Did Nichols’ opponents make too much noise?
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The city of Newport Beach was considering making changes to Corona
del Mar State Beach and a reporter asked Councilman Dick Nichols if
he favored a plan that designated more grass area. His honest and
straightforward answer of “no” because “Mexicans” would claim and
occupy it for the day provided the Daily Pilot with fodder sufficient
enough to create the resultant, highly charged controversy.
It is worth noting that the critics of Nichols did not contradict
or challenge the accuracy of his analysis. Missing from the debate is
whether large numbers of Mexicans do use that beach’s existing grass
area, and if so was Nichols’ lamenting that fact because he harbors
hatred for Mexicans or was Nichols merely questioning the wisdom of a
large financial expenditure that might be used for a purpose other
than what the city intended (which, by the way, is what we elected
him to consider)?
Here are a few questions worth pondering. Is it bias in reverse to
assume his comments originated from a racist attitude? Are his
opponents, who for the most part are not new critics of his, making
this more or an issue that it deserves just to destroy him? If so,
why do they dislike him? Do they really consider him to be dangerous
or just annoyingly blunt? Is the real irritation that he doesn’t
filter statements through their version of politically correct speech
and thus he has become a threat?
Social analysts have warned that a segment of our population has
digressed into attacking the messenger instead of the message,
intentionally ignoring the real issue behind controversies that
deserve attention. In this case, the real discussion regarding beach
improvements has been ignored, but that is not the red-hot subject at
the heart of this firestorm. It is the impact legal and illegal
immigration has had and continues to have on our community, most of
which comes from Mexico. Many of the speakers addressing the last
Newport Beach City Council meeting testified they had seen and
experienced numerous problems associated with this unprecedented
immigration explosion -- an explosion brought about by a government
that ignores the very laws that were specifically designed to keep a
healthy balance on immigration for the well-being of its existing
population. That is the subject that deserves attention, but
mentioning it -- even referring to it -- causes accusations of racism
to be hurled at a person. Thus, open and honest debate is stifled
because who among us wants to be branded with the scarlet letter “B”
for bigot? It is one thing to have people disagree with your
opinions, that is fair and expected, but quite another to be
personally tarred and feathered for expressing them, especially
knowing very few will come to your rescue for fear that they, too,
will experience the same fate by association alone (ask Assemblyman
Ken Maddox if you don’t believe that).
Has it become acceptable to condemn, censure, fire or recall
anyone who dares commit the sin of voicing what the “elite” among us
have deemed to be offensive speech? If this practice continues, it
will soon destroy most people’s desire to debate or even discuss
controversial subjects. If the “elite attackers” (whether they are
political activists, elected officials, the media or even neighbors)
continue to stifle free speech and healthy debate through the
practice of intimidation, we leave an unobstructed path for them to
advance their own agenda of public policy and their version of
political correctness for us all. That is what seriously threatens
America. It is not one man making a statement he believes to be
factually correct. No, the real danger is that he is condemned for
making it ... even when most of us know it to be true.
* WENDY LEECE is a former Newport-Mesa Unified School District
Board of Trustee member.
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