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The
Melting Pot
Secession.
It's a searing, tearing word. A ripping
of social fabric that proclaims civic,
cultural and political failure.
Separatism by another name. And it's what
our neighbors in the Valley and Hollywood
are intent upon accomplishing come the
November election. How did it come to
this? The municipal rending of the
country's second largest city didn't
happen in a vacuum. So who fell asleep at
the wheel?
The
obvious answer is city and county
officials. Their seemingly myopic,
parochial and territorial management has
antagonized entire segments of the
population, further eroding public
confidence in the business of governance.
Politically, the last fifteen years in
L.A. have been uninspired, short-sighted
and disconnected, with the consequences
now looming. Those leaders certainly bear
fault. But the harder answer is really
something else, a quite different
repudiation as it turns out, and
tellingly, though inadvertently,
expressed by two letter writers to the
L.A. Times recently. In admonishing
anti-secessionists, one Los Angeles
resident writes, "...By the way, has
anybody driven through West Hollywood
lately? Independence has never looked
better." The implication, of course,
is that cityhood automatically brings
prosperity. But another asks, "Do
secessionists really believe that,
overnight, the Valley will become like
West Hollywood?" This really gets to
the heart of the matter, namely that a
governing charter doesn't make a city.
People do. West Hollywood is held up as
an example of civic success not because
of municipal independence, but because of
the local populous. We on the Westside
enjoy relative cultural homogeneity,
bereft of the competing group politics
that roil social issues throughout much
of the rest of the metro area. Though
this may evoke images of class
consciousness and distinction, the result
has been safe and attractive
neighborhoods.. The Valley sees this and
attributes it to cityhood, when in
reality it's a matter of citizenry. It's
also a matter of common sense.
Twenty-five years ago, California
embarked on a conscientious and noble
experiment in social engineering. This
was soon followed by major changes in
immigration laws, subsequently casting
bias toward the previously
under-represented Third World. The
convergence of these two events, in
addition to creating budget-busting
unfunded federal mandates for state and
local government, turned what had begun
with the best of intentions into the
modern-day equivalent of the Tower of
Babel. Idealism gave way to identity
politics. Multiculturalism replaced a
sense of community and commonality.
Business saw opportunities to profit by
way of worker exploitation, all the while
giving incentive to illegal immigration.
And the shrill indignation of special
interests turned dialog into one-way
communiques. The center could not hold,
as Valley secession demonstrates in stark
relief. Diversity for its own sake has
erected walls, not bridges, and the
pluralistic ideals of the past have
devolved into ethnic chauvinism, as group
rights displaced individual rights. These
are not the tenets upon which to build an
equitable society, and were certainly not
the intentions of the original
multi-culture advocates. At least, I hope
not. But L.A., once the envy of the
nation, now finds itself not only
seriously polarized, but increasingly
poor as well. Whether the issue is public
education, health care or cultural unity,
things are a mess, with the one common
thread being divisiveness. Can you blame
the Valley for wanting out? The
experiment hasn't worked. Admirable as it
was, social engineering has failed to
deliver anything worth emulating by a
nation that looks to us for social and
political trends. The message now being
sent is, "If you want your
metropolitan areas to balkanize, then
follow our lead."
These
are topics that are not ordinarily
debated in public, deemed to inflammatory
to discuss openly. And for precisely that
unwillingness to address those issues do
we now confront the break-up of Los
Angeles. For so long, the hot embers were
swept under the rug to avoid stepping on
them, and now the whole house is on fire
as a result. Somewhere along the line,
progressiveness got highjacked by
"group think", as it became
necessary to accommodate cultural
sensitivity first. Where political
correctness was once rightly employed as
a means to an end, it has now become the
end in itself. Race-based politics makes
a mockery of citywide consensus, and
ethnic loyalties trump all others. This
is a "melting pot" alright. The
pot is melting!
Do I
think the Valley will transform overnight
should secession pass? No. But having the
ability to establish local autonomy over
everything from public education
(eventually) to voting district
boundaries will at the very least impart
a sense of building toward
something better and more productive.
L.A.'s vision of the future seems to
entail nothing more than self
perpetuation and the same conflicting
recipe that led to political and
municipal gridlock in the first place.
Maybe the Valley really does have a
better idea. In any event, secession, it
would seem, is the only realistic option
left, and that's a seriously sad
statement of affairs.
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