The SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT —
"[The] blog he developed was something that made the district better." - Tim Jemal, SOCCCD BoT President, 7/24/23
This (absurd) event has grown larger with each year; last month’s event comprised 600 riders. So when the mob-o’-bikes got to the intersection of Moulton and El Toro (in the middle of sleepy Laguna Woods), one of the bikers “held” the light for bikers to clear the intersection.
This upset Laguna Woods’ city manager, Leslie Keane, who is very serious about public safety and who (probably rightly) viewed the action as dangerous.
Naturally, the bikers don't see it that way. One of them wrote to Sforza, explaining that:
“Last week on Oct. 7 I was contacted by the O.C. Sheriff who had launched a investigation into the 9-11 ride at the incessant urging of Leslie Keane. She has been screaming mad for the last month at the fact that one of the 9-11 riders held her street light for the bikes to clear the intersection at Moulton and El Toro. That light is monitored by a red light camera. Oddly enough the camera images were blurry thanks to the handy work of a patriotic bird (probably a bald eagle) clouding the lens. Not one single license plate number could be recovered and NO tickets will be issued. Ms. Keane is infuriated and wants to know the name of the rider who held her light. Since I have no idea who that was, she has launched a smear campaign against me and the entire 9-11 event in an effort to prevent it next year.
Sforza herself experienced the bikers on 9-11:
Traffic ground to a near-halt as a wave of rumbling thunder rolled over us, shaking our little car and rattling our little eardrums. Our 5-year-old cowered in her booster seat as hundreds upon hundreds upon hundreds of motorcycles roared by on their sojourn from Cook’s Corner to Long Beach….
She had a similar experience last year:
Last year on 9/11, The Watchdog was unnerved to find herself driving south in a sea of flag-flapping motorcycles on Laguna Canyon Road. The bikes didn’t want us there, and we didn’t want to be there, but there we were, bikes drving around us, sort of like water tumbling past rocks in a stream. Pulling over didn’t seem like a good idea.
These bikers are not the sharpest tools in the shed; nevertheless, they've figured out that Keane is likely hoping to “stop the ride by forbidding it to come through her city.”
Gosh, it’s “un-American.”
The Laguna Woods city council was to meet this afternoon, and some of these bikers were expected to show up, all pissed off. Don’t know what happened. Evidently, TV’s Channel 9 covered it.
Dissent readers may be surprised by my perspective on all this. I think these bikers are assholes. They’re rude and stupid. I am unsympathetic to their perspective and to their need to impose their noisy parade on a mostly civil public.
Part of my problem here is the bikers’ brand of patriotism, which combines ignorance and an intolerance of those who will not stand aside for their loutish and noisy self-celebration.
They are, in short, deluded, self-righteous bullies. As far as I'm concerned, they can pound sand. I don't know this Leslie Keane, but I do hope she prevails.
VIDEO UPDATE:
Good Lord! Keane decided to lower the temperature, apologizing for some of her harsher remarks (in emails). Looks like the bikers will return next year with a bigger group than ever. No doubt they will be accompanied by police.
Is it just me or is there something retrograde about OC Republicans?
I mean, which other crowd would hold “cigar smokers”—events, evidently, in which rich white guys sit around, smoking expensive cigars on the patio of the freakin’ Balboa Bay Club?
Am I reading too much into this? Who would show up to something like this but a self-satisfied, rich, "conservative" businessman who thinks people like him are what made America great?
Local Republicans may as well hang up a neon sign that says, “We’re rich; you’re not; fuck you.”
Matt Cunningham of the OC Red County blog (Bourbon, Cigars And Conservatism On Nov. 18 At Balboa Bay Club) seems pleased as punch about the whole goshdarn thing. He chirps: “Tom Fuentes is organizing another of the [Claremont] Institute's popular cigar smokers at the Balboa Bay Club. This is the fourth such event this year, I believe, and they are really enjoyable.”
The invitation says:
Senior Fellow Thomas A. Fuentes cordially invites you to
“Bourbon and Cigars”
An evening of casual camaraderie and conservative conversation
featuring:
Dr. John Eastman
Dean of Chapman University School of Law
and Founding Director of the Claremont Institute’s
Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence
with President Brian T. Kennedy
We’re also told that “This is not a fundraising event.”
During a board meeting in ‘99, John Williams proudly reported visiting a place called the “Claremont Institute” (CI). After Fuentes’ board appointment, Williams mentioned CI again. According to the IWN, “Williams said [that, among candidates,] Fuentes rose to the top due to his broad range of experience and his roots in the community college system…‘He knows about policy making. He’s a member of the Claremont Institute’ …” (7/20/00).
Actually, Tom Fuentes is more than a member of CI: he’s on its board of directors.
I found a description of the Institute’s “policy making” on the “Americans United for Separation of Church and State” website:
The CI [is]…an ultra-conservative advocacy group with ties to the Republican Party and some of the most extreme elements of the Religious Right… Claremont’s board of directors includes Howard F. Ahmanson Jr., a California-based Religious Right activist…[He] personifies the Institute’s ties to the farthest fringes of the right. He has contributed significant sums of money to spread a radical philosophy known as “Christian Reconstructionism.” Reconstructionists believe the Old Testament’s harsh legal code should be binding on modern society. They advocate the death penalty…for a number of religious “offenses,” including apostasy [i.e., abandonment of one’s faith], blasphemy and “unchastity.” The Reconstructionist view is perhaps best summed up in a 1992 quote by Ahmanson: “My purpose is total integration of biblical law into our lives.” Ahmanson gave the Institute $185,000 in 1995…Claremont attacks the concept of a wall of separation between church and state. One Institute article labeled Thomas Jefferson’s metaphorical wall “imaginary.”…The CI believes homosexuality is an affliction that can be cured by therapy…Another Institute project is Doctors for Responsible Gun Ownership….
As near as I can tell, this accurately describes CI’s “policy making.” Good grief!
I invite you to explore CI’s own website; unquestionably, CI—and its man Fuentes—mean to promote the interests, not of Labor, but of Big Business and Big Authority. Their vocal support of Prop 226 is part of a pattern. The pattern’s pretty plain, dude.
After several years of experimenting with “hybrid” Spanish courses that mix online and classroom instruction, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has decided to begin conducting its introductory Spanish course exclusively on the Web. ¶ Spanish 101, which had featured online lessons combined with one classroom session per week, will drop its face-to-face component in an effort to save on teaching costs and campus space in light of rising demand for Spanish instruction and a shrinking departmental budget. ¶ “We were seeing that there was just a lot of demand on our resources, both monetary and space-wise, due to Spanish,” said Larry King, chair of the Romance Languages and Literatures Department.
Larry King? That guy really gets around.
• Meanwhile, the nation’s Poet Laureate is targeting community colleges, her favorite sector of higher ed, to promote poetry:
…Today marks the official launch of [Kay] Ryan's project "Poetry for the Mind's Joy," an initiative through which she hopes to draw national attention to community colleges, as well as drawing the colleges' attention to poetry. ¶ "I couldn’t wait to get to UCLA," Ryan says, "to get away from the community college, and it took me a number of years to have it truly dawn on me that I’d been treated much better at community college than I was at UCLA … [where] I was in classes of 300, and … I didn’t ever talk to my professors, I talked to the TA, and often my papers were graded by a whole rotation of TAs. If I had three papers, they would wind up graded by three different TAs, and there’s no coherence, there’s no relationship.… And at community college, all of my instructors knew my name; I had a personal relationship with them. Which is beyond price."…
• Back here in the OC, Tom Fuentes’ pal Chris Norby, on the Board of Supervisors, is lengthening his record of bizarre comments and actions. The Supes heard a report on child welfare in the county, and this led to a discussion of childhood nutrition:
…21 percent of O.C. kids age 5-20 are still overweight, according to Dr. Michael Riley, Social Services chief deputy director, who discussed the findings at the board’s regular biweekly meeting.
Riley also noted that the recession has affected children, although not as much as in harder-hit parts of the country. Forty-three percent of public-school children got free or discounted lunches as part of a federal program during the 2008-09 school year, up from 40 percent last year.
Supervisor Chris Norby peppered Riley with questions throughout the doctor’s presentation. Norby wondered whether there might be a connection between obesity rates and the free-lunch program.
“When we give kids more and more free food, because they are in economic need, yet they are getting fatter, is there something there that’s a health concern?”Norby said.
Wow. What an idiot.
The Reg later interviewed Norby by phone, and he then “acknowledged that the nutritional value in school lunches affects all kids, not just poor ones.”
Evidently, Norby’s also down on bike-helmet laws.
“I think bicycle helmet laws, while well-intentioned to protect kids, probably have contributed to [obesity] as well, because when you make it more difficult for kids to exercise because maybe you’re concerned about his safety, sometimes you have a negative effect where the kids don’t do as much of it,” he said during the meeting.