Wednesday, February 24, 2010

A successful Black History Month celebration today at IVC





"Slightly to the right of Genghis Khan"

Melissa Fox is a Democrat running for the 70th Assembly District. She’s liable to be Don Wagner’s liberal competition.

On her blog today, Fox draws attention to an old (1974) article about Orange County’s right-wing past: Orange County: No Longer "The Right Wing Cradle":
Dated July 7, 1974, and titled "Orange County: The Right Wing Cradle," the article shows how dramatically Orange County, and in particular my own 70th Assembly District (Irvine, Laguna Beach, Laguna Woods, Lake Forest, Foothill Ranch, and most of the cities of Aliso Viejo, Newport Beach, and Tustin) has changed, both politically and demographically, in the past four decades.

The article describes Orange County as “a stronghold of the John Birch Society, a former stomping ground of the Klu Klux Klan, the fastest growing county in the United States, and the home of the first drive-in church.”
Fox draws attention to how much OC has changed from it’s notorious right-wing past. In some ways, I’m sure that’s true. But we’re still the home of Birthers, Minutemen, and other Neanderthals.

Fox’s link to the article brings one to an old and unwieldy photocopy. It's hard to read. I’ve converted that to digital form. If you’d like to read the entire article, go here: Orange County, the right-wing cradle – A Fertile Land of Firsts, It’s Patriotic Above All

Here are some excerpts:

From the Palm Beach Post-Times, Sunday, July 7, 1974

Orange County, the right-wing cradle
A Fertile Land of Firsts, It’s Patriotic Above All

By Kay Bartlett
Just About anything will grow here. Most things will flourish.

Societies to fight income tax, counter committee to battle the “Communist infiltrated” PTA, even something called SHRIK (the Society to Harass the Reds and Intimidate the Kikes).
. . .
It’s citizenry tend to add fuel to the image. Four-star Gen. Curtis LeMay, four-star patriot John Wayne, Sen. Barry Goldwater, an Arizonian who keeps an apartment at Newport Beach overlooking a bay.

Bordered by mountains on the east and the Pacific Ocean on the west, Orange County has been, among other things, a stronghold of the John Birch Society, a former stomping ground of the Ku Klux Klan, the fastest growing county in the United States (U.S. Census Bureau figures), and the home of the first drive-in church.
. . .
Currently popular bumper stickers include “CommUNism,” “Hanoi is Fonda Jane,” “Kissinger My Ass,” “Would You Want Your Daughter to Date a Kennedy,” and “Nixon is a Liberal.” The “X” in Nixon is a swastika.

Politically, Orange County has long had a reputation for its ultra conservatism, a reputation that has been the subject of national magazine articles and popular jokes. It once prompted John Schmitz, a former congressman and 1972 presidential candidate of the American Independent party, to remark that he joined the John Birch Society in get into the mainstream of Orange County politics.

Many of my neighbors were Birch members,” says Mrs. Judy Rosener, who teaches a course in Orange County politics at the University of California at Irvine (UCI). “They were almost evangelistic about it. The thing that was disturbing to me was that they were well-educated, very bright and they took this thing very seriously.”
. . .
Many residents claim the image attached to their county never was justified. And then you meet a resident like Anthony Hilder, a self-proclaimed “new rightist” and author of a book – “The War Lords of Washington” – which argues that international bankers conspired to involve American in World War II.

“I’m slightly to the right of Genghis Khan and far, far right of the Birch Society,” Hilder says. “If I was in charge, I’d bomb London, New York and Washington. That’s the seat of the international banking cartel that wishes to dominate the world.”
. . .
Many see in the Register, a Santa Ana newspaper with a circulation of 172,000, a major reason for the county’s conservative bent. Since 1905, the Register has editorialized unwaveringly against income tax, public schools and government in general. It refuses, for instance, to endorse political candidates because, as Jim Dean, the executive editor, puts it, “Government is the problem.”
. . .
Then there was the late Jimmy Utt, a dapper man who sat in the U.S. House of Representatives from the 83rd Congress until his death in 1970. Known as “Mr. Conservative,” Utt usually was cheered back to Congress with 70 per cent of the vote.

When Utt died, he was replaced by Schmitz, who continued the ultra-conservative voting pattern.
. . .
James Townsend, publisher of a newspaper called the National Educator and a man sometimes called the hub of the right wing in Orange County, assessed the reduced membership this way:
. . .
“The Zionists are a powerful force, money-wise,” says Townsend. “It’s a very wealthy, very well-organized, very fanatical force. Anyone who doesn’t recognize the power of the force is naïve. It is alien and very dangerous to the people of the United States. Their goal is world control. They can buy a candidate for any office. They exert a tremendous influence on who wins the presidency of the United States.”

Townsend’s newspaper, The National Educator, is mailed across the country, but he won’t reveal circulation figures. It regularly attacks the school system, the National Education Association, abortion, the United Nations, sex education, both the Republican and Democratic parties, Darwinian theories of evolution and income tax….

Townsend, a middle-aged six-footer, describes Mr. Nixon as a “wild-eyed liberal who did more to promote the concept of one world in his first five years in office than all the Democratic presidents put together. Well, maybe, except for FDR. Nixon takes the concept further than McGovern’s wildest dream. McGovern would never have gotten away with what Nixon has.”
. . .
One thing Orange County has not been accused of being is a center of culture.

“As I’m fond of remarking,” historian [Jim] Sleeper says, “the last cultural innovation that came to Orange County was indoor plumbing.”….

“Occupation” of 5th floor of Aldrich Hall, UCI, today by “labor organizers”

Evidently, the following email was sent to the “UCI Community” today at 1:30 p.m.

From: On Behalf Of Cathy Lawhon, University Communications
Sent: Wednesday, February 24, 2010 1:30 PM
To: UCI Community :
Subject: Update on Aldrich Hall Activity
A group of students and labor organizers occupied the fifth floor of
Aldrich Hall at 10 a.m. Wednesday, Feb. 24, disrupting business and
presenting a wide-ranging list of demands.

Offices on the fifth floor were locked down and protestors were
informed that they should leave or they would be arrested. By noon,
police arrested 17 protestors inside Aldrich Hall who refused to leave
and cited them with unlawful assembly and refusal to disperse.
Students arrested will also be cited with violations of university
conduct policy.

Demonstrators outside the building blocked several exits impeding the
ability of those inside to leave. Police surrounded the perimeter of
the building and exits were cleared.

By afternoon, staff inside Aldrich Hall were evacuated to ensure their
safety.
• 17 arrested in UCI protest being released (OC Reg)
3:15 p.m. update: While there were several reasons for the protest today at UCI, one of the factors was a break down in negotiations between UC Irvine and the UC system's janitorial union. The union was seeking to "insource" janitorial and maintenance jobs which are contracted out to ABM Industries.

Negotiations broke down because UCI management wanted to impose citizenship checks on the workers, said Jorge Olvera, a groundskeeper at UC San Diego and executive vice president of service for the local chapter of AFSCME, which represents janitorial employees at the UC system.
• Another Day, Another Bunch of UCI Arrests (OC Weekly)

A big boost for Don Wagner

Allan Bartlett of Red County/OC (AD 70 Watch: Don Wagner Gets The CRA Endorsement) reports that the California Republican Assembly has endorsed our own Don Wagner in the 70th Assembly District race. Here’s his campaign’s press release:
The Orange County chapter of the California Republican Assembly, the state’s oldest and largest conservative volunteer organization, held its endorsing convention this past Saturday in Newport Beach and overwhelmingly endorsed Don Wagner for the 70th Assembly District. Wagner defeated moderate Republican Jerry Amante by a 28-3 margin. Amante was unable to hold the 5 votes of his home base, Tustin, where he serves on the City Council.

“I am very proud to have earned the support of the CRA, one of the most important organizations in our party and within the conservative movement,” said Wagner. “CRA is the conscience of the Republican Party and has always been focused on governing based on a set of principles. I have done that as president of the South Orange County Community College Board of Trustees and will continue to as a member of the State Assembly.”

Wagner is a proven conservative leader, having founded the Orange County chapter of the Federalist Society, a nationwide organization made up of conservative and libertarian attorneys, judges, and law professors dedicated to promoting the rule of law against liberal activism.

He is supported by conservative leaders like Hugh Hewitt, Michelle Malkin, John Eastman, Jim Lacy, and the Atlas PAC. He is also proud of the support of conservative California Senators Tony Strickland and Mark Wyland….

Frozen in San Diego

From this morning’s Inside Higher Ed:

Student Government Freezes Funds for Student Media at UC-San Diego

The student government president at the University of California at San Diego temporarily froze funding for all student-financed media operations on the campus after members of a student media group made racially charged comments on a broadcast, the San Diego Union-Tribune reported. The incident, which was the second involving derogatory comments about black students in a matter of weeks, led the president of the student government to freeze student funding for all media outlets while the campus drafts a new policy on funding student media. The Guardian, the student newspaper, which does not receive student fee support, blasted the decision in an editorial entitled "Stopping the Presses Won't Heal the Hurt."

Meanwhile, at the Chronicle of Higher Ed:

Student Media Groups at UC-San Diego Lose Funds Amid Controversy Over Race and Speech

The head of the student government at the University of California at San Diego has temporarily suspended funds for all of the university's student-run media outlets after a broadcast prompted new outrage in a controversy over a party mocking Black History Month, The San Diego Union-Tribune reported. The broadcast was produced by The Koala, a controversial campus humor magazine, and aired over the student-run television station last Thursday. The freeze on funds, which affects 33 student media outlets, has in turn prompted complaints of muzzling free speech. Utsav Gupta, the student-government president, said he wanted the campus to craft a new policy for student media groups before lifting the freeze.

Also in IHE:

Merced Bans Chancellor-Mocking Art From Exhibit

The University of California at Merced has banned from an art exhibit a student's series of photographs that mock Chancellor Steve Kang, the Associated Press reported. The photos, among other things, show the chancellor speaking into a microphone that has been covered with a condom. University officials said that the art exhibit is billed as a family event and that this series was inappropriate. A video by the student, showing and explaining her work, may be found here. She writes: "My piece is a reflection of the torn feelings students face when discovering themselves. It outlines the ability to love two different campus idols: Steve Kang, our chancellor, and Lady Gaga, a pop idol."

And at the always entertaining OC Reg:

School board adopts patriotic policies

FULLERTON - All high school classrooms in the Fullerton Joint Union High School District will display the American flag and hold a patriotic activity on a daily basis after a 5-0 vote Tuesday by district trustees.

The new policies were researched and developed by an eight-member student advisory council in the past four months.

"The whole goal of these policies is for students to have an appreciation for the country we live in, and for all our freedoms," said Amanda Wong, the district's student board member – and a senior at Sunny Hills High School – who led the council effort.

A handful of students and residents complained to the board last July that the district wasn't following the state Education Code, and urged trustees to adopt a written policy.
. . .
"Our fear was that if the (Pledge of Allegiance) were recited every day, we could lose touch with the students," Wong said. "So, we decided that period of time could also be used to read a quote from one of our presidents, read a patriotic passage, discuss the meaning of words in the pledge or hold a moment of silence.
. . .
Ultimately, the council decided those students who chose not to participate must remain silent, Wong said….

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...