MAILBAG - Nov. 6, 1999
The shady side of the Bell Curve
Joe Bell squares off against right-wing fanatics in his column of Oct. 28
(“Forget about the facts, the commies are coming”), lecturing two local
congressmen, and, coincidentally, Pilot readers, that they are silly
children to worry about the fact that the Chinese have armed themselves
with nuclear missiles, and their military leaders have belligerently
specified that these missiles are capable of hitting Los Angeles.
Why is it childish of American citizens to be alarmed at being targeted
by the most terrifying of weapons? Bell doesn’t really make that clear.
He cites an expert who feels that a Chinese nuclear weapon would not be
very dangerous. And he quotes from an article in the New York Times (that
notable news source that suppressed information of Stalin’s mass
slaughter of millions of Ukrainian farmers as not being anything
Americans should know about), which concludes that espionage, military
threats, missile tests and unrelenting bluster and hatred directed at the
United States by an unprincipled dictatorship don’t really justify
concern.
But if his arguments against congressmen Chris Cox and Dana Rohrabacher
aren’t strong, they’re not really his point.
What Bell wants to do is to show his cleverness; he clearly remembers
those heady days in the ‘70s, when right-thinking lefties had such grand
sport with the slow-witted conservatives in exactly the way Bell is here
laboring to duplicate. He almost chokes on his contempt for Chris and
Dana for thinking that communists were, and still are, the threat he --
and the sophisticated set he longs to be included among -- had convinced
themselves they were not.
Bell is typical of the academic lightweights who see nothing in political
and foreign policy questions but opportunities to enhance their inflated
self-importance, their sense of superiority over the lowly bourgeois
citizenry that their mediocre educations have taught them to despise.
Like them, he hates his rivals more than he hates his enemies, even
though those enemies are devoted to destroying everything he wishes his
children and grandchildren to enjoy.
He and I have lived through much of this slaughterous century; we have
witnessed sights that should have convinced him, as they certainly have
me, that there is an overwhelming seriousness in the problems that face
this country -- and a grim finality for those who make the wrong choices.
Bell sees in them only an opportunity to smirk at those who don’t line up
with the popular kids. But Chris and Dana have chosen the unfashionable
route of taking armed hatred seriously; I think I’ll stick with them, and
let Joe slide down the shady side of the Bell Curve on his own.
DOUGLAS R. TOOHEY
Costa Mesa
Dunes is bigger than it seems
I noticed in your editorial about the Dunes that “The owners of the land
planned to build a 500-room hotel.” Please note that the people planning
the project are leasing the land from the county. The land was formed
from tideland by dredging.
Also, the size and appearance of the project seem to be misrepresented to
the public. The views that have been used in presentations were
illustrated from a vantage point three stories high. The harbor view in
the environmental report may be as much as 50% of the actual project to
view. Here are some images of the project. I made the image by overlaying
the plans behind the existing buildings. I used the existing buildings
for scale. Thank you for providing information to the public about the
project.
BERT OHLIG
Newport Beach
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