Take me out to the recall
JOSEPH N. BELL
This is our last meeting before the circus leaves town on Tuesday.
Having just watched an often mindless and mostly uncontrolled
candidate debate, then reading in the Pilot that Arnold had
solidified his support among 100 Republicans gathered at the Balboa
Bay Club with his performance, I can only say, thank God it will soon
be over. If Arnold’s failure to address direct questions and offer
instead pre-scripted, smart-mouth one-liners enhanced his
gubernatorial credentials among locals -- as reported in the Pilot --
then we must have been watching different debates.
Of course, what I saw on Sept. 24 wasn’t a debate at all but a
kind of group mugging that needed the cops more than a moderator. The
only candidate who seemed above it all, retained his cool, spoke in
complete sentences and stuck to the subject at hand was Sen. Tom
McClintock. It would be a pleasure to support him on those grounds
alone if he wasn’t so intractably mouthing all the nostrums of the
hard political right -- including a pledge not to raise taxes under
any circumstances, which would effectively tie his hands in dealing
with our desperate economic problems.
The Republicans shot themselves in the foot by putting up such a
candidate against Davis a year ago, and -- as I write this -- there
still seems a chance that by splitting the party vote on Oct. 7, they
may be doing it again. Only this time, the Republican right would be
performing a considerable public service by protecting us from
Arnold.
None of this should have happened, of course. The guy who bought
this election, Rep. Darrell Issa, is now telling us to vote against
the recall if McClintock doesn’t drop out. That’s good advice for the
wrong reason.
Gray Davis’ poor performance since his re-election is far short of
the malfeasance that would merit a recall. A vote to recall him is a
vote to arm the people and organizations wealthy enough to use this
weapon with a precedent that can force frivolous new elections by
importing an army of mercenaries to gather signatures. If it works
here, it will surely be attempted elsewhere. Only by voting against
the recall here can we make the circus irrelevant.
Meanwhile, I’m filling out an absentee ballot so I won’t have to
wait in line at a polling place while the people ahead of me search
through some 135 names looking for one that speaks to them.
When I finish my ballot, I plan to study a petition for “the
immediate recall and removal of Arnold Schwarzenegger if he should be
elected governor.” If you’re interested, you can find the petition in
the “Doonesbury” comic strip in last Sunday’s Los Angeles Times. Come
to think of it, that’s where this whole fiasco belongs.
*
I went to a viewing last Friday night, but I skipped the funeral
on Sunday. Too painful. Instead, I had a beer in our backyard and
remembered what I was doing a year ago on this date. I was
frantically searching for playoff tickets. The Yankees would be here
for games three and four, and I was prepared to offer up my battered
soul or my family members for tickets. I was saved this humiliation
by a dear friend -- now even dearer -- who had four season tickets
and offered to share them with my wife and me. I was there when the
Angels came back from a five-run deficit. This year, I’ll be watching
TV in the hope that Minnesota does the same thing to the Yankees. My
head will be there, but not my heart.
Astonishingly, the heartbeat at Edison Field on Friday night was
loud and clear, generated by a capacity crowd that would help the
Angels break 3 million in season attendance on the next night.
Astonishing because we were watching the Salt Lake City Angels play
the last-place Texas Rangers, two teams whose playoff hopes had
vaporized many weeks earlier. But the thunder sticks were out, every
Angel base hit was cheered raucously, and the Rally Monkey even made
an appearance -- the only time I’ve seen him (or is it her?) emerge
during this dreadful season.
The next time I connect with one of my shrink friends, I’m going
to ask how the Angels could set an attendance record in the same
season they almost made history by collapsing from world champions to
a last-place division finish. If this was carry-over from the
championship season, then the Angels’ new owner had better bring in
some fresh blood to get the team back on track next year before the
glow of a World Series wears off.
It certainly hadn’t worn off last Friday night. The Angels rallied
and won, the crowd was into the game through the bad innings as well
as the good, and my daughter, Patt, and I sang “Take Me Out To the
Ball Game” for the last time until next spring with championship
gusto.
I can’t ever remember a losing season ending with such enthusiasm.
Maybe that’s because it has now been proven to us that dreams can --
once in a great while -- overpower even the New York Yankees.
It occurred to me as we were flowing with the tide of a happy
crowd leaving the ballpark that we draw all sorts of symbolism from
the start of a new baseball season, but little from the end of an old
one. Spring is a time for renewal, the slate is clean, the shackles
of failure removed, everybody is in first place, life can start
afresh.
But I couldn’t think of any life lessons to be drawn from an old
season that ends in failure. So I made one up. The Angels this year
illustrated a basic rhythm of life: We win some and we lose some --
and life goes on.
Of course, if we never win, the symbolism gets a little dicey. But
the Angel owner can take care of that with an anchor for our pitching
staff and an outfielder who can hit the long ball. Then life can
start afresh next spring -- and maybe we can even forget what I’m
afraid is going to happen on Oct. 7.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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