Correspondence
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Do you know how happy it makes me that the Crystal Cove restoration
money is secure? Not at all (“Crystal Cove restoration money secure,”
July 4). And why you may ask? Here’s why: The schools are going down the
tubes as a result of a $23.6-billion state deficit with the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District having to put away $4.2 million from their
emergency reserve fund in order to function in the upcoming school year.
The cottages are getting $13.1 million for restoration. Have the
powers that be gone nuts?
Now you tell me which is more important -- our children’s education or
repairing some ramshackle shacks on the beach that have no historical
importance other than they are old? What a total waste of the taxpayers’
money. When is education going to take a top priority in our government?
Hopefully before it is too late.
RHODA FRIEDMAN
Newport Beach
Cause, not case, exists for parking lawsuit
It is hard to believe someone would actually go to the trouble and
expense of filing a lawsuit to try and overturn a city policy that
provides a few free parking meters by churches on Sunday (“Resident sues
Newport over church parking,” Jan. 15). I am trying to imagine what
possible motive John Nelson would have for doing so. He couldn’t be
worried about the loss of income to the city, because in filing the
lawsuit he has just cost us a bundle.
He states it is because he feels compelled to defend the Constitution.
I question that because our Constitution does not mention “a separation
of church and state.” That is a term coined by liberals and atheists in
their pursuit to remove God from our lives. The fact is, early documents
and our founding fathers made it quite clear that God was to be an
essential part of our lives, and that the Bible was the source upon which
much of our government and laws were developed.
We were guaranteed the freedom to worship as we wished and that the
government would not have a “state church” like that in England. There
was never any mention that government should exclude itself from
religion, and evidence indicates just the opposite. One only need to take
a look at our coins that read “In God We Trust,” or know that each
session of Congress has always opened with prayer, or read the thousands
upon thousands of quotes from our leaders and Supreme Court decisions
throughout America’s history to verify our government’s strong ties to
God.
Nelson might have a point if specific churches were given special
privileges. However, that is not the case. The fact is he has no case,
but I suspect he has a “cause.”
JEAN OLSON
Newport Beach
Religion should not be forced into schools
OK, here we go again. Another letter written in wide-eyed, innocent
wonder at the lack of “scientific creationism” classes in our public
schools.
For starters, scientific creationism is an oxymoron. You can have
science or you can have creationism. But you cannot combine provable
facts with religious dogma.
Practitioners of every religious stripe -- save those that maim or
kill or use “controlled substances” -- have absolute freedom of
expression in this country. No matter what your beliefs, you can
indoctrinate them into your own children. There are religious day
schools, Sunday schools, religious study groups, as well as old-fashioned
parenting, to shape the minds of one’s own children.
However, some religious groups, particularly fundamentalist
Christians, are going to be satisfied only when their religious dogma is
forced upon all children in public schools. While a majority of Americans
may profess to believe in a Christian God and biblical dogma, the U.S.
Constitution clearly prevents that from becoming official policy.
Yet the religious right keeps on insisting that the children of
taxpaying nonbelievers, atheists, agnostics and non-Christians of all
religions must be taught their creation myths dressed up as scientific
creationism.
If enough Americans decide that we truly need a state religion, then
there is a process to amend the Constitution to reflect that need. In the
meanwhile, if some Americans actually wish to raise their children to
believe that this lovely planet and its precious cargo of life, past,
present and future, was created in six days about 2,000 years before the
present era by a God who looks like us, then they should teach them to
believe it. But, for the rest of us, please let our children pursue an
actual, practical educational goal.
WALLACE WOOD
Costa Mesa
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