Dear CR list, I have received many kind and supportive posts off list regarding the Confente/Recht/Medici story. Thank you all. It seems necessary to respond to Brian's recent response to that post, because it was sent to the list, not to me. RE: > Personally, I think the only thing between Jim and I in reality is a simple matter of >>personalities being about 180 degrees apart. Happens sometimes. No worries.
In many way we are opposites that don't attract. I have resigned myself to
his opposition. I don't seek Brian's company. I do (and have done) nothing
to harm him and I and try not to express any animosity toward him. I can
work quite well with those whose personality, politics or lifestyle are
distasteful to me. What Brian misses or tries to gloss over here, is that
the problems I have with Brian are his actions against me. Personality
differences just add heat to the formula.
RE: >I was amused buy Jims' account of the goings on between himself, Mario,
and Recht.
It is hard for me to imagine being "amused" by as sad a story as this is.
In recent attempts to socialize with Brian at bike events I have tried to
warm up to him, but I am often repulsed at this sense of humor. It seems
mean spirited. What is funniest to him is others hardships or put downs. I
just can't get into that. This makes it especially hard for me to mend
fences with Brian, although I've tried. A recent effort ended in a shouting
match at the GWBR in 1999.
RE:>The only time I either went in or out of the Confente
shop that day was >with an escort (I assume that >was the Chris person) who
unlocked the >door and let me in where I had no key to open the dead bolt to
>get out.
This sort of thing was one of many things what should have made it clear to
Brian that something was wrong with the situation? (Not to mention unsafe
and illegal) To me it was perfectly clear that the only reason to deny my
request to have a Marshal-escorted notorized inventory performed was to
facilitate Recht's theft?
RE:>I never spoke to Cunningham, and I can assure you that the
>>"conversation"(however cleaver it is; I especially liked the part about
>>the Nazis). <SNIP to the end of the same sorry paragraph> There is a
possibility
>>a conversation took place through one of the push out windows which (I
think)
>>had bars over them on the front of the building;
Now that he mentions it, I do remember that the conversation occurred
through the window. I had forgotten that detail as I had several heated
exchanges on the doorstep. The content of the conversation, which we
absolutely did have, I am quite clear about. Being 50% German and having
Jewish girlfriend at the time, and having ground up with Shultz on Hogan's
Heroes on the tube, the "Nazi" accusation popped out. I am not proud of it.
I think such accusations have no place in such trivial matters as business
and employment disputes. What I meant however, was clear in context: Brian
was shutting out the ethical problem with what was happening, just following
orders that were obviously wrong and refusing someone desperately asking for
his help.
We don't have to speculate on weather we had failed to communicate. Having
read my detailed written explanation of events, Brian says now, "My business
was with them, not you. Even if I could have opened the door, I wouldn't
have if they told me not to." And "your beef with Recht was your business.
My business was to paint bikes. I'm sorry you feel the need to consider me
evil, but I'm OK with that".
I put the anger of that exchange behind me long ago. I recognized that
other things I called him, were probably unfair at the time. I did not know
how short-term his involvement had been, nor that he really could not have
opened the door at all. Remember I supported his being included in the San
Marcos cooperative in 1981. Even after he helped destroy that cooperative,
in very ugly fashion, "evil" is too grand a word for the way I feel about
Brian. I don't waste energy on hate. I do steer clear of people who have
disappointed me.
RE:>I don't think I owe you an apology for anything that happened to you as
a result
>>of your involvement with Bill Recht.<SNIP> But me apologizing to him for
his
>>having gotten involved with Bill Recht isn't going to happen
either.
I agree. As I said before, I never held that single event discussed above, against Brian. Also, Brian had no part in our getting together with Bill Recht. The apology is owed for a series of actions taken later, in San Marcos in 1983. I don't want drag that mess out in public, and I don't expect a public apology. I do think however, if Brian can find it in himself to do so, in private, as did his cohort at the time, Dave Tesch, it would help heal the rift between us. If Recht hurt Mario, perhaps I am to blame for fostering his involvement, but Recht would have contacted Mario and tried to hire him without me. Perhaps I could have sensed Recht' danger sooner, perhaps I could have insisted on a written contract. Perhaps I could have found another investor. Perhaps I could have insisted that Mario get medical check-up that would have uncovered his heart condition. Perhaps... I could not see the future. I did my best in all these areas and more. In our partnership, I saw Mario as the master and myself in a support role, I presented options and expressed opinions but the decisions at all critical points were left to Mario. I suppose to Bill Recht, I had poisoned his plans by helping Mario to believe in himself and the possibility of freedom through hard work in America. Then I exposed Recht's plans and had the audacity to stand up to him. RE: >I have no emotional involvement >in what went on with Recht and Mario and Jim. Jim obviously has a lot, >pretty much all of it negitive. I don't blame him for having bad >feelings about what happened and some of the people involved. For someone with a passion for framebuilding and who knows how hard it is, I find this lack of compassion for others in his craft strange. Perhaps there is some jealously or competitiveness getting in the way. I came away from the Recht/Confente saga with much more than "negative emotional involvement" or "bad feelings". First, despite the unfortunate turn of events I still feel privildged to have shared several years with Mario Confente. Mario was a masterful craftsman, disciplined and passionate about bicycles above all else. They were his calling, money, women, even food were lesser priorities. His bravado and weak English masked a childlike naitivite' and a powerful soul. He never built my Confente, I was not able to keep a single tool, but I gained immeasurably by being his partner. I learned about integrity and the power and danger of one's convictions. Even Bill Recht taught me lessons beyond those in universities. I learned to how to protect against and even attack a superior force. I learned unwritten laws of litigation. I learned that power and money do not buy happiness. That those who would sell their principles for money are weak and will fail or desert when times are hard. Pain and struggle build strength. More recently, years after I last saw him, Recht has taught me that that love of one's craft can out last a corporate empire. (The only hits to be found today on a Google Internet search for "RexArt" or "Plexicraft" printing or "Bill Recht" is an EPA suit for illegal dumping of chemical waste.) Brian closes with one question of the type we need to get back to: RE:>I'm curious how much Mario was involved in the >development of the Masi lugs.
I believe Mario made the models for the first Masi investment cast lugs,
just as Recht asked him to make them for what became the Medici lugs. They
arrived when Mario and I were there, but Mario was not satisfied with them.
This is why he wanted to make the molds, not just the models. As Mario
explained it, the molds cannot simply be a female of the male model. They
have to be distorted for the part to be undistorted when cooled. Also, he
had ways to make the steel thinner than had been done up to that time.
If there are any responses to this post, I ask again; please send to me off
line as I need to get back to the book and will not be following the CR list
as much as I'd like to.
JFC ~ CyclArtist
Jim Cunningham
Vista, CA