Rebane's Ruminations
September 2012
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George Rebane

JeffPelline2These pages rarely mention Jeff Pelline or comment on his work.  The exception here is pursuant to an email I received this morning that contained the most recent egregious posting on Pelline’s blog that again misrepresented and attacked me.

For newer readers not familiar with the gentleman pictured nearby, Pelline was at one time editor of The Union.  From our first and only meeting, we didn’t hit it off – the differences between us were too great, literally in every dimension imaginable.  As the capacity and countenance of the total man became known in the community and at the newspaper, the Former Union Editor was terminated as being redundant.  This deprived the very liberal, self- and loudly-proclaimed journalist of his accustomed trumpet and caused his nose to become disjointed, in which condition it has remained since.

By any measure, Pelline is a dedicated leftwinger who attempts to present himself as a middle-roader to those unfamiliar with the country’s political terrain.  He has a following that he deems wholly insufficient for his obvious grandiosity.  With that following he communicates through the blog which he started after leaving The Union.  His posts continue to reflect a persistent bitterness toward his former employer, containing “scooplets” of local news that seek to compete with our newspaper.  These droll postings of local store openings, entertainment events, etc are regularly interspersed with diatribes attacking what he understands about and/or fabricates from what is happening on the Right.

But the real burr under his blanket seems to be RR and the extension of its themes through my Union columns and KVMR commentaries.  Even though my voice is an admittedly small one, it seems to be of the type that needs to be muted if not silenced in the worldview of his politics.  My monthly columns and biweekly commentaries should be proscribed because they do not represent the middle-mind of the county as Pelline sees it.  And being the Grand Arbiter of Political Placement and Correct Thought, he sees my views as being harmfully divergent from the permitted latitude of local thought.


So for some years now the man has continued to bitch and moan about my print and broadcast presence, and various appearances at local events.  His latest apoplexy is the result of my September column ‘The Advent of Obamunism’.  In his most recent diatribe – the post that launched my response – he takes a couple more steps down the ladder of journalistic standards, a ladder that apparently goes all the way down.  (BTW, I am not a journalist.)

Besides repeating his special views of acceptable politics and the aggregate political leanings of our county, he attempts to show how unsuitable is my presence in this forum by again misrepresenting what I wrote, this time in regards to last June’s primary election.  Pertaining to my backing Sue McGuire, he stated –

Before the election Rebane wrote: “Sue McGuire has all of the qualifications to become our new supervisor,” and I’m voting for her, not Nate Beason. – Rebane, May 30

The use of the first person pronoun outside of the quotes to convey what I said is a big no-no in journalism.  I did not say “and I’m voting for her, not Nate Beason.”, which fabricated coda is even appended with the attribution “- Rebane, May 30”, thereby giving the reader the sense that the whole thing was my pronouncement.

A more competent journalist with professional standards would have written – ‘In his endorsement of Sue McGuire, who ran against Nate Beason, Rebane stated on May 30th that “Sue McGuire has all of the qualifications to become our new supervisor.” ’

(To see the variance from fact and tone in Pelline’s reporting, please read my entire post ‘Voting for Sue McGuire and Doug LaMalfa’ from which the above mal-quote was generated.  Also please read Pelline’s entire piece and attempt to decipher his attributions and emphases.)

Continuing in the same perfidious vein, Pelline tells his readers that I then tried to misrepresent the local loss by Sue McGuire, by writing –

After the election, he tried to downplay the outcome: “Dammit Todd, don’t tell ‘em [we won]. Let ‘em rest in the comfort of their fabricated world.”

This tongue-in-cheek quote, sans the gratuitous [we won], was taken totally out of context, and from a comment I made on Todd Juvinall’s  blog (!) under a post in which Todd summarized the overall performance of conservatives in the primaries across the United States.

Such examples of twisted journalism abound on Pelline’s blog, not only directed against me, but also against other local voices who do not fit into his mangled mold of the attitudinal profile a community should have.  Hidden under his substantial ego is a very small, bitter, and nasty man who represents the worst of his profession.

I’ll end with an apology to RR readers for this tedious distraction from our usual daily round of more stimulating discussions and debates, a distraction which unfortunately also betrays my human frailties.

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69 responses to “Journalist ≠ FUE = Sleazebag”

  1. Steven Frisch Avatar

    Correct me if I am wrong George, but didn’t you arrive here in 2002 after a life of work in Southern California living off government contracts and on the government payroll?

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  2. Steven Frisch Avatar

    This “anti-newcomer’ thread of Todd’s is just another form of hick chauvinism. We all live here because we choose too. We are all part of the same community. The world has seen populations move for time memorial. Nothing is ever going to change that. To bemoan it as a curse instead of embrace it as an opportunity is the ultimate example of our divided world views.

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  3. Russ Steele Avatar

    Todd,
    We are always chuckling about how quickly the For Sale signs go up on Banner after a big snow year. Not so much last year, it was an easy winter, but boy wait for two hard ones in a row and the For Sale signs sprout like spring weeds on Banner Mountain. Back to the Valley, or below the snow line the newcomers go.

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  4. George Rebane Avatar

    StevenF 925am – Perhaps my 810am wasn’t sufficiently clear. Yes indeed, we moved here in 2002 after a life of camping in the Sierra and getting to know its small towns on both sides of the mountains. We knew Nevada County since 1992, and somewhere in the interval decided that it would be our new home after soCal.
    But the difference between people like us and those of a more progressive bent is that we didn’t want to change Nevada County, we didn’t want to haul the culture and values of soCal up here, and start militating that they be accepted by those whose roots go deep in these mountains. We wanted and still want to blend into the traditions and lifestyle that made these mountain communities such wonderful repositories of what has made America great.
    It was the same in 1949 when we arrived on these shores. The Rebanes wanted to blend in and become Americans, instead of hauling Europe with them and joining with those like minded who wanted to change the local scene. (Today some are hell bent on taking the worst of Europe and imposing it on America.)
    And re my “living off government contracts and on the government payroll”. The only time I was on the government payroll was when I was on active duty in the Army. And I lived off government contracts doing the research and developing systems which the government could not accomplish internally, systems whose employment gave, and still give us the security to maintain the individual liberties that allow you to freely work for the threatened fundamental transformation of America.

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  5. Paul Emery Avatar

    George
    As a migrant to Nevada County in 1976 I had a pretty good seat to observe evolution of our towns. The renaissance of Western Nevada County was largely the result of the counter culture bent settling here in the early 70’s that saved the Nevada Theatre, started the American Victorian Museum, made businesses out of boarded up storefronts and elevated the cultural interests that in turn made this an attractive location for bay area and beyond retirees. Historical preservation in the late 60’s kept the attractive appearance up and eliminated franchise fast food restaurants in the historic district. The “culture” you were attracted to was largely a result of these efforts. I can write a book on this but I can sum it up simply by saying the Nevada County you enjoy today can largely be attributed to the Hippies and Gays who settled here in the 60’s and 70’s and spiritual communities such as Ananda

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  6. George Rebane Avatar

    PaulE 1234pm – Paul, I neither doubt nor denigrate the contribution of the Hippies and Gays, but I do know the record of when this community started picking up in both its population and economy. And there were much larger forces at work then than the Hippies and Gays as the tens (hundreds?) of other Sierra communities can attest. Perhaps ToddJ, RussS, et al can chime in here.
    Today there is no doubt in my mind that the descendants of these bohemians, and the subsequent migration of similar mental sets, make up the economic and regulatory friction that will again relegate these foothills to the destitution of the 1960s and 70s. And all that is because there is a gross ignorance in those classes of the workings of an economy, of human nature, and lack of critical thinking skills, especially if it any numeracy is required.

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  7. Paul Emery Avatar

    George
    It was regularity friction that allows us to enjoy the type of down towns we have today. God only knows what it would be like if it was left up to the rednecks that ran the town down in the 60’s and left it as a Foohills ghost town. Much like the protection of the South Yuba River, one of our greatest assets from French led trashy hydro projects that would have put dams on what we now enjoy as a State park. No help from the neckers on that one.

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  8. Russ Steele Avatar

    Paul@12:34PM and George@12:58PM
    I am sorry to say but the hippies and the gays are nothing but window dressing on the robust economy that was the result of Charles Litton Sr deciding to come to Nevada County and bring the Litton Engineering Laboratory with him in 1953. That move resulted in the creation of an applied technology business cluster in the 60s and 70s that spawned multiple manufacturing business and design centers. In the late 1990, Western Nevada County had 32 design centers that were designing products used around the world.
    Litton invited Dr Hare to come to Nevada County in 1959 to develop his theater sound systems, but when the theater business was over come by TV viewers staying home, Dr. Hare and his engineering team decided to create products for the TV industry, resulting the Grass Valley Switcher. An industry changing product, that eventually led to the development of a world wide recognized video engineering and product development business cluster, as engineers left GVG to start their own firms.
    An advanced technology cluster that provided high paying jobs and solid manufacturing based tax revenue steam for local governments. This industry cluster attracted many highly intelligent community minded individuals to the community, who became civic board members, little league coaches, school volunteers, band members in the local bistros, and much more. Without this advanced technology economic base the hippies and gay would have be nothing but a flash in the pan. There would not have been the money in the community to buy their products and participate in their events with out the video and applied technology business cluster. The gays and hippies were Nevada County window dressing.

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  9. Todd Juvinall Avatar

    Sorry PaulE, you can’t make up yur own history here. I have been here since I popped into the world in 1950. Russ before that. Nevada City is what it today because of Lon Cooper, a retired cop if I recall correctly and a city councilman. He lead the changes in the rules for building and conservation in the historic district. I went through school with his son Jerry, now a lawyer.
    The hippies came here in the late 60’s led by a fellow who became a 15 minute famous type. He lived in a cave and had two or three babes with him. The press was gaga and a bunch of us traveled up there to see what the hubbub was all about. After the press glamorized him the hippie types flooded the ridge (ask Chris Dabis). The rest of the county (except Truckee) prospered because of REAL ESTATE. LOP, LWW and CASCADE SHPRES among the big ones. Hundreds of little ones drew thousands over time. Along with GVG and timber (until the government sgut that down for the most part), the “establishment” made the county what it is today, not the hippies or the homosexuals. I will say all have had a part but REAL ESTATE was the drivng force along with construction.

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  10. Steven Frisch Avatar

    Re: one portion of George Rebane | 22 September 2012 at 10:29 AM
    Are you seriously saying that because you came here with somehow pure motivations that your contribution is somehow different than other people who came here? The reality is that Americans are remarkably mobile people, and the citizenship rights that we carry with us are mobile as well as our persons. Thus the contribution of someone that comes here from Simi Valley expounding on his philosophy of Hayek and Bastiat are no different than the contribution of someone who comes here from the Haight expounding the philosophy of Keynes or Krishnamurti. Every new influence coming to a region changes it in some way, and that is as it should be.
    I visited Truckee for my first time on a cross country trip in 1978. I later moved to California, with stops in the Bay area and San Diego, before I settled here, never being more than 6 months without a trip to the region.
    The anti-newcomer meme is nothing but chauvinism. pure and simple. It is an attempt to discount or minimize the influence of newcomers by creating a litmus test for civic engagement. It is this attitude in part that accounts for the late adoption of change that often holds the economies and skills of rural regions behind those of more urbanized area. The ultimate in chauvinism is the assumption that ones own motives are pure while others are not. It is actually a rather elitist attitude if you really get down to it.
    We are all part of a community, and my contribution is every much as important as Todd’s or yours, or Paul’s. To think any other way is downright backward thinking.
    Re: The debate over hippies versus GVG–why is it so hard for people to understand that it took and takes both? No economy, culture or system is composed of one thing. Why do we insist on “one true answer”? This is yet another example of the magical thinking that makes our ability to rationally agree on a path forward so difficult.

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  11. Russ Steele Avatar

    Steven@09:23, you wrote:
    “Every new influence coming to a region changes it in some way, and that is as it should be.”
    Yes, that is true. However some influences have longer term impact than others. The “spotted owl” scare by the environmentalists that kill the lumber industry is one example. The zoning that banned any “big box” stores without considering the long term consequences was another. Nevada County citizens are shopping in the “big box” stores in Roseville to get the product they want at the lowest possible price. With no local big box stores people go on line to get the best price and have it delivered right to their door. The leakage is approaching $200 million dollars, that results in lost tax revenue for local governments. Banning big box stores is having some long term consequences and more big box stores will soon be opening in Auburn, making the problem even worse. Shorter trip, less time, lower fuel costs.
    I will give you an example. I needed some halogen light bulbs for a kitchen light bar. Cost locally for a pack of three was $14.98. Online at Amazon the cost for a pack of six was $14.98 with free shipping delivered the next day. A crowbar at the local hardware was $45.00. In Roseville “big box” store $27.00. That “big box” store is now in Auburn, reducing the transportation cost by 1/3.
    Nevada County has missed out when the current zoning and community attitudes have prevented the development of business parks large enough for a major manufacturing firm to move here. With billions in gold under our feet community attitudes have blocked development of mines to extract that gold.
    During the last great depression, it did not have much of an economic impact on Nevada County, due to the gold mines that provided jobs and tax revenues for government services. Those gold miners keep the local shops and saloons open, creating community based wealth.
    Rather than consider the needs of the whole population of the community, we have tribal groups that are only interested in their vision of the future. Many, not all, of those tribal leaders refuse to come to Ruminations and debate their ideas like you do, they refuse to even address the ideas presented here. Why is that?

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  12. George Rebane Avatar

    SteveF 923am – “The anti-newcomer meme is nothing but chauvinism. pure and simple. It is an attempt to discount or minimize the influence of newcomers by creating a litmus test for civic engagement.”
    You mistake the character of the meme in this thread. It is not of the simplistic “anti-newcomer” kind. No one here professes to be of a blanket anti-newcomer sentiment, and insisting on that stops the conversation. And no one has claimed to “minimize the influence of newcomers”, in fact it is exactly the other way around – the influence in changing the character of the community by certain new-comers is acknowledged to be very significant.
    Also, such statements as “No economy, culture or system is composed of one thing.” are your fabrications of what no one here has maintained. Perhaps you had some other blog’s arguments in mind when you wrote this, or maybe it was another instance of ‘I know what you are thinking.’
    The entire notion of what it takes to make a good community is worthy of its own post, and I will get to it directly. In the meantime, I will leave you with the blasphemous(?!) thought that it does NOT take all kinds of cultures and value systems coming together to make any given community most beneficial to any of its inhabitants.
    Steve, I appreciate your considered remarks because they represent the dominant, widely taught, and politically correct viewpoint, especially in California. I, and perhaps one or two others, consider it to be one of the biggest social errors in the land. Airing out the particulars should be both revealing and, perhaps, productive.

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  13. Todd Juvinall Avatar

    I think SteveF is jut too sensitive to be posting here. Hell, my dad and mom moved here in 1945 and were called flatlanders for years! Goldmining was going on and until 1856 was a major emploter. Russ is correct about the spotted owl crap. The econuts were victorious and we all watched as thousands of families were handed a pink slip all over Northern California. Thanks SteveF for that bud. The hippies brought nothing here. They have been and still are a bunch of moochers. They grow and manufacture illegal drugs and their kids are following in their footsteps.
    I also would like to know what you have brought Nevada County and Truckee SteveF. Give us a list of your accomplishments.

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  14. THEMIKEYMCD Avatar

    Paul E, hour diatribe against rednecks is in error. Do you not enjoy the wide open spaces provided by the lifestyles/livelihoods of the rednecks you love to hate?
    As a redneck (who values locally grown food, water, inexpensive power) and has been on the NID waiting list for years (!) I would be in favor of more dams/reservoirs. I think more supply of h20, electricity and recreation is a blessing to a community….. AND it helps the less fortunate.
    I doesn’t take much time in reflection to know that today’s traffic issues, lack of H20, and energy crisis are the byproducts of too much government planning.

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  15. George Rebane Avatar

    Please continue the ‘community thread’ in the next post ‘What makes a good community?’ Thanks.
    http://rebaneruminations.typepad.com/rebanes_ruminations/2012/09/what-makes-a-good-community.html

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  16. billy T Avatar

    I will post later on “What makes a good community”. Just to round out this thread of Journalists and Sleazebags and Liberals and Purple People Eaters, here is a small news blurp that hits the control freaks who love to pave the road to hell with feel good intentions: ww.jsonline.com/news/education/students-strike-against-new-federal-school-lunch-rules-t96t7sp-170124676.html

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  17. Russ Steele Avatar

    billyT
    Even after I fixed the missing “w” in the link, the browser could not find the referenced page. Searched the paper and came up empty.

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  18. TomKenworth Avatar

    Since the spammer brought it up., I assume George & Company here would have absolutely no objections to Big Box stores opening up here in town, and would call the family owned B&C and Hills Flat socialists if they tried to block them. After all, it’s a dogpile world, by Libertarian and Bastiat Triangle choice. Who are you to pry into the the private contract affairs of the Walmart Family, which is currently undergoing a run-in with commie organizers? Walmart has a perfect right to recommend their employees take advantage of the state welfare programs, right?
    And the following is a perfect way to run a country:

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