School made the right decision Thank goodness...
School made the right decision
Thank goodness sane minds prevailed at St. John the Baptist School
and that same-sex couples can visit the campus together. With all the
money the Catholic Church is paying out over the priest debacle, not
allowing adults to come to school to support the education of their
children was a battle they didn’t need to fight -- and lose.
MIKE BUETTELL
Balboa Island
Parishioners should live by example
I have been following the proposed ban on gay couples at St. John
the Baptist school, and I have to admit that I was disappointed to
hear how parents condemned these people. Under the almighty, we are
all sinners and require forgiveness.
As the crowd brought him a woman and attempted to test Jesus into
condemning her, Jesus said: If anyone here has clear consciences,
then he can cast the first stone.
As educators, church officials and parents, we are required to
deal with issues separately and not shovel problems into one bucket
and generalize the outcomes.
Thus, I ask my fellow St. John parishioners, please do not show
our neighbors and the world our weaknesses and shortcomings, but show
how it is to be a Catholic.
As Jesus has told us through his disciples, we should not just
follow him, but pick up our crosses and follow him.
ALEXANDER P. KUANG
Costa Mesa
Parents need to take responsibly for kids
Mark Gleason and Wendy Leece’s “Parents Talk Back” from Tuesday
states the obvious -- kids do dumb things, the majority of them have
cell phones, and word of any party that parents will not be at
spreads within minutes.
Gleason says he doesn’t “have much sympathy for any of those
involved.” How about no sympathy?
It has become far too common among our youth that parents spoil
their children long past the age when “they are just a child” is a
legitimate excuse for their behavior.
Parents don’t follow through with their threats of discipline and
then try to blame “those who want to permanently remove
Judeo-Christian values from public life” for the kids’ lack of
respect for people, property or values.
Jews and Christians do not have a lock on values. Muslims, Hindus,
Buddhists and just about any recognizable religion is based on the
precepts in Ten Commandments, regardless of how it is worded.
Having traveled the world, and having involved myself in numerous
diverse cultures, I have yet to come across one that shows the
disrespect and lack of honor as blatantly as our own Judeo-Christian
society.
When are parents and their teenagers going to accept
responsibility for their behavior?
They are society; they are the government; they are the
institutions that are blamed for the problems.
Have these teenagers been charged with the crimes they committed?
Are they going to be made personally responsible for the cost of
repairing the homel, or will they be required to assist in the
repair?
Will they be required to fulfill community service? Are there to
be any personal consequences for these kids that the parents won’t
buy their way out of?
If not, those kids will be “way cool” for having the best party at
other people’s expense.
I refuse to paint all parents or teenagers with the same brush of
selfishness and disregard for others, but until parents stop allowing
their kids to rule the roost, we will continue to see this type of
behavior.
ROSEANNE EICHENBAUM
Costa Mesa
Voters, right or wrong, have the right
“We probably get a better person appointed than we would elected.
We know what we’re looking for.” -- Tod Ridgeway.
This Daily Pilot quote attributed to Councilman Tod Ridgeway in
Sunday’s “Notable Quotables,” if true, would certainly seem to be a
depiction of the attitude of Ridgeway (and maybe the council too)
toward our long revered system of representative democracy in this
country.
One must surmise that Ridgeway, if the quote is accurate, has, as
an elected official, a consuming disdain for the electoral process.
I am driven to conclude that he would have all of the residents of
the city of Newport Beach blindly accept the edicts, picks and
appointees of the council rather than exert our efforts to have a
City Council made up of elected representatives.
Yes, we have had councils made up of less than “better” persons --
by whose estimate I wouldn’t know -- but like it or not, our system
is based on the will of the electorate, however flawed.
And to that we are entitled; for better or worse.
ROBERT E. BADHAM
Balboa Island
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Robert E. Badham is a former congressman who
represented Newport Beach.
Don’t judge a pothole without a winter
In his commentary, “Annexation, naught but a dream” on Sunday,
Geoff West wrote that Costa Mesa’s streets “are beginning to resemble
Third World cattle trails.”
In my recently enlightened view, Costa Mesans have excellent
reason to be grateful for said “cattle trails.”
I recently spent two weeks driving about the streets and freeways
of Montreal.
What hard winters do to roadways there is little short of
grotesque: potholes and ruts many inches deep, which stretch across
entire lanes and relentlessly follow one after another throughout the
city.
If potholes were sentient and could observe and comment, Costa
Mesa’s potholes would be weeping and wailing with envy.
DAVID J. STILLER
Costa Mesa
Church proposal needs community OK
The expansion and parking proposal by St. Andrew’s Presbyterian
Church is of grave community concern for the residents of the area
around the church and in the entire city.
I don’t live in that area, but this type of density and intensity
on our side of the bay would be ridiculous. It’s no different from
any other residential community. These types of uses need to be
reined in by this city.
The actions of the Planning Commission were very disappointing,
with only two commissioners siding with the communities.
Many are disturbed by these actions.
Cities are made up of their communities. The city officials need
to look to the community for this important decision, which will have
lasting effects.
I am familiar with the growth of this area, having taught at
Newport Harbor High School for a number of years.
The only way this church should be allowed to expand is if the
neighborhood gives its blessing.
We need to ask St. Andrew’s to improve its quality of facilities
and services, not its size.
The current conditional use permit should indicate that the church
is big enough.
BETTY ORBACH
Newport Beach
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