Columnist mistaken about the poll numbers Although...
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Columnist mistaken about the poll numbers
Although an avid fan of Joe Bell, I feel compelled to write and
rebut a couple of points he made in the Bell Curve, “Keep us blessed
with the right to dissent,” from March 20.
Bell stated that he counts himself among the 60% of our population
who don’t support military action without U.N. sanction, and among
the 50% who don’t support it at this time at all. I grew up in a part
of the country where nearly every bumper had a sticker on it
emblazoned with the motto “Get the U.S. out of the U.N.” The events
of the past few months should provide ample reasons for us to print
up a bunch more of these stickers and vigorously renew that campaign.
When the U.N. Security Council put the U.S. into the position of
having to beg Cameroon for the right to take action that the council
had previously approved unanimously via Resolution 1441, I believe
any reasonable person would agree the U.N. has outlived its
usefulness. Considering that the U.N. has placed Libya in charge of
defending international human rights, and has named Iraq as
next-in-line to chair the commission in charge of disarmament, one
has to laugh out loud. And considering that France has openly stated
that it wishes to become the counterbalance to hold U.N. power in
check, and in fact clearly sabotaged the U.S. effort to win a
majority vote in the council, I for one recommend that the U.N.
should move to less expensive real estate. I’m thinking Paris, maybe
on the Left Bank.
As a Vietnam-era soldier, I was detailed to Paris in 1968 for
several months to help catalog the millions of American items we had
to remove from France. Gen. DeGaulle, the guy you’ll recall whose
bacon we saved from the Germans during World War II, ordered America
to get its possessions and soldiers out of France, and gave us a year
to comply (Operation FRELOC). Night and day, seven days a week, we
loaded thousands of semi trailers with everything that wasn’t nailed
down. Tractors then hooked up these trailers and drove them as
quickly as possible to just over the borders with Germany or
Luxembourg or Belgium and dropped them off. It took literally years
to locate these trailers and repatriate them, and cost hundreds of
millions of dollars. The French didn’t care then, and they don’t care
now.
Maybe what we need is an entirely new organization of
industrialized democracies. Maybe we could call it the Union of the
Willing. Then France and China and Russia and several dozen
dictatorships could sit around and contemplate their navels while the
U.S. and its friends go about the business of finding and ridding the
world of terrorists, wherever they may be.
I agree with Bell that war is terrible. But when it’s necessary to
wage it, to not do so is always a mistake. And I, and more than 60%
of my fellow citizens as of this writing agree this one’s necessary.
Bell, you have the right to dissent you so embrace, as do we all.
That right was purchased with the blood of Americans who fell in
battles defending our country and its ideals. We had to fight for
those rights then and we on occasion have to fight to keep them. This
is one of those times.
CHUCK CASSITY
Costa Mesa
Retiring to a state of verbosity
In covering Col. David Hackworth’s talk with Newport Harbor High
students, Joseph N. Bell has much to say concerning the colonel’s
disagreements with President Bush’s decision to evict Saddam Hussein
from power in Iraq (“Keep us blessed with the right to dissent,”
March 20). Some of what he and the colonel have to say, however, are
not backed up by recent facts.
Bell errs when he writes that “nine-tenths of the world and half
the United States is strongly opposed to this war.” A recent Gallup
poll from March 19 shows that 64% of Americans support the war with
Iraq. Also, although nonsupport by France, Russia and Germany has
dominated the headlines, a coalition of nations has come about that
support the current military actions underway.
Stealing from a column appearing in a local newspaper, I believe
that what dissenter Bell has demonstrated so effectively is that “old
soldiers” (like Hackworth) “never die, they just become verbose.” We
all should remember we are not beginning a war, we are ending an
unfinished one.
LEFTERIS LAVRAKAS
Costa Mesa
Pilot coverage is missing truth of war opposition
Where is truth? As they say, truth is the first casualty of war,
and that has been painfully obvious in the pages of the Daily Pilot.
Recently, you printed a picture and small article about the “few
dozen” pro-war supporters gathered at South Coast Plaza at noon on a
Saturday. The next day, you ran a picture and much larger article
about the six people (four of whom were children out for the day with
grandma) supporting George Bush who gathered on a Jamboree corner in
Newport Beach. A visitor to our community would think that a few
Newport-Mesa residents support the war and that everyone else is
apathetic. Nothing could be farther from the truth.
Where were your reporters on the Friday evening after the war
started when more than 250 people showed up at Bristol Street and
Anton Boulevard to support our troops and oppose this illegal,
unnecessary war? Where were the pictures and articles about the more
than 200 people who came out on a cold, windy Sunday two weeks ago at
Niketown for a candlelight vigil, praying to spare the lives of our
soldiers forced into a war of greed and imperialism?
Why is the Daily Pilot ignoring the large gatherings and focusing
on the small ones? Is fairness in reporting not a tenet of the Pilot?
You may choose not to cover the opposition to the war, but you will
not silence the voice of democracy. Peace.
MAGGIE GALLAGHER
Costa Mesa
Newport-Mesa does welcome open debate
In his Thursday column, S.J. Cahn missed the point (“Keep the
debate alive”). Of course, we Newport-Mesa residents are in favor of
debating differing points of view, but just try finding a
conservative point of view printed in any major newspaper. Most
readers of the Daily Pilot also subscribe to the Los Angeles Times,
so the liberal view permeates the majority of our news. If the Daily
Pilot takes a conservative slant, then the balance is there, and we
are happy about it.
Having just returned from six years in the Bay Area, I can tell
you that there is very little reporting in California that reflects
the conservative minority. The Daily Pilot’s lean to right is a
breath of fresh air for those of us who also crave an expression of
our views, and Cahn should not quash that.
SALLY E. MAY
Newport Beach
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