Wanting to clean up slums is not racist
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I would like to thank the Daily Pilot and Jennifer Kho for including
my comments in her article that appeared on Jan. 22, “Costa Mesa faces
the challenges of diversity.”
However, as I scanned the entire article, I saw that there are
apparently some in this city with a topsy-turvy view of reality and what
can only be viewed as some sort of persecution complex.
How else can we explain what appear to be whispered comments alluding
to seeming dark undercurrents of racism and the like? What nonsense.
The improvement movement of which I was one of the founders is all
about making Costa Mesa the best city it can be. It’s about removing
slums. It’s about reducing crime. It’s about making this city more like
its two quality neighbors -- Huntington Beach and Newport Beach.
It’s my belief that those who want to keep the city mired in slums and
social problems want to do so because of psychological problems or
because they profit from slum conditions.
Fortunately, this perverse little clique of city destroyers is far out
on the extremist fringe and most good, decent people ignore them and
their racist fantasies.
It seems to me that every time “racism” rises, so does Bill Turpit
accusing us of xenophobia, Maria Elena Avila noting cliques of activists
who are racists, and Mayor Libby Cowan agreeing.
None of them, of course, live on the Westside, and Avila does not live
in Costa Mesa. The mayor has even invited those who disagree with the
“changing face of Costa Mesa” to move.
Well, I was here before the slums, and I am not moving.
JANICE DAVIDSON
Costa Mesa
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