EDITORIAL
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After leading a quiet existence, Costa Mesa’s Human Relations
Committee appears to be getting at the very issues it was created to
address, albeit not in the way some members may have planned to.
Issues of hate. Issues of racism. Issues of intolerance. How the
committee handles these issues may very well define how useful it will be
and signal whether the city is destined to unite across different
cultural, political and religious lines or fracture into tight-knit, but
alarmingly separate, enclaves.
What is at the center of this debate depends on whom you ask. It is
either that three committee members, including one City Council
candidate, posted allegedly racist and homophobic comments to a Web site
dedicated to Costa Mesa issue (and therefore should not be members of the
tolerance committee) or that the trio has been unfairly targeted for
having different viewpoints -- ones they describe as conservative -- from
the majority of the committee.
Less important than the root of the argument is finding a solution to
it, however. And that solution must involve both sides bending toward
each other in a gesture of understanding and tolerance.
For the trio accused of the offending comments -- candidate Allan
Mansoor and residents Jan Davidson and Joel Faris -- that bending means
looking at what they have written and understanding why it has upset
people so severely. An example are posts by Mansoor citing the Family
Research Council and a supposed link between gay men and child sex
abusers. The problem with these is that the council is not an unbiased
source of information and their promotion, drawn from the group’s mission
statement, of “the Judeo-Christian worldview as the basis for a just,
free, and stable society” is counter to the cause of the Human Relations
Committee, which presumably would not promote one “worldview” over
another.
Other posts or statements that denigrate one group in favor of another
are equally counter to the committee’s goal and deserve rebuke and
criticism, from whichever side it may come.
Those charging Mansoor, Davidson and Faris -- and the rest of the
committee, as well -- need to remember that the only view the committee
should be promoting is tolerance and understanding. Certainly, any group
preaching tolerance should be able to include residents who have
different political and religious beliefs, as long as there is agreement
on the basic mission of the committee. That is the point of the group,
after all.
Simply being a “conservative” member of the committee is not reason
enough for removal. But being hateful is. Because the mission of the
Human Relations Committee is clear, the onus is on all members of this
committee, not just Mansoor, Davidson and Faris, to prove that they are
committed to tolerance and understanding. If they cannot, then they have
no place on the committee.
The handling of their defense will be the crucial test for the rest of
the committee. If members cannot cope with these internal problems, it
will be difficult to conceive of them managing citywide issues of hatred
or racism.
But if they can bring their divergent beliefs together, then there
truly is hope for a better Costa Mesa tomorrow.
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