RON DAVIS -- Through My Eyes
I keep a couple of dead horses around the house. When you enjoy beating a
dead horse as much as I do, you’ve got to keep a couple of corpses around
for practice.
It doesn’t really concern me that Wal-Mart is going to be built. What
concerns me are the politics and seemingly acceptable practices of our
political leaders for or against a cause.
Last week, I showered you with my thoughts regarding a letter sent by
four Huntington Beach council members to some senior citizens regarding
Measure I (Wal-Mart). I told you that I believed that the four council
members had misrepresented the truth by telling the seniors that if
Wal-Mart wasn’t built, it would directly affect the city’s ability to
continue to maintain current police and paramedic services. I thought
their letter contained a lot of that stuff that bulls leave in a field
after a hearty meal.
After the column was published, I had hoped that some, any or even one of
those council members would explain to this writer or the community, not
only that my perception was wrong, but how the failure to build Wal-Mart
would’ve had a “direct impact” on the city’s ability to maintain the
current level of these important services. I wanted to be wrong. I wanted
them to persuade me that they really hadn’t deliberately misrepresented
facts to a facet of our community -- all in the name of winning.
There’s no 5th Amendment when it comes to politics and political figures.
Silence in the face of an accusation is an implied admission of the truth
of the accusation. At least that’s the way I treat their collective
failure to respond to my contention that they deliberately misrepresented
certain consequences solely for the purpose of winning. An
ends-justify-the-means, win-at-all-costs mentality that I find deplorable
in everything and particularly in politics.
Between submission and publication of my column, my mind wandered back to
the time when the City Council moved what should have been a January
special election on Wal-Mart to the primary election in March. At that
time, some of the signatories to “the letter,” publicly expressed dismay
that petition signatures may have been collected because those signing
the petition had been misled as to what the petition was designed to
accomplish.
In short, they professed disdain for the tactic of employing falsehoods
to obtain signatures or votes. They were right.
At that time, I stupidly believed they meant that misrepresenting the
truth was to be deplored always, not just when it was politically
convenient. I misunderstood. I didn’t realize that one was supposed to
only condemn deliberate misrepresentation when the other side engaged in
it and embrace it when your side needed to win. I forgot about the
double-standard.
What really chaps my hide is their failure to offer either a rational
explanation of how the loss of Wal-Mart would’ve affected the city’s
ability to maintain current police and paramedic services, or apologize
for deliberately misleading a group of voters.
Of course, I know they don’t have to do either. That’s politics too. But,
I don’t have to treat their silence as meaningless. I treat it as an
admission that four of our city leaders deliberately misled a group of
voters for the sole purpose of winning.
Because I’m not an optimist and expect this kind of thing to continue,
I’ll drag this poor dead pony back into the garage, so that it’ll be
available for a later flogging. Of course, it’s beginning to stink a
little bit by now, but that smell pales in comparison to the tactic of
deceiving people merely to get their vote.
* RON DAVIS is a private attorney who lives in Huntington Beach. He can
be reached by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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