LETTER OF THE WEEK
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It’s easy to get peace in the Middle East. It’s easy to get Protestants
and Catholics to unite in Northern Ireland. It’s easy to get the Balkans
to unite harmoniously.
I’ll tell you what’s going to be hard: making a harmonious community out
of West Side Costa Mesa (“How will West Side story end?” Feb. 26). Look
at the foot-dragging so far. The members of the business subgroup didn’t
get involved until they got their own special meeting to advocate their
positions. The Latino subgroup didn’t get involved until they got their
own special meeting to advocate their positions.
Secondly, look at the plan itself. On the one hand, the suggestions for
physical changes are so modest that they seem to be motivated by no more
than the least common denominator, (“Hey, we all agree this place is the
dumps, so let’s fix some potholes and plant some trees”).
On the other hand, the plan is perhaps too revolutionary for Costa Mesa,
suggesting that the West Side should plan to become a community. This
flies in the face of tradition, which is more comfortable with just
drifting along as balkanized islands of special interests.
Finally, there’s Plato. True, Plato’s not in the same league with Yogi
Berra as a philosopher, but he wrote something 2,400 years ago in The
Republic that is eerily appropriate to Costa Mesa.
For indeed any city, however small, is in fact divided into two, one the
city of the poor, the other of the rich; these are at war with one
another; and in both there are many smaller divisions, and you would be
altogether beside the mark if you treated them all as a single state.
Nonetheless, I couldn’t help but get excited as I read the West Side
plan, thinking that it could be a catalyst to bring all the warring
parties together to battle the common enemy: the dumps. I could see that
stakeholders, working together, might forge relationships that could lead
to a strong, healthy community. (You are a stakeholder if you are
interested enough to have read this far.)
If, to change a city, it takes leaders and followers who are committed to
a common goal, then we have a start, since the plan seems to have
identified some common goals.
All we need to do is find leaders and followers in Costa Mesa who will
work devotedly to reach the goals.
Or should we just take the easier route and get the Serbs, Croats,
Bosnians and Kosovo residents to kiss and make up?
TOM EGAN
Costa Mesa
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