A sight of a left-wing takeover
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JOSEPH N. BELL
I’m writing this on the day after.
I just checked the morning newspapers. I needed confirmation.
They’re reporting the same results I heard last night. Davis is out.
Schwarzenegger is in. Democracy is right on schedule in Iraq. And the
Cubs lost to the Marlins in extra innings.
Then I got these e-mails from my two grandsons. Trent, who is a
sophomore at George Washington University, wrote: “I guess Hollywood
does rule California. I predict that when Arnold has to make
decisions, his wife will give him proper advice.” And Trevor, who is
promotion director of a San Francisco radio station, was more
succinct. He wrote: “I can’t wait to see Poppa’s article on this
one.”
That put a lot of pressure on me. And it got me thinking about an
article the New York Times did recently contrasting the housing
market on the two coasts with the country in between. As a test case,
the editors chose to do an in-depth real estate study of Fort Wayne,
Indiana, where I grew up.
For a lot of years, I drove back to the Midwest regularly to draw
sustenance from my roots, and I would always come home with the real
estate pages from newspapers en route. My wife and I would pore over
them and inevitably learn that with the equity in our California
home, we could buy upscale outright in any of these cities and have a
life of writing novels without mortgage stress. This was underscored
by the New York Times study which quoted a realtor as saying: “You
can still live like a king in Fort Wayne with $200,000 housing -- and
you can live pretty well for $100,000.”
So I have to admit to my grandsons that when I went to bed Tuesday
night, I was fantasizing the possibility of kicking mortgage stress
and watching Arnold the Governor from afar. This act of cowardice can
only be excused by the late hour and the apt description of
California as “the next banana republic” by Los Angeles Times
columnist Peter King, to which the president of a Southern California
crisis-management firm added: “California has now developed the
reputation of a lot of Third World countries.”
I was still in that state of mind when I padded out to get the
morning paper and make absolutely certain that a flood-tide of votes
from East Los Angeles hadn’t turned the election around while I was
sleeping. It hadn’t, of course. Revolutionaries in our banana
republic had truly overthrown the government in Sacramento. The car
tax was dead meat.
That’s when two items on our kitchen counter caught my attention.
The first was a pair of tickets to the Kirov Ballet, coming soon to
the Orange County Performing Arts Center. The second was a clipping
from the Pilot that Mike Scioscia, the manager of the California
Angels, had just bought a home in Newport Beach. In a sudden
epiphany, it became clear to me that neither the exquisite joy of the
Kirov nor the Angel manager as a neighbor would be likely in Fort
Wayne. Or any other city with bargain housing in between.
That set me to thinking about all the other things I would leave
behind, especially friends and family. And I decided that -- unlike
the car tax -- I would not become another victim of the revolution.
California may be a banana republic, but it’s my banana republic.
So does that mean onward and upward with Arnold? I have no idea,
and nothing he has said to this point suggests that he has any idea,
either. But the slogans and generalities and lines from his violent
movies with which he has been seeding the California countryside
won’t grow any grass in Sacramento. Everybody is for “the people”
there. If you doubt it, just ask them.
Sooner or later, Gov. Schwarzenegger will have to face a simple
equation. When government expenditures are greater than income and
the gap is growing dangerously, there are only two possible
solutions: either expenditures must be cut or taxes raised. Or both.
Tying government’s hands on either of these options is an invitation
to disaster. That’s what happened during the budget fiasco earlier
this year. We’ll see if Arnold can prevent it from happening again.
And that’s only the beginning.
We’ll also see if successfully opening the can of recall worms in
California will start a spate of similar actions in which the recall
becomes simply a device to reverse elections that -- like the Davis
election -- were perfectly legitimate and involved no malfeasance in
office. If that does, indeed, happen, it must not happen again in
California. Any effort to turn this weapon back on Schwarzenegger
would be seen as vengeance and would be counter-productive anywhere
but the Doonesbury comic strip.
One other thought occurred to me while I watched the empty podium
where Arnold would appear to make his acceptance speech. The crowd
waiting for him onstage and massed behind the podium was loaded with
Kennedys. They are unmistakable in any group, and this one even
included old Sargent Shriver who once ran as a Democrat for the
vice-presidency of the United States -- and on this night was
whooping and hollering with the rest of the Kennedys present for a
Republican governor of California.
About the only thought on the long election night that I found
amusing was the possibility that the Kennedys are using Arnold as a
front man in a left-wing plot to take over California. I’ll be
watching him carefully to see how many Kennedys he brings into his
governing team. It’s good to know that if he goes overboard, we can
always recall him.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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