![]() | Ortiz y PinoWorshipping BaalThe North Golf Course is safe ... for now![]() The news out of the UNM president’s office last week was good. In the face of the community’s vocal opposition to the scheme, he and the university regents have decided to put their plans to carve a retirement center out of the fairways and rough that make up the venerable North Golf Course near the Law School on indefinite hold. The university is going ahead with its latest bond issue without including the revenue stream (estimated to be in excess of $2 million annually) the company which sought to develop the retirement center would pay for its lease to the property. Other UNM properties and projects have been included in the bond package to replace the money the golf course would have generated. It didn’t escape UNM leadership that the neighbors who’d risen in defiance of the project included many of the community’s most influential and well-placed figures, not the sort to crumble in the face of slick architectural renderings or impressive profit and loss statements. The university’s decision was not so much a surrender as a strategic retreat for temporary, tactical considerations. But its leaders have not lost sight of their primary goal: How best to turn this juicy plum, this parcel of choice real estate in a highly desirable location, into a profit center. We can expect in the near future to see another version of “Let’s Make a Deal” with the golf course land, and you can bet that when it next emerges it will be with the enthusiastic support of most of our state’s opinion makers: the media and our elected local and state officials. And next time it will fly. Bet on it. I can predict this because I just read the piece “Hot Air Gods” written by Curtis White in the December issue of Harper’s[xurl]. White explores our national idolatry, our worship of our favorite pagan god, our Baal: the marketplace. I recommend the article to you, but be prepared to be disheartened. You can’t expect a fish to critically examine water’s suitability as an environment when it assumes water simply is nature; is what all life exists in. The fish can’t imagine another environment because it can’t conceive of nature as anything different from what it has always experienced. Thus in our country today, it is considered heretical to question the primacy of “The Market.” You can practice whatever (any) other belief system you choose and our rigorously pluralistic culture will (perhaps grudgingly, but prodded by the courts, eventually) make room for you at the table. As long as you don’t let your creed interfere with our national worship of profit. The opinions expressed are solely those of the author. E-mail jerry@alibi.com. Public Comments |
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