Feeling a little alienated
Jose J. Santos
Are you ready for some news that’ll give you the heebie-jeebies?
(OK, maestro, cue the theme to “The X-Files.”)
Apparently, according to some candidates running for political
office, there are aliens running all over California. In fact -- and
I don’t mean to cause panic here -- there may even be some in
Newport-Mesa.
That’s right, Scully. Aliens.
You know, aliens, as in those Sigourney Weaver movies; as in that
tin man from “The Day the Earth Stood Still”; as in strange creepy
little guys like Marvin the Martian.
If that wasn’t horrifying enough, it turns out these aliens are
here illegally -- as in without the government’s consent.
It’s like Orson Welles’ “War of the Worlds,” except instead of
Grovers Mill, I’m in Goat Hill waiting for those three-legged
jiggamabobbers to level 1901 Newport.
According to one Assembly candidate, “Too much money is spent on
making the state hospitable to illegal aliens at a time when the
state doesn’t have money to spend” and that former Gov. Gray Davis’
administration was working to “provide in-state tuition and tuition
fee waivers to illegal aliens.”
Another Assembly candidate has said, “While the federal government
is in the driver’s seat on immigration policy, we ought to do what we
can to reduce the incentives for illegal aliens to come to
California.”
Still another said taxpayers are spending billions of dollars
every year on all sorts of things, “from providing social services to
housing illegal alien felons in our prisons.”
Suddenly, the president’s renewed interest in space makes sense.
It’s not about exploration, it’s about exportation. We gotta get all
these illegal aliens back to their home planets and fast.
They’re coming to California and California is footing the bill.
They’re in our schools, they’re taking our services and they’re even
taking up space -- they like space -- in our prisons.
I’m starting to feel like I have those special glasses that
“Rowdy” Roddy Piper wore in John Carpenter’s “They Live.” I can see
all those creepy aliens in the streets, in the supermarket and --
this is really scary -- even in our kitchens.
If there’s one place I don’t want aliens, it’s in the kitchen. I
saw that episode of “The Twilight Zone” called “To Serve Man”:
There’s no telling what (or who) aliens will put on your plate.
So, I’m guessing these aliens must have had some pioneers make
their way to California over the last 100 years or so. I’m guessing
Area 51 must be where they land and are processed -- sorta like in
“Men in Black” -- then they make the drive into Baker, stop to make
some of that famous alien fresh jerky, and filter out into our cities
and schools.
But that begs the question: what’s the difference between an
illegal alien and a legal alien? I mean, there’s gotta be a
difference, right?
Take E.T. Now that guy had to be illegal: he was hidden by a
middle-class family; he got sick while he was here, exposing a whole
bunch of people to his alien germs; and he wasted precious resources
like telecommunication services and air traffic controlling.
But then, there’s Alf, from that ‘80s TV show. He was adopted, so
I think he ceased being illegal. I feel much safer knowing that fact
since he’s working in our country now, hawking discount long-distance
service.
How about those guys in “Independence Day”? They were definitely
illegal: they wandered around from place to place draining resources
until they left a world without anything for its own citizens.
Now Worf -- that Klingon from “Star Trek: The Next Generation” --
he’s definitely legal. I mean he’s in the military, right? He proudly
serves our planet along with other humans, so I think he’s allowed to
be legal.
How about the Terminator? There’s no way he’s legal, right?
Oh yeah, that’s right, he is. Humans built the Terminator into
what he is today in order to defend themselves from imminent threats
like Gray Davis and Cruz Bustamante. Now if there was only a way to
control him.
Mork from Ork, he’s legal by marriage, so he’s cool.
Which brings me back to Orson -- as in Welles. That whole radio
thing must have not been a hoax. Why else would politicians bring up
this alien issue every two years or so? I mean, let’s really take a
loo --
Hold on, somebody’s whispering something in my ear--
Oh.
Well folks, um, there’s no need to worry. It turns out the
candidates were talking about illegal immigrants, not illegal aliens.
In the words of Gilda Radner, “Never mind.”
It’s campaign season, and while it may not be “War of the Worlds,”
it definitely is a war of words. And whether you’re for or against
the issues surrounding illegal immigration, I hope people will take
the time to consider the words they choose to describe their fellow
human beings, because words matter and voters care about what their
elected officials say.
And that’s no joke.
* JOSE J. SANTOS is the art director and news desk chief. He can
be reached at [email protected].
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