Category Archives: Paul Miller

The Year in Review

It has been a bittersweet year for the Conejo Valley. We’ve seen the worst—a crippling downturn in the housing market, a rash of store closings, a sharp increase in unemployment, the reelection of Elton Gallegly and Audra Strickland, the election of Tony Strickland, the passage of antigay legislation—and we’ve seen the best—the election to the presidency of Barack Obama.

Only one mark in our favor seems trifling, pitiful, laughable. But it is not. The nation can always and forever be proud to have elected an African American to the highest office in the land. The Democratic party can always be proud that it was the first party to successfully run an African American candidate. But most of all, the American people can never cease to be proud of what it has accomplished by the election of this man to the White House.

We have rejected eight years of regressive policies, economic mismanagement, willful ignorance, and petulant statesmanship. We have accepted in its place a new openness. We have confirmed America’s place at the standard bearer of liberty, as a place where the Constitution, not a muddled theocratic conception of the world, is the highest source of law. We have reclaimed our rightful place among the community of nations.

Barack Obama, there is a lot on your shoulders, but we believe in you. Do not ever be discouraged. There is a nation depending on you.

There was a telling few seconds of video on the NBC Nightly News the other night. The story dealt with California’s fiscal crisis and Republican obstructionism. A brief snippet of video showed Tony Strickland in the Senate chamber lethargically poking away at a Blackberry while the important business of the state passed him by. His answer to the budget crisis was a simple “no.” No is not a responsible answer. No simply abdicates responsibility to someone else. No is not leadership.

It would be easy at this point to bemoan the loss of Hannah-Beth Jackson to Strickland in the narrowly contested Senate race. But what matters is where we go from here. We have a budget; there is still much work to be done. So Democrats lick the wounds they’ve suffered from during the last year, but  can be confident in the knowledge that they have won the fight—and that their good work will continue to invigorate our nation.

Greenberg Gets it Right

Congratulations are in order for Steve Greenberg, editorial cartoonist for the Ventura County Star, for his superb piece in Sunday’s paper. I think it captures my feelings about the constitutionality of the matter pretty well. Check out his website for more well-crafted cartoons.

Simi Church Billed

Simi Valley Mayor, City Council Wrong to Fine Church

Paul MillerThe Ventura County Star reported today that Simi Valley Mayor Paul Miller would send the United Church of Christ in Simi Valley a bill for nearly $40,000 for protests that took place near the church this weekend.

 

 

The church has been “harboring an illegal immigrant,” according to Miller. The immigrant is identified in the report only as “Liliana.” The mayor and the city council are apparently angry that despite their having warned Rev. June Goudy in August not to take in Liliana, she defied them.

 

 

The mayor’s and city council’s actions are clearly unconstitutional. Goudy should hire a lawyer and contest the fine. She will prevail in court.

 

 

A similar incident occurred in San Bernardino this spring after the City of San Bernardino billed Armando Navarro, organizer of a peaceful antiwar and pro-immigration rally, $17,674.08 for their policing of the event.

Patrick Morris

 

In this case, the city’s sensible mayor, Patrick Morris, who served for 30 years as a Superior Court judge, was strongly opposed to the fine, saying in a May 17 e-mail that “The right to free speech, especially when it involves criticism of our government, is one of our most cherished individual rights as Americans.”

 

 

“This fundamental right cannot and should not be burdened with the concern or fear that if you exercise your right to free speech, you will be sent a bill by your government.”

 

Save Our State

 

 

The irony is that most of the protesters were from an inane and mean-spirited group, Save Our State, which was picketing the church in protest of its protection of Liliana.

 

 

The problem with these organizations and the politicians that support their point of view, like Miller and Congressman Elton Gallegly, is that they focus only on the problem of illegal immigration and turn a blind eye to less talked about values that made our country great: tolerance, hospitality to foreigners, compassion, and charity.

 

 

They forget, perhaps, that their own ancestors were immigrants too, albeit probably legal immigrants, but with the sameAnti-Irish Cartoon, Thomas Nast desire to live in freedom and prosperity.

 

 

Instead of taking a humane approach to the problem of illegal immigration, politicians and anti-immigration activists and their supporters instead focus on its negative aspects, notably those few individuals who commit crimes.

 

 

Gallegly’s recent editorial in the Ventura County Star is a prime example of this intolerance.

 

 

The United States has both the right and obligation to enforce its own immigration laws. But we should not lose the soul of the nation in the process.

 

 

In the end, Liliana, if she is an illegal immigrant, would have to be deported. This is a sad and an avoidable consequence of her decision to cross the border illegally.

 

 

It is avoidable because we can change our laws to allow guest workers. Our economy demands such a change, but the mainstream of the Republican Party cannot seem to get its act together and support the idea.

 

 

The Chinese QuestionIt may be that Miller, who has had a long career in law enforcement prior to becoming mayor, does not understand that his actions are illegal under the Constitution. Perhaps he is blinded by his anger at having the resources of his officers tied up by an inconvenient protest, caused by the actions of a person he disagrees with.

 

 

I’d like to give him the benefit of the doubt.

 

 

But it is more likely that Miller knows exactly what he is doing. It seems that he is using his political office not for the good of the community, but to advance his cynical political agenda by whatever means are at hand.

 

 

“This city is not going to be known as ‘sanctuary city,’” Miller said, according to the Ventura County Star.

 

 

He will not win this fight.

 

 

Links:

 

“Church to Be Billed for Costs of Protest,” by Anna Bakalis, Ventura County Star, September 19, 2007.

 

 

“Mayor: City Was Wrong to Bill Protesters, by Robert Rogers, SBUSN.com, May 18, 2007.

 

 

Controlling Public Protest: First Amendment Implications,” by Daniel L. Schofield, Unit Chief of the Legal Instruction Unit at the FBI Academy, Law Enforcement Bulletin, November 1994.

Patrick Morris’s Superb E-Mail