Weave of a tangled Web
- Share via
There’s nothing about last week’s rather abrupt flame out of the
colorful and often edgy Concerned Costa Mesa Citizens Web site that
would spark any fretting that the great cosmic continuum may have
been interrupted. After all, the place had just a tick more than 100
members when it went dark and only a small handful of those were
regular lurkers.
But I’m nonetheless disappointed the co-founders of the usually
stimulating cyber klatch -- Janice Davidson and Jerry Vanus -- yanked
the plug on it in the wake of the kindergarten dust-up that enveloped
the site in recent weeks.
The place was a decent trove of insight for a journalist. I’d
often drop in to lurk, swap banter and generally take the pulse of
some of the leading activists in the city who have real concerns
about the compass point that Costa Mesa’s following.
For the most part, the site -- launched in October 2000 --
generally troubled itself with perspectives and debates centering on
the fundamental structural problems that plague most cities that are
nearly a half-century old. The blemishes often kicked around included
the obsolescence of Costa Mesa’s slap-dash zoning and land uses,
substandard housing, crumbling roads, the encroachment of urban crime
and under-performing schools.
Its inhabitants were a diverse lot with no shortage of opinions
and fixes (some level-headed, others not so much) for changing the
municipality’s heading. And most of its members weren’t wilting
daisies afraid of a good and heated scrap. Least of all Davidson, who
routinely scolded site visitors for boneheaded posts or for straying
off topic.
Which is why the logic doesn’t pencil that she and Vanus would
shutter the thing in the wake of a brief but blistering personal
offensive launched by outside gay and other civil rights advocates
against Davidson and others who regularly posted opinions on the
site.
And so we’re left stewing in the question: What sparked this train
wreck in cyberspace? A few things, I think.
On one front, the Concerned Costa Mesa Citizens site became
increasingly dominated in its posts and tone by the city’s irascible
gadfly Martin Millard. Millard, a prolific writer and idea factory,
often tacked up a dozen posts a day railing against the city’s urban
sores caused by an eroding “demographic” and growing population of
illegal immigrants drawn here by the city’s bounty of charitable
organizations. Most of the site’s visitors and regular posters often
agreed with his theories, including founder Davidson.
Now Millard’s musings might not have registered on the radar
screens of county civil rights advocates given the site’s small
membership and relative obscurity outside Costa Mesa’s city limits.
Except that when Millard’s numerous essays for the anti-immigration
American Patrol Web site, and also New Nation and the Council of
Conservative Citizens -- the latter two organizations often
associated with white supremacy -- came to light, alarm bells began
going off in human relations circles. Indeed, many of Millard’s
essays are complex hand wringings over the dilution of the white race
at the hands of massive illegal immigration and interracial breeding.
Also, Costa Mesa resident and City Council candidate Allan Mansoor
touched off a heated controversy when he began posting Family
Research Council articles linking homosexuality with pedophilia.
All of which sparked the now-famous conflagration at a June
meeting of the Costa Mesa Human Relations Committee, in which gay
rights advocate Mira Ingram blasted committee members Mansoor and
Davidson, among others, for posting what she called bigoted and
homophobic opinions and information on the CCMC Web site.
That prompted Orange County Human Relations Commission members
Barbara Hunt and Robert Cerince to begin monitoring the site. Indeed,
Cerince engaged in lengthy and often heated debates with Web site
members about homosexuality, hate crime and other topics far afield
of the Concern Costa Mesa Citizen Web site’s original stated mission.
The entire harangue was too much for Davidson. Millard -- the
principal content contributor to the site -- simply disappeared.
Mansoor continued to defend his positions. And the rest of the site’s
members -- hoping for a return to the issues confronting Costa Mesa
-- seemed to simply give up.
Which is too bad, really. But it’s nonetheless symptomatic of how
difficult it’s becoming in this land to have debates and share ideas
without having our sensibilities bruised or getting our undergarments
in a bunch.
* BYRON DE ARAKAL is a freelance writer and communications
consultant. He lives in Costa Mesa. Readers can reach him with news
tips and comments via e-mail at [email protected].
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.