has been clear for many years, and there
have been two opportunities to resolve that problem without further
burdening the residents of Newport-Mesa: rallying behind El Toro and
taking the same inflexible stand in the 2004 agreement that AirFair
is taking today. In both instances, Newport Beach put all its
energies into compromising new and increased caps, and Costa Mesa
just looked the other way.
Meanwhile, South County never changed its focus. It said no,
flatly and firmly, to any sort of a commercial airport at El Toro and
continued flipping the political coin until it came up its way.
That’s what AirFair wants to do now, use its no-growth inflexibility
to keep the heat on local politicians to find alternatives if they
want to keep their jobs. It worked in South County. It’s worth a shot
here. Maybe it’s our only shot left.
* Finally, our local public TV station that was snatched from the
jaws of the Daystar Television Network by a friendly foundation buyer
is now once again walking the streets unprotected after the sale was
quashed in court. Daystar, in its customary compassionate Christian
style, is threatening lawsuits and probably hellfire to any and all
parties that would now dare to oppose KOCE-TV’s sale to Daystar.
The only party not represented in this dispute is the public,
which will once again learn that money always prevails, and instead
of a local public-interest TV station, our public airwaves will be
turned over to fundraising for Daystar.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.