JOSEPH N. BELL -- The Bell Curve
I got very depressed when that Los Angeles multimillionaire, Dennis
Tito, went up into space on a Russian rocket last week. Took me awhile to
figure out why, but now I know. It rubbed my nose in a reality I’ve
always had a difficult time acknowledging: that in this country today,
virtually anything can be had for a price that only the rich can pay.
Maybe even happiness -- or what passes for it. And I don’t find that very
comforting.
I think Tito’s weekend sandbox in space hit me especially hard because
I was so closely involved with the beginnings of manned space flight in
this country. I watched firsthand as the original seven astronauts
prepared for this remarkable and perilous venture into the unknown.
They were all highly trained professionals, test pilots with military
combat time. They were meticulously chosen from a much larger group with
similar qualifications. There was no precedent for what they set out to
do, and no assurance that they would come back safely. They were pioneers
in the fullest sense of that word, as were those professionals who came
after them to bring back scientific data and set foot on the moon.
So now along comes Tito, with only one qualification for climbing atop
heroic shoulders to reach out into space. He’s rich. Very rich. And
although there must be hundreds of thousands of civilians just as eager
and better equipped, Tito was allowed to buy his way into history.
There are plenty of precedents in other fields, of course. People
whose qualifications start and end with money. Elections are bought
routinely. So are ambassadorships. So are presidential pardons. So are
baseball teams and movie studios and VIP lines at public events and tax
exemptions. So is the ability to hire high-priced lawyers and to exploit
our virgin lands and pollute our streams and air.
Major league owners used to be baseball people who made their living
that way. Some of them were barbarians, but they knew the game inside
out. And Hollywood studios were run by movie people, not all of them
nice, but still movie people. Now both are run mostly either by
aggressive multimillionaires buying an expensive and endearing toy
(George Steinbrenner of the Yankees) or conglomerates that frequently use
them as a tax write-off and hire lawyers and accountants to run them (the
current owners of the Dodgers).
You want other examples? A few years ago, a man who was probably the
least qualified political candidate in American history came within a few
thousand votes of becoming a U.S. senator from California. His name was
Michael Huffington, and his credential was money. Just money. Lots of
money. He bought a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives and almost
made it into the Senate the same way. You can blame this on voter
stupidity, if you like, but it was the money that brought out the
stupidity.
Then there is Horace Vignali of Los Angeles, who bought broad support
for a presidential pardon for his son, Carlos, with a long series of
low-level political contributions. When Bill Clinton pardoned Carlos, a
convicted cocaine dealer, his father told a Los Angeles Times reporter:
“This is a case where America worked.” Indeed.
Or take a look closer to home. The airport at El Toro is being spent
into oblivion, washed away in a tidal wave of expensive brochures and
advertisements for which Irvine taxpayers are picking up the tab. I must
say here, with grudging admiration, that they’re making the pro-airport
people look like novices. First, they asked voters to reject jails and
landfills in their backyards, along with the airport, and won big. Now
they’re asking people if they’d like to have a Great Park. Not at the
expense of an airport. Just a Great Park. And the unwashed are not any
more likely to say, “Hell, no, I don’t want a park” than they were to
embrace a landfill.
Which brings me to another problem I have with Tito. As I grow older,
I have less and less patience with amateurs. The Irvine anti-airport
campaign is making those who favor it look like amateurs. Tito is an
amateur in space. The recently displaced publisher of the Los Angeles
Times was an amateur in journalism. Bob Daly is an amateur in baseball.
Wealthy political contributors who buy ambassadorships are amateurs in
diplomacy who hopefully will lean on the pros in the State Department for
the heavy stuff.
I once had a plumber who came to my house regularly to bail us out of
critical situations I had created by trying to fix something. Finally, he
said to me in some exasperation: “From now on, you write. I’ll plumb.”
I’ve never forgotten that advice. Trouble is, nobody says it to rich
people. There’s a myth that’s been around a long time in this country
that wealth automatically connotes superior intelligence and wisdom. This
is baloney, of course, but it somehow prevents them from being told that
they can’t buy their way into or out of any situation that arises. So
Tito paid up and took off.
I still like to cling to the last vestiges of hope that this isn’t
true. That’s why I’m currently excited about the Minnesota Twins.
Although the Twins have the lowest payroll in major league baseball, they
are leading the American League and just took a series from the Yankees.
If the Twins could hang in and win a pennant, it would give me new hope
that even Tito couldn’t destroy. Or those twice-a-week brochures about
the Great Park.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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