Good News is bad news for kids...
Good News is bad news for kids
I would like to respond to the letters claiming that a religious
club in a public school is just what kids need (Coastline Pilot,
Sept. 24).
The authors may be correct that it is now legal to have religious
clubs on our school campuses because the current Supreme Court has
deemed it so. So too was it legal to keep and sell slaves,
discriminate against blacks and other minorities in employment and
public accommodations, deny women the right to vote and to put
Japanese Americans in internment camps. That does not make the
Supreme Court right, nor does it make it consistent with traditional
American values.
I’m sure that these families are full of wonderful people with
good morals and good intentions, just like most Hare Krishnas or
fundamentalist Muslims or whatever religion you might think of.
Let’s face the facts, the reason the Good News evangelical group
wants to hold meetings on public school campuses instead of their own
private schools, churches or community centers is so that they can
have access to our young, impressionable children. One of their major
admitted goals is to proselytize and convert our children; all you
need to do is check them out on the Internet and you will see their
goals.
The fact that Katy Crumley thinks that it is wonderful that the
opportunity for “our elementary children to learn the great truths of
God ... “ is all the more reason for great concern. It is a slippery
slope, indeed. Evangelical Christians are not the only religious
groups that maintain as a core goal the recruitment of young people.
So too do the Scientologists, the Moonies and Heaven’s Gate. Do we
truly want our public schools to become arenas for all religions to
recruit our children? While the Good News Club may not be the same as
David Koresh or Jim Jones, we must all agree that it is not legal for
our public schools to decide which religions get access to our school
facilities and children and which do not. If we’ve learned nothing
else from the events of Sept. 11, and the current situation in
Afghanistan, Iraq, and many parts of the world, it’s that the wall of
separation between government and religion should remain inviolate.
Otherwise, we are subject to religion/government hybrids like the
Taliban encouraging people to engage in suicide attacks against
others, all in the name of their particular god.
Whatever way you look at it, the Good News Club is bad news for
our public schools.
ELIZABETH ANSELL
Laguna Beach
Wow! Judging from the mailbag last week, many parents (at least
three mothers) favor elementary school after-school Bible studies.
I would favor them too if the children were mature enough to
comprehend the meaning of such a profound book. But young minds are
capable of just so much. That’s why elementary school students are
not registered to vote or licensed to operate motor vehicles. A few
warm and fuzzy Bible stories and songs, totally out of context to the
much greater portion of less comforting Bible stories, do not a Bible
study make.
It is a disingenuous attempt to snag children’s hearts and minds
before their emotions and intellects are developed. Dirty pool!
The Good News Club may be constitutional, but it’s dishonest. That
itself sets a bad example. Why can’t they wait until children are
mature enough to take on the whole Bible, warts and all?
NIKO THERIS
Laguna Beach
Village Entrance was logical solution
We have an ugly Maintenance Yard in the very heart of Downtown.
The estimated cost to move it to Act V was once estimated by our
city manager to be $5 million. A current cost estimate could easily
be double that original out-of-date cost estimate. The City Council
has already expended a large sum of money for a design contest for
the Village Entrance Project. The winning design concept included a
parking structure for 400 cars and would house the Maintenance Yard.
Why has our City Council not instructed our city manager to proceed
further with this project ?
Instead, the council has voted to waste millions of taxpayer
dollars (money that could be used toward the Village Entrance
Project) to move only a part of the Maintenance Yard to Act V. Our
city manager has said that the ugly “tin shacks” will remain after
the rest of the facility is moved to Act V, so what will be
accomplished to clean up this eyesore in our midst ?
The aesthetics, economics and logic of this expensive move escape
me.
The ugliness remains. We will have delayed the building of the
Village Entrance Project (by who knows how long) by diverting
millions to moving only a part of the Maintenance Yard. We will gain
some 190 parking spaces at the current Maintenance Yard while we will
lose nearly that many peripheral parking spaces at Act V. Is this
progress toward the solution of traffic and parking problems?
The city needs to retain all of the present peripheral parking
spaces at Act V to help to eliminate cars from our streets. It was
proven this past summer that visitors will use Act V and ride our
colorful free trams into town. The city desperately needs the
additional 400 parking spaces that would be provided by the very
concept design of the Village Entrance Project that has already been
accepted by the council.
The city needs to move ahead with the Village Entrance Project by
canning the very expensive move to Act V. Such action would clean up
the eye sore of the Maintenance Yard, provide a huge net gain in
parking spaces and retain a peripheral parking system that works to
keep visitors’ cars off of our crowded streets. By moving ahead with
the Village Entrance Project and canning the very expensive Act V
move the city could better utilize taxpayers’ dollars.
It is urgent that Laguna address our traffic and parking problems
with logic. I guess this is just too logical. Maybe we need a new
City Council.
DON KNAPP
Laguna Beach
Candidates’ history tells the real story
For the Fall 2003 Festival of Arts board election, then Festival
President Bruce Rasner sent out a mailing to festival members.
Councilwoman Cheryl Kinsman and then Festival of Arts Vice-President
John Campbell were listed prominently under “We Support Bruce Rasner
for the Festival of Arts Board.” Kinsman is running for re-election
to the Laguna Beach City Council and Campbell for the Festival Board.
Although well intentioned, they both should be replaced.
As vice president, Campbell chaired the Festival of Arts Nov. 12,
2003 meeting where it was announced that Rasner received 293 votes in
his re-election effort. The slate led by long-serving board member
David Young won overwhelmingly with Young receiving 1,115 votes,
Anita Mangels and Carolyn Reynolds 984 votes each. At the meeting,
Campbell noted Young asked him to join the board. Young interrupted
him and said it was the worst mistake he had ever made.
I do appreciate the time and effort Kinsman and Campbell donate to
our community, however, I seriously question their judgment. They
supported Rasner during and after:
* witnessing his secretive and abrasive leadership style as
Festival of Arts President;
* hiring Executive Director Steve Brezzo for $175,000;
* managing the festival and pageant as a corporation to increase
revenues to the greatest degree; and
* pursuing licensing the Pageant of the Masters to other venues
even though specifically in conflict with the new 40-year lease with
the city
Kinsman and Campbell supported this vision for Laguna Beach and
the Festival of Arts. Unbelievably, plans included covering the
Irvine Bowl for a cost of $4.4 million. Due to their poor judgment,
Kinsman and Campbell should be replaced.
GENE FELDER
Laguna Beach
Campbell did no more than others
In reading the campaign literature of John Campbell, in his effort
for re-election to the Board of Directors for the Festival of Arts, I
find it quite difficult to understand what the other board members
were doing while Campbell was so busy overseeing our construction
program, lease negotiations, insurance program, keeping the festival
in Laguna and, most importantly, performing the duties of a board
member.
Campbell, as a board member, had certain duties for which he was
responsible.
He accepted his proper responsibilities.
DAVID YOUNG
Laguna Beach
Festival of Arts Board of
Directors member
Pearson still has questions to answer
My letter did not accuse Councilwoman Elizabeth Pearson of
receiving the gift of a ride in a limousine to Beverly Hills, but it
did question her motivation as to why she would bother to travel all
that way as a favor to the Athens/Montage people (“Pearson needs to
see the real problem,” Coastline Pilot, Sept. 10). My question remains unanswered.
She continues to miss the point of ethics here. As a taxpayer, and
a constituent, I expect council members to represent me, my needs and
my quality of life, not just the wants and desires of developers who
do not -- save for a few employees -- even vote, live, or raise their
children in this community. Pearson reminds us of the 55% vote in
favor of Montage, but has she forgotten her responsibility to the
other 45%, nearly half of the rest of Laguna Beach voters, who voted
no on Montage and now see another Montage project looming in Aliso
Creek that they don’t want?
CHARLOTTE MASARIK
Laguna Beach
* The Coastline Pilot is eager to run your letters. If you would
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