Practice what
you preach
In
it, I challenged the credibility of CCA Town Council candidate Ron Areglado to
deliver a lecture on civility when he and his CCA cohorts have been far from
civil during their six-year reign of invective in Charlestown.
Areglado’s
remarks published in the Sun on August 31 reminded me a lot of President Lyndon Johnson and things he said in his final
years in office as he took increasingly hard criticism for the carnage in
Vietnam. LBJ, who
had a reputation as one of the meanest, nastiest politicians in 20th
century politics, discovered civility and tried to use it to fend off his
critics.
I think Areglado may be taking a page from LBJ’s
playbook, especially this famous LBJ homily on civility: “I believe it very damaging to the American
nation to have opposition for opposition’s sake, and to have blind opposition…I
try to keep as far away from partisanship and campaigning as I can.”
(Lyndon Baines Johnson, news conference, April 18, 1964).
(Lyndon Baines Johnson, news conference, April 18, 1964).
On
August 31, you published a letter by Ron Areglado entitled “Restore civility
in Charlestown politics” decrying “caustic, disrespectful personal
diatribes.”
Readers
should know that Mr. Areglado is a candidate for Charlestown Town Council endorsed
by the Charlestown Citizens Alliance (CCA), a fact omitted from his letter. Nor
did the letter note that Mr. Areglado was a leader in two unsuccessful
lawsuits
against the town of Charlestown and an unsuccessful
complaint
to the RI Attorney General alleging violations of the Open Meetings Act by the
prior Town Council.
In dismissing
Areglado et al. v. Charlestown Town Council, the Attorney General’s office agreed
with Charlestown Town
Solicitor Peter Ruggiero that there was “a question of credibility” in Mr.
Areglado’s complaint due to a lack of evidence to back up his charges.
Mr.
Areglado’s sermon on civility also did not note the key role he and Maureen Areglado played in the
character assassination campaign the CCA waged against Town Administrator Bill
DiLibero, a campaign that drove Mr. DiLibero from office.
Mr.
Areglado’s sermon does not name names, although I suspect at least one of the
targets for his homily is Progressive Charlestown, the on-line news and opinion
journal where I proudly serve as co-editor. I doubt that Mr. Areglado intended
his deprecations to mean his own organization, the CCA, with its six-year
history of relentless personal attacks against its many enemies.
Mr.
Areglado might be referring to the CCA’s own website and its e-mail publication
of unsubstantiated,
personal assaults,
usually anonymous[i].
But I doubt it.
Politics
is a rough-and-tumble game and Ron Areglado can’t expect to have it both ways.
He cannot expect that he can take hard shots and swing low blows and then
expect any sympathy when his opponents fight back. As ye sow, so shall ye reap
(Galatians 6:7).
Mr.
Areglado begins his ode to civility by quoting Irish orator Edmund Burke’s
famous quote, “Those who don’t know history are destined to repeat it.” Burke
might have added that those who don’t know history are bound to be fooled by
politicians who try to hide their own history.
I
think in Mr. Areglado’s case, a different Edmund Burke quote is more appropriate
– “Hypocrisy can afford to be magnificent in its
promises; for never intending to go beyond promises; it costs nothing.”
Mr. Areglado’s sermon on civility would have a lot more
credibility if he practiced what he preaches.
[i] One of my favorite anonymous CCA
“voices of greed:”
We bought here in the mid 1980′s to enjoy a quiet, slow going community. We understand/understood the value of this being a vacation mecca. Why are we so determined to help this area become even more active, faster paced, and accomodating [SIC] to others than [SIC] live here and enjoy the tranquility? I live close enough to the beach to use my own facilities. I would strongly urge residents to join me in voting for no improvements at any of our beaches. If we need more revenue to continue being Charlestown [SIC], let’s raise the parking rates .
We bought here in the mid 1980′s to enjoy a quiet, slow going community. We understand/understood the value of this being a vacation mecca. Why are we so determined to help this area become even more active, faster paced, and accomodating [SIC] to others than [SIC] live here and enjoy the tranquility? I live close enough to the beach to use my own facilities. I would strongly urge residents to join me in voting for no improvements at any of our beaches. If we need more revenue to continue being Charlestown [SIC], let’s raise the parking rates .