Cox’s license to attack
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S.J. Cahn
Rep. Chris Cox is not holding back with comments on the signing of a
law in California that allows illegal immigrants to get driver’s
licenses.
And his target is a familiar one: Gov. Gray Davis.
“The newly liberalized process of obtaining a California driver’s
license is dangerously flawed,” Cox said in a statement. “It is a
giant leap backward in the war on terrorism.”
Of Davis’ role, Cox was no less demure: “It is alarming that Gov.
Davis has ignored the lessons that we learned from Sept. 11, 2001. It
is especially cruel that he has signed this bill into law on the
two-year anniversary of the war on terrorism.”
Cox, along with 19 other California Republican representatives,
also has sent Davis a fairly heated letter to the governor.
In part, the letter says: “You vetoed this legislation twice
before over security concerns, stating just last year: ‘The tragedy
of Sept. 11 made it abundantly clear that the driver’s license is
more than just a license to drive; it is one of the primary documents
we use to identify ourselves. Unfortunately, a driver’s license was
in the hands of terrorists who attacked America on that fateful day.’
In fact, seven of the Sept. 11 terrorists obtained driver’s licenses
illegally from Virginia, whose laws at the time were essentially the
same as the one you have now signed.”
Davis has said the law will be a boon to immigrants who work in
the state. Other supporters have said it would increase security by
giving police and other officials access to more information about
those with the licenses.
Cox, coincidently or not, has given Arnold Schwarzenegger, who is
running in the recall of Davis, $21,200 via his campaign committee.
Rohrabacher ascends to new heights
Newport-Mesa’s other Congressional voice, Dana Rohrabacher, also
threw some verbal assaults earlier this month. His target: The Space
Shuttle program and NASA.
At the opening of a hearing on Sept. 4 about the shuttle program
and the crash of the Shuttle Columbia earlier this year, Rohrabacher
-- who is chairman of the House’s Subcommittee on Space and
Aeronautics -- said that traveling into space is a risk worth taking.
“We have the rare opportunity to help NASA break the bureaucratic
malaise that has gripped it for so long,” he said. “Our space program
should be about expanding American freedom into a new frontier. To
carry all humankind to new heights, into the heavens above, and to
better lives here on this planet; to finish the space station, and
move forward.”
That high oratory was contrasted by his severe take on the
shuttle.
“For the last 30 years, NASA may well have been on the wrong path
with the Space Shuttle. The Shuttle has failed miserably to meet its
original goals. Our reliance on such a complex and high-risk
technology has drained billions of dollars from our treasury and
other space programs, and has regrettably cost too many lives.”
Arianna Huffington is certainly no Terminator
Arianna Huffington made a campaign stop at Orange Coast College
this week, speaking before an enthusiastic crowd and asking those fed
up with the political system to give her their support.
But, judging from the response of some students afterward, she may
have a long way to go.
Plain and simple, she didn’t get their blood boiling like
Schwarzenegger did when he made a stop at Cal State Long Beach on
Sept. 3 -- yes, the one where he got egged.
OCC students who had traveled to that appearance were plenty
positive on the GOP front-runner. Huffington, even right at their own
door, earned more ho-hums.
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