Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Nexus

Red Emma and crew read aloud words that some wish to suppress


Sometimes, things come together in surprising ways. For instance, today, DtB contributor and former Irvine Valley College adjunct Red Emma was among the organizers of a read-a-thon at UC Irvine to celebrate National Banned Books Week.

What’s that? Well, it’s “an event aimed at raising awareness about the importance of ensuring availability of those often unpopular books targeted for bans at many public and private schools.” Or so said the OC Reg (O.C. observes Banned Books Week).

As it turns out, OC is a book-banning hotspot! The Reg describes the many Neanderthalic episodes of book bannery (or near book bannery) in OC in recent years, including this incident in 2001:
[A] Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustee wanted to bar high school students in Advanced Placement English classes from reading David Guterson's "Snow Falling on Cedars" and Isabel Allende's "Of Love and Shadows." Trustee Wendy Leece said they contained graphic sexual scenes; the award-winning novels were later OK'd in a 5-2 vote.
Wendy Leece? Why, that would be one of the hosts of Don Wagner’s “kick-off” campaign event tonight at the Balboa Bay Club! Don, the President of the SOCCCD board of trustees, is running for State Assembly. Don is the peevish fellow who, a few years ago, led the SOCCCD board in ending the colleges’ memberships in the American Library Association (ALA). They were, he said, a bunch of “liberal busybodies.”

But wait! Isn’t the ALA the very organization that is closely associated with National Banned Book Week? Yessireebob! Indeed, the Reg helpfully notes that “The American Library Association keeps … statistics of book challenges each year.”

All these connections! What do they mean? Not a goddam thing, I’m sure.

Red, aka Andrew, was interviewed by the Reg:
"A lot of these books appear on these 'hit parades' because they have naughty words or ideas many people don't like," said Andrew Tonkovich…. Tonkovich read from "The Bell Jar" from author Sylvia Plath.

"We just want to help people resist the foolishness of censorship and bans for many of these books," he said.
That’s our Red. Naughty words indeed.

Matt Coker on Don and Tom

The "Ronald Reagan Board Room"? What the F***?!

Looks like the OC Weekly’s Matt Coker has rediscovered our boy Don Wagner:

Don Wagner Kicks Off Assembly Bid With a Little Help From His Far-Out, Far-Right Friends.

And he ain’t happy.

Writes Matt,
Irvine's Don Wagner, the hard-core conservative president of the South Orange County Community College District Board of Trustees, kicks off his bid for state Assembly this evening with the help from one of the other hard-core conservatives on the college board's dais, "Chairman Emeritus of the Orange County Republican Party Central Committee" Tom Fuentes.

Wagner hopes to win the GOP nomination for the 2010 race for the Assembly seat currently filled by Chuck DeVore (R-Irvine)….

Among the conservative heavy hitters the Wagner campaign lists as supporters are: Chapman University law school dean John Eastman; Orange County Board of Education president Ken Williams; Williams' fellow trustee Alexandria Coronado; Irvine Values Coalition president Scott Peotter; and frequent state/municipal campaigner, OC Young Republican for life and newspaper columnist Jim Righeimer.

But it is Fuentes, the "Don Wagner for Assembly Campaign Kick-Off Party special guest and master of ceremonies," who will be tonight's star attraction.

After wreaking havoc for years as head honcho of the OC GOP, the dapper fancyman of Lake Forest was relieved of his command in favor of former Assemblyman Scott "Slime" Baugh. Fuentes landed an appointment to the South County college board when suspected Nazi sympathizer Steven J. Frogue resigned in 2000.



Less controversial than Frogue, who managed not only to bring out the worst in people but the worst people period, Fuentes has managed to rile several on the college district's two campuses, Saddleback and Irvine Valley community colleges.



He tried to stop the Spain study abroad program in 2005 after the European country's leaders withdrew soliders from the Bush Administration's Iraq War. Fuentes has also openly damned from his board seat faculty academic senates, campus worker unions and the college accreditation process.



Close board watchers say he has pledged undying support to divisive Chancellor and board toadie Raghu Mathur. Oh, and "the Lord," who former monastery enrollee and onetime Roman Catholic Diocese of Orange spokesman Fuentes frequently cites in quasi-sectarian board prayers and invocations. Wagner also referenced "the Lord" at the most recent board meeting. 


Can we get an amen from the chemistry lab?



Both Fuentes boy toys—that would be the Christ and the chancellor—got a run for their tidings during the Chancellor's Opening Session in August, when Mathur showed a video of images accompanied by the tune "God Bless the U.S.A." The collage ended with the words, "Only two defining forces have ever offered to die for you—Jesus Christ and the American Soldier. One died for your soul, the other for your freedom."


The chancellor of what is ostensibly a public institution welcoming all faiths (or none at all) defended showing the video at the subsequent board meeting, and Fuentes and Wagner said nothing to indicate they were displeased with the spectacle.


Though generally more polished, sophisticated and affable than Fuentes, Wagner's run on the board since 1998 has also included some controversial moments, such as when he attacked the American Library Association as "liberal busybodies." The practicing attorney successfully persuaded his fellow board members to cease the colleges' memberships in the ALA.



Though the Wagner campaign website boasts about the candidate's courtroom acumen, he didn't display legal smarts after faculty members complained at a board meeting that Mathur and other trustees were violating their rights when Wagner essentially said, "So sue us." They did—and won in court.



Of course, that was taxpayer money Wagner was playing with, not a client's, so his campaign doesn't have to count it against him.

Speaking of non-brilliant plays, Wagner at first joined Fuentes in criticizing the college accrediting agency to the point where the district nearly lost accreditation, something that would have proved devastating for students attending schools aimed at feeding major colleges and universities. "To his credit, he regretted this and worked hard to satisfy the accreds in the end," a board watchdog said of Wagner. [That would be me. -RB]

By the by, you read that correctly above the photo of Wagner that began this post. What's supposedly a nonpartisan panel meets in something they've dubbed the "Ronald Reagan Board of Trustees Room." Amazing.

Wagner's Assembly campaign website says he decided to run after becoming "frustrated" like so many Californians watching California's elected leaders "recklessly" commit the state "to spending programs we can't afford while ignoring badly needed reforms in the management of fiscal affairs."

"But rather than sitting on the sidelines, and with the encouragement of friends and neighbors, Don has decided to do something about it," the site explains. "That is why Don Wagner is running to serve in the California State Assembly."

Sacramento needs the type of "conservative, fiscally responsible leadership" Wagner has demonstrated on the school board, boasts his site. Um . . . yeah.

His Assembly kick-off party is scheduled from 6 to 7:30 p.m. on the patio at Duke's Place within the Balboa Bay Club in Newport Beach. Business attire, slicked-back hair and the tightest of underwear only, puh-leese.

And don't forget to pray. To the Lord! Sounds like we'd all better get used to that.

More on Don Wagner’s BBC “kick-off” event

Marcia, Dave, John, and Bill come out to support ASSEMBLY candidate DON!

Yesterday, Allan Bartlett of Red County reported on the 70th Assembly District race.

Evidently, early on, Tustin’s Jerry Amante announced his plan to run for the 70th AD (which includes Irvine and environs), but his efforts to raise money have been disappointing.

Republicans like Don Wagner and Irvine businessman Shawn Black saw their chance. But, according to Bartlett, Wagner “has the momentum … with his endorsement recently by the [OC Young Republicans], Atlas PAC, Tom Fuentes, and many other notable conservative activists in OC.”

In yesterday's post, Bartlett mention’s tonight’s event at the Balboa Bay Club with Tom Fuentes as MC. He adds a list of “hosts”:
Family Action PAC, O.C.Y.R’s, Mark Bucher, Tammy Bullard, Dr. Alexandria Coronado, John Dodd, John Eastman, Jeremy Gray, Matt Harper, Bill Hewitt, David Lang, Hon. Wendy Leece, Lee Lowrey, Hon. Mike McGill, Marcia Milchiker, Kevin Muldoon, Scott Peotter, Atlas Pac, Jim Righeimer, Larry Smith, Serge Tomassian, Tim Whitacre, Hon. John Williams, Dr. Ken Williams, Phil Yarbrough
As you know, SOCCCD Trustee Bill Jay announced his support for Don at the September board meeting. Judging by the above list, trustees Marcia Milchiker, John Williams, and Dave Lang are on board, too.

And Bill Hewitt.

Admission is free. —“Hosted Cigars, No-Host Bar, and Music”

Note:

Back in 1993, Mark Bucher and Jim Righeimer (along with Frank Ury) fought for a school voucher initiative, which failed. After that, with money from Howard Ahmanson, Jr., the three founded Tustin's Education Alliance, a conservative "back to basics" group. In 1998, Ury, Righeimer, and Bucher authored the so-called “campaign reform initiative." You’ll recall that Proposition 226 would have required “all labor unions to obtain annual written permission from union members before allocating any dues for political action or political education efforts” (Cosmo Garvin).

Not long ago, at a board meeting, several trustees reported their attendance of an EA event. Don Wagner, evidently, is on EA's board.

Bill Hewitt, an IVC counselor, is an officer of the SOCCCD faculty union (Faculty Association/CCA/CTA).

Watch "silver tongue" Don in action

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...