SOME THOUGHTS ON OUR TIMES

We’re not even through the pandemic and we are “hit” with 24/7 news showing protests and looters. To their credit, one Los Angeles County city actually scheduled a peaceful demonstration for Sunday, apparently forgetting the past: does anyone else remember the 1965 Watts riots? They actually destroyed their own community, focusing on store owners who were different than they and probably immigrants. I had moved to L.A. just the previous year and was shocked at the lengths to which some people would go, purportedly in order to vent their anger at injustice, would steal what was easily grabbed, would beat up innocent people who disagree, would set fires to businesses and, I think, even homes. If you don’t remember that week of riots you can read about it on Wikipedia, along with how the riots and protests started: a Black man was stopped for reckless driving near his mother’s home; his brother left the car brought her to the scene. She chewed her son out for drinking and driving, then ended up attacking the police, and the three of them – mother and two sons – were arrested. The rioting started then and grew to as far away as Pasadena, Pacoima, Monrovia, Long Beach, and even San Diego.

The exact same incidents took place in those cities then as what we saw in the past week: the defiance of necessary curfews, the necessary deployment of the National Guard, attacking first responders like police and their vehicles, arson and looting of stores. Curiously, this time the LAPD and Sheriff were unprepared for the similar actions and the necessary measures took a few days to be employed. Winston Churchill, paraphrasing George Santayana, said “‘Those who fail to learn from history are condemned to repeat it.”

I can understand their frustration and anger somewhat: my immigrant White ancestor, who came here simply to bring the gospel and served the American Indians for years, was murdered by some (who were probably also related to me); years later her son and grandchildren were driven to seek refuge in Canada by the same tribe. But how could I justify punishing American Indians alive now, for what their ancestors did? Somewhere, sometime, somehow, vengeance has to stop being people’s motivation for acting as they have been doing in the past 50+ years.

Am I alone in thinking that what happens in L.A. or elsewhere in California doesn’t really affect the police in Minneapolis? So what good does marching in the streets and on the freeways, disrupting traffic, torching businesses that they would need in the future and the very police vehicles that might have been called to assist them at other times, and otherwise straining LAPD’s and others’ resources, really do? One has to believe that the looters are just hoodlums looking to make a quick buck on someone else’s property. And this time the looters can wear masks to conceal their identities without raising suspicions.

And why would people, who just didn’t like being forced to stay home the past two months in order to stop or slow the pandemic, get out there and violate social distancing, quite likely exposing themselves or others to the Coronavirus, and starting another upsurge? It defies reason.

If the Floyd family can ask for the violence to stop, and respect what George Floyd would have said was appropriate, who is entitled to continue it?

From the policeman’s history, it seems like he should have been fired and arrested a long time ago. For that failure, George Floyd paid the ultimate price, but out of his untimely death perhaps can come some good: a bad cop is finally off the streets. And he will probably have to watch his back constantly when he goes to prison, where he belongs, because the other inmates will likely exact their revenge.

If it seems like these troubles will never end, for the Bible readers Matthew 24 gives a good description of what we can expect in the future. MM

How Mentone is Being Impacted

When you read how people who don’t live here and we don’t even know sank our chance to get the proposed amendment even considered by a Senate committee, doesn’t it make your blood boil? It does ours. One would hope that whoever now employs Ms. Scherkenback catches on to her little scheme of lying – repeatedly – to constituents, in the name of her employer, to manipulate matters to her liking and that she doesn’t get the opportunity to do so any more.
And who is CALAFCO to decide what the Legislature should do? It is advisory, only, to a governmental agency that is not concerned with whether an annexation must take place.
Sometime, somewhere, somehow, someone must take notice of little Mentone (it used to be bigger) and give it a chance to survive and even thrive.

If you’re curious about current numbers you can look at sbcovid19.com. Somewhere I saw the other day that there were 7 confirmed cases in Redlands.  I made an emergency trip to the dentist the other day, through Redlands – of course: adults were jogging, running, biking, walking, no masks.  Kids were out playing without masks and looked at me in my mask in my car as though I were from another planet.  Maybe that’s why they have cases there? 

So far, MM hasn’t heard about any cases in Mentone; I guess Mentonites’ toughness and  independence pay off!  To say nothing of common sense!  Of course, some of those “Redlands” cases could be Mentonites hospitalized there (hopefully not).  Everyone please keep safe out there and one day soon we’ll have MACA and COMET/Chamber meetings again and like will be back to normal, whatever that turns out to be.  In the meantime, won’t you note what lessons you’ve learned from this pandemic?  MM

SOME THOUGHTS ON OUR SITUATION

MM is thinking that Mentonites and others who have enforced time on their hands will be looking for more to do and read and maybe to look at this site. Here are some thoughts on our situation:

A crisis brings out the worst and best in people: there are the hoarders who cleared the supermarket shelves, thinking only of themselves. Then there are the people who think about their neighbors and offer to help. And aren’t we all neighbors?

This won’t last forever. When I was a young mother (a long time ago) a neighbor told me about living through the Spanish flu during World War I and how devastating it was for young men away at war having their fiancees die of the flu back home. It is estimated that hundreds of millions of innocent people succumbed to each of those diseases. And vice versa. In medieval times they had the bubonic plague; then and 100+ years ago they didn’t know as much about vectors and other causes or cures. They didn’t have the electronic microscope so they could see the enemy. But the Spanish Flu went away; the bubonic plague went away. And, although COVID-19 is devastating and we mourn the innocent people who died from it, we know the cause and some treatments, if not the cure yet.

Do what you can with the enforced time you have. For example, someone posted on Facebook the story of Isaac Newton: while he was in quarantine for the bubonic plague, he developed the principles of calculus, optics and gravitational theory.

If you are not impacted financially but the feds send you a check for $1,200 anyway, along with everyone else, give it to someone who really can use it.

Rethink what’s really important to you in your life. Life may be different after this, like it was different after 9/11.

The world is wearing out so we can expect to see more crises like this. We must do what we can to make sure we don’t bring the calamity on ourselves: take proper precautions. If the authorities say stay home, stay home – not only for your own good, but for others’ sake.

While you are alive, do all you can for others, just as others do for you. Or maybe they don’t.

Be ready to meet your Maker any day. None of us is guaranteed tomorrow, even when we’re not in a crisis and life is “normal” – which keeps changing, anyway.

MM welcomes comments – hopefully nice ones. Also, would you like to receive automatic notifications of postings here? Then please subscribe.

Welcome

MentoneMatters.org hopes you are enjoying the occasional publications. If you are not receiving, but wish to receive, automatic e-mail notifications when new articles are published, please subscribe, and we will add you to the list. MM also hopes you are telling others – who live here now or used to live here – about the website so they can enjoy it, too. It’s open to the whole world and we will keep improving it as possible. 

So! The Hangar 24 Air Fest is moving! Hopefully, now they will fly low over Redlands or San Bernardino instead of Mentone, where they have been scaring our animals for the past five years. One year a jet flew over so low we could see the whites of the pilot’s eyes and the sound was deafening. We always thought “If it’s a Redlands event why aren’t they flying over Redlands instead of Mentone?” Especially when I was shopping in Redlands and they weren’t flying over there but over here. Maybe now that will change. ‘Nuff said?

OP-ED

Thanks to Godfreyd, our Crafton Hills intern, you can now click on the links above to go to your chosen page. Way to go, Godfreyd!

OP-ED

Welcome to our new Intern, Godfreyd Tuazon, an honors student at Crafton Hills College.  He works three days a week as well as attending classes in the IT field and we are delighted that he is helping us get the website working even better in his “spare time.”  We have had four college interns thus far, and they have helped us a lot.  MM is sorry we haven’t been able to post anything for months after starting the website because of a lack of help and feels very bad that we couldn’t upload the posters advertising the wonderful events we have in Mentone in the summer and fall.  Hopefully, it won’t take long to be able to do so.  We are also going to be able to notify everyone whose e-mail addresses we have of news so they can check out the site.  We also need to put up permanent signs around town, advertising MentoneMatters.org., so everyone will know what’s going on in town.  Without a local newspaper since 1943, and some of us not wanting to read about Redlands, it is hard to “get the word out” as to what is going on.  The Reynolds’ (see “Interested in Mentone History?” elsewhere) have copies of Grandfather Reynolds’ newspapers and share tidbits with MM, which hopes to have more of them on the site in the future, once this editor/publisher learns how to upload photo-type items.  MM is also wondering: If State Senators can term out why can’t we have U.S. Senators and Representatives time out, too?  One feels that sometimes they do not have their constituents’ best interests at heart, but just politics.        

Have a comment to make? Send it and if it’s decent, we’ll publish it.

NEW STORE IN TOWN? OR NOT?

The Chamber of Commerce met on Tuesday night, July 30, and discussed having a “ribbon-cutting” ceremony for Mentone’s newest store. However, it was reported that Dollar General does not have a tenant or franchisee, even thought the store building is substantially completed.

There were some concerns raised about a hole in the ground in front of the store.

OP-ED PAGE

MM regrets that we have been unable to provide a newspaper for quite some time, owing to the need to defend ourselves full time against personal litigation. Our Crafton Hills College intern, Zoe Lane, is now volunteering her time (Thank you, Zoe!) but is involved in a heavy class this summer and we need to let her alone.

We hope readers enjoy this edition, and also hope to be more up to date in the future.

OP-ED

We welcomed Supervisor Rowe’s comments and suggestions; whether they will succeed in protecting Mentone remains to be seen. We look for her really to protect Mentone, as opposed to her predecessor who – although he claimed to have grown up here – was more interested in his political ambitions than in Mentone and actually favored Redlands’ greedy takeover. As for East Valley Water, perhaps someone out there knows if we are connected to it with piping: the area where the “Harmony” project is sought to be built used to be in Mentone’s territory but LAFCO gave it to Highland, which it serves, and that district may not be able or willing to give us water across the riverbed. It is doubtful that Redlands would agree to sharing the piping it received when it bought Mentone’s water companies.

Redlands likes to claim the Zanja as its own but it forgets that the ditch/creek begins in Mentone territory and if we dammed it up into a reservoir they wouldn’t get any of the water! Say, maybe that would provide some water and thereby alleviate some of our problems with Redlands.

Officer Emon’s comments were certainly understandable: no one likes to go to work thinking that it could be their last day on earth. MM deeply appreciates our law enforcement, firepeople and others who protect us. They do have those Kevlar vests but no helmets, except in limited situations; helmets could go a long way toward protecting them. On the other hand, the ACLU (which MM considers extremely liberal and not always right) says AB 392 addresses the unfortunate police shootings of – sometimes – unarmed people and states that the majority of them are people of color (one hears the most about people of color who are killed by white officers but less about white people who are killed by officers of color). MM has no opinion about which bill to support and urges its readers to Google both bills and make informed decisions for themselves.

This editor has helped the homeless and applauds efforts on behalf of the deserving down-on-their-luck homeless, but what to do about those who are on drugs or choose to live on the streets and off of society because they don’t want someone to tell them what to do? Present-day laws do not force them to go to shelters – even though San Bernardino County says it has the largest number of resources for the homeless in California (usually accepted by the not-of-their-choice victims) – or to get into drug- and alcohol diversion programs or get mental health treatment (including medication where needed) or otherwise be responsible for their own food and lodging. The only solution is to drive them away from here so that they become another city’s, county’s or state’s problem. It seems unfair to the area where they end up (and harsh to the homeless), but who creates the problem? Isn’t the person who chooses to live on the street or in their car, who won’t go to a shelter, get a job or otherwise become responsible for themselves?

Finally, after living four years in Mentone, we still don’t understand why all of the flying – especially the screaming jets – takes place over Mentone rather than Redlands: after all, it is their air show. One year a jet flew so low over our neighborhood that we could clearly see the pilot’s face. It scares our animals and just isn’t necessary over here: another intrusion – this time into our “air space” – by Redlands. We’re always glad when it’s over for another year. This is just MM’s opinion and we will probably hear from those who like the air show over Mentone. MM