STEVE SMITH -- What’s Up?
It’s “lights out” in the twin cities. Last week, former school board
president Dana Black called Mariners Elementary School with an elementary
request: unplug -- not remove -- the colored lights that parents had put
up.
The request caused ripples in the national media, which was searching
for news because the lights went out on Al Gore’s presidential bid.
But there is no story here. Black was correct in placing the call to
Mariners for it has been apparent for years that Christmas has no place
in public schools, here or across the country. The real news would have
been that the lights remained shining.
Christmas lights in other places are also making news. In Sacramento,
the state Christmas tree was turned on, then turned off 30 minutes later,
the use of power to light the pine having been determined to be excessive
in this time of power shortages.
All over the state, homeowners have been asked to burn their holiday
bulbs only between the hours of 7 and 10 p.m. -- a request I support.
One organization that has turned a blind eye to blazing lights is
Trinity Broadcasting in Costa Mesa. The lights that adorn the building
and the grounds are so numerous and bright, I am sure they’re visible
from deep space.
However, the lights this year do not provoke the usual “ooohs” and
“aaahs,” but jeers for their ostentatious, in-your-face display during
the power crisis.
This year, the lights at Trinity Broadcasting burn especially bright
against the eventual rolling blackouts and long-term power shortages.
Black took it one leap further. When I told her I was going to write
about Trinity Broadcasting and ask them to turn off the lights, she said,
“Think how many hungry people they could feed.” That’s it in a nutshell.
I spoke to Colby May, the Washington-based attorney who acts as
Trinity’s media mouthpiece. Asked if there were any plans to alter the
display in any way, May said, “We’re already using low-wattage lights and
have cut back the display to the hours of 8 p.m. to 2 a.m.”
Trinity Broadcasting is an easy target because of their lights and
because almost anyone outside of their organization -- grenade-throwers
such as yours truly -- can be expected to criticize them for their
enormous waste of energy.
But how many of us are not guilty of the same thing on our own,
personal level throughout the year? How many of us drive too much or
drive too far each week, burning gasoline? How many of us have not taken
the few seconds to turn off extra lights around the house during the
year? Why is it that most office buildings have lights blazing throughout
the night, long before and long past the time when a custodial crew needs
the power in which to clean?
Why stop with Trinity? Should we not also ask, for example, Disneyland
to cut back or cut out the extra 300,000 bulbs that light up “It’s a
Small World” this season?
The fact is, we’ve all been drunk on electricity for far too long. We
take for granted what we have been loaned while we’re here on Earth, with
few of us stopping to consider that what we waste each day was meant to
last for thousands of years after we’re gone. The single light bulb we
leave on upstairs burns only pennies. But it burns along with thousands
of other bulbs in Newport Beach and Costa Mesa, making up a tremendous
waste of the power we now crave so dearly.
This is not an excuse for Trinity Broadcasting to maintain their
garish display. Later in our conversation, May offered that the lights
were still burning brightly “to remind people why we celebrate Christmas,
to celebrate the birth of our savior, Jesus Christ.”
I fail to see the connection between wasting precious electricity and
providing a reminder to the masses of the real meaning of Christmas.
May’s words ring even more hollow considering that Trinity Broadcasting
can be seen from the parking lot of South Coast Plaza, one of the great
facilitators of our desire to run up our credit card bills in the name of
Jesus’ birthday.
I would like Trinity to take the lead in local conservation by cutting
their display back to just the “Happy Birthday, Jesus” sign on their roof
and shutting them down after 10 p.m. Similarly, office buildings in the
twin cities should shut down their lights at the earliest opportunity of
the evening, probably right after the custodial crew has cleaned the
floor.
If for no other reason, we must turn off the lights to show our
children we are not as thoughtless as we appear. I’m not a biblical
scholar, but something tells me Jesus would agree.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer. Readers
can leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642-6086.
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