Mother is proud of her son’s stand...
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Mother is proud of her son’s stand on stamp
Wrong or right, I had to jot down my thoughts on the stamp fiasco.
Like it or not, in my opinion, it’s about foreigners coming to
America and agreeing with a young woman’s pathetic stamp idea. What
will be next?
Shame on Americans. Where is your loyalty for our forefathers?
They left England for religion with God at the head, not man.
I’m very proud of my son Russell Niewiarowski for standing up for
the truth. The Bible says the truth will set you free.
MARGARET NIEWIAROWSKI
Santa Ana Heights
Are red light cameras really worth it? In my opinion, absolutely.
Red light running is not the exception but the norm in
Newport-Mesa. This anti-social, potentially lethal lawlessness is
seemingly acceptable by other drivers. I am the only one to react (my
beloved mother-in-law having been killed by a red-light runner who
got off with a fine) and I usually receive a curse and the one-digit
salute in return.
I only hope that the cameras have a sobering effect on scoff laws,
bring in lots of money and, perhaps, prevent many accidents and the
loss of lives.
WALLACE WOOD
Costa Mesa
I am writing in response to Allison Spousos’ letter about the
people behind the picket line.
After reading her very well-written article, all I could think was
“wow.” Her submission so poignantly stated the plight of the grocery
store workers. I have yet to cross the picket line -- formed just
blocks from my house -- due to the fact that I see all of the people
she described on a daily basis.
They are nice, hard-working people, who are trying to make it in
this very expensive place we are so fortunate to live in, all the
while making our lives that much easier.
Her letter hardly exhibits the “skills” of the “unskilled worker.”
Kudos to Spousos.
KELLI DAVIDSON
Newport Beach
Keeping drivers in check a is welcomed
Re: Howard Nathanson (“Checkpoints violate civil rights,” Tuesday)
may not like the checkpoints to check for driver’s licenses and
vehicle registration forms, but they are not, as he wants readers to
believe, a violation of civil rights when they are conducted
correctly.
My 7-year-old son and I had the opportunity to view the checkpoint
on Fairview Road that Nathanson commented on. The Costa Mesa Police
Department is to be commended for running such a professional
operation. Nathanson also tries to link this perfectly legal and
appropriate checkpoint with the Patriot Act, which many of us who
care about civil liberties are concerned about.
It doesn’t fly. It’s apples and pears.
As one who is very concerned about civil rights, I told my son
that the police should be counting cars and only stopping every car
whose number came up. I suggested that they were probably stopping
every tenth car. Thereafter, my son made a game of counting back in
the line of cars to predict the next ones that would be stopped. The
police were precise in only stopping every tenth vehicle. Then, at
one point, my son told me they weren’t stopping the tenth car
anymore. I suggested to my son that they had probably switched to
every fifteenth car because of the traffic. My son adjusted his count
and that’s exactly what the police had done.
This precise counting puts such stops within the law and prevents
officers from stopping people who they may just not like -- for
whatever reason. While we were watching, we saw no mistakes. Not one.
We were also close enough to observe that the officers were polite
and professional.
It’s time we took drivers off the road who don’t follow our laws.
Those who don’t have driver’s licenses or registrations show a
contempt for our laws that may carry over to other areas as well --
such as speeding up and running red lights while honking their horns,
which is now a common sight on Fairview Road.
I hope the Costa Mea Police Department has many more checkpoints
on Fairview Road and in other parts of Costa Mesa as well.
I would be only too happy to pull up and show them my driver’s
license, my registration, and my insurance card -- if my vehicle was
the tenth or fifteenth in the line of cars. If I’m stopped because
the officers don’t like the way I comb my hair or some other similar
thing, I’ll be the first one to complain.
M.H. MILLARD
Costa Mesa
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