CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2021, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“LET’S STOP NAMING THINGS
FOR PEOPLE”
The
U.S. Postal Service can be justifiably criticized for a lot of things. One is
the 2011 decision to begin allowing images of live people on United States
stamps.
This
relatively new policy puts into bas relief some of what’s happened in California
over the last 18 months, when a lot of things named for persons living or dead
have been renamed or removed because the honorees had feet of clay.
It’s
not merely hazardous to name things for live people, but also to name them for
the dead.
That’s
because true saints are rarities in America and everywhere else. Junipero
Serra, a leader of the Spanish mission era in early California history, is a
one example. Back in the 1990s, while he was beatified and sainthood awaited,
Pope John Paul, himself now a saint, visited San Francisco and speechified on
Serra’s virtues. Protesting throngs closed down San Francisco’s busy Geary
Street as they objected to sainthood for Serra, who the crowds believed helped
enslave myriad Native Americans, orchestrating their forced labor for missions,
their farms and other enterprises.
He
achieved sainthood anyway. But in the last few months, as more history emerged
and Native Americans and Latinos became more vocal and political, several
statues of Serra have been pulled down.
High
schools and streets still bear his name, but it’s a good bet some won’t much
longer.
Then
there was the Richard M. Nixon Freeway (California 90) between the San Diego
Freeway (I-405) and Marina del Rey in Los Angeles County. Named for the
then-President when it opened in the early 1970s, this road quickly lost its
name when Nixon’s role in the Watergate scandal emerged.
This
happens in academe, too. Until recently, many buildings and other items on the
Stanford University campus were named for founding school President David Starr
Jordan. Jordan’s place in history is assured, but not his name on university
properties. Once it became widely known he was an early advocate of eugenics, a
plan to “improve” the human race by letting some people reproduce while
sterilizing others, Jordan’s name quickly came off most places it once adorned.
The
same for 1920s-1940s USC President Rufus Von KleinSmid, who built his campus
and its athletic programs into formidable forces. Also an advocate of eugenics,
a theory that became a key part of Nazi Germany’s efforts to “purify” its
populace, Von KleinSmid’s name has been removed from most of its former
perches.
And
what about Serranus Hastings, who gave his name and plenty of money to San
Francisco’s Hastings College of the Law, alma mater of Vice President Kamala
Harris? That name won’t last much longer, now that it’s become clear Hastings
organized a set of Native American massacres, complete with bounties.
Now comes Mark Ridley-Thomas, a Los
Angeles city councilman and termed-out former county supervisor under
indictment for allegedly conspiring with a USC dean to get his son Sebastian
admitted as a scholarship student and named a professor. In return, millions of
dollars in county contracts were supposedly funneled to USC. A bridge now
carries his name, but for how long?
And
in far Northern California, the gorgeous Patrick’s Point State Park has
reacquired its Yurok Indian name of Sue-meg State Park. Why? The point’s former
namesake, 1850s-era settler Patrick Beegan, stands accused of murdering
multiple Yurok tribesmen.
Put
all this together and the hazards of naming things for prominent people becomes
very clear, even if they helped create many projects and institutions.
The
realization is fast dawning that we usually don’t know enough about
individuals, living or dead, prominent or not, to trust they are worthy of
honors they sometimes bestow on themselves or are awarded by others.
It
might have made a nice retirement gift for David Starr Jordan to have his name
affixed to several Stanford sites, but decades later, this became an
embarrassment for the university.
So
let’s begin a new policy as soon as possible: Give parks and buildings and freeways
names descriptive of their location and nature, not someone’s name.
For
if there’s one thing we know about human beings, it is that none of us is
perfect.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book,
"The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the
Government’s Campaign to Squelch It" is now available in a soft cover
fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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