Monthly Archive for October, 2007

Illegal Aliens and the Dream Act!

You may remember several months ago when the bipartisan effort at comprehensive immigration reform (another way of saying “amnesty”) was defeated. Since the defeat, the effort to pass some form of amnesty for illegal aliens has not ended, it just takes on different forms. The latest reincarnation is the Dream Act which was similarly defeated last week by a vote of 52-44. Believe it or not, the Dream Act was first introduced in 2001. It was also included as a part of the comprehensive reform effort. It apparently has 9 lives. Maybe more.

In this interview with Steve Elliott, Executive Director of GrassFire.Org, Steve discusses this most recent effort at amnesty. One of the major provisions of The Dream Act purported to provide a “Path for Citizenship” to illegal aliens that came to America before the age of 16. And how does an illegal alien prove he arrived in America before age 16? Let’s see! An illegal alien does not have papers documenting the illegal entry into the U.S. Under the Dream Act, he just says he got here before he was 16, even if it was actually last month. Further, according to Steve, he can make this claim 10 years from now.

You may recall that the earlier comprehensive legislation was essentially written behind closed doors and was unveiled shortly before the vote in an effort to force a vote without providing either the public or our representatives an adequate opportunity to study and understand the legislation. Well, the same kind of strong-arm tactics continue to the order of the day. According to GrassFire:

Harry Reid and Dick Durbin are using “Rule 14” to push the Dream Amnesty Act directly to the Senate floor — bypassing committee hearings, debate and markup. To invoke Rule 14, Reid and Durbin must get 60 “yes” votes on a special cloture vote.

Our own Georgia Senators, Chambliss and Isaakson, initially supported amnesty and a “Path to Citizenship,” but changed their minds when they realized that most Georgians do not favor amnesty. Last week, they both voted against the Dream Amnesty Act.

Here is how the Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities (HACU) describes the legislation:

The bipartisan Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors Act of 2003 (S.1545), or DREAM Act, would also make it easier for immigrant students who have met long-term residency and other requirements to pursue permanent legal residency status. HACU supports this legislation and companion House legislation as the opportunity to open new doors to college for tens of thousands of talented students.

Note that HACU makes no attempt to clarify that “minor” is in the US illegally.

And here is how the National Immigration Law Center describes the “need” for the legislation:

Each year about 65,000 U.S.–raised students who would qualify for the DREAM Act’s benefits graduate from high school. These include honor roll students, star athletes, talented artists, homecoming queens, and aspiring teachers, doctors, and U.S. soldiers. They are young people who have lived in the U.S. for most of their lives and desire only to call this country their home. Even though they were brought to the U.S. years ago as children, they face unique barriers to higher education, are unable to work legally in the U.S., and often live in constant fear of
detection by immigration authorities. Our immigration law currently has no mechanism to consider the special equities and circumstances of such students. The DREAM Act would eliminate this flaw. It is un-American to indefinitely and irremediably punish them for decisions made by adults many years ago. By enacting the DREAM Act, Congress would legally recognize what is de facto true: these young people belong here.

Makes it sound right, doesn’t it! Well, it isn’t. But this isn’t about education for minors. As the NILC article recognizes, the children of illegal aliens are being educated. This isn’t about racism or xenophobia. Pardon me for harping on this, but this is about American sovereignty. When the President of Mexico says that where ever a Mexican is, there is Mexico, I know that our neighbor to the South is nuts. Mexico is a politically corrupt country with a third world mentality and standard of living. Mexico would love to export its problems and its poverty to America and import our money to its economy. They want, and are even demanding open borders so that they have absolutely no barrier between our standard of living and theirs.

We need a sensible and reasonable immigration policy. We need a fence on the border for security. We need to enforce the laws we have. We don’t need to give to Mexico what it wants.

 
 Steve Elliott, GrassFire.Org [28:50m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (88)

Reservoirs? Questions of Quality of Life!

For those who are trying to figure out whether or not there is an answer to the water problem, you might want to read this commentary by Greg Bluestein (AP) in the Macon Telegraph Online. Greg points out that reservoirs are not the answer to the water problems, neither in the long term or the short term. Why?

Short term: They take years to build. They are also very expensive. According to the article, a new reservoir costs about $4000 per 1000 gallons. Dang!

Long term: More reservoirs = More water = More buildings = More people = Same problem 30 years down the road.

Now, this may sound a little naive, but when you think about it, the real problem here is deciding what quality of life we want to have in Georgia 30 years down the road. Think about this. Why do you like

to go to Wyoming? It is the 10th largest state in land size and the least populated state, less than 500,000 per the 2000 census. As beautiful as it is, as nice as it is to visit, why the heck aren’t there more people in Wyoming?

I am not exactly sure when it was in vogue, seems like decades ago, but I remember when you heard a lot about zero population growth as a goal because the world had too many people.

I don’t know anyone that actually wants Atlanta to get bigger. I don’t know anyone that wants more concrete for roads and parking lots in Metro Atlanta. I don’t know anyone that has any idea how to solve the traffic jams and transportation nightmare that is Atlanta.

Could the answer actually be that we decide that Georgia is big enough? Can we decide we have had enough growth, enough population? Can we choose to slow down so that the Georgia we knew and loved when we were kids (open spaces, natural streams and stuff like that) is actually preserved so that our grandchildren can enjoy it? Or will they look back and wonder how we could have been so stupid to have failed to make the hard choices and preserve the best in this state? Will they wonder why we left it to them to solve problems that could have been more easily solved by us in this day and time?

It sounds strange to contemplate a conscious decision not to grow and grow and grow. It sounds strange, but it has the ring of wisdom to it. Look at China. An industrial slum that will destroy its future, if not the world’s. It sounds like one of those things that we may regret not giving serious consideration to 30 years from now.

One thing is for sure, without any shadow of a doubt, Georgia can only hold so many people and building and roads. If you compare 1950 with today, it is not hard to imagine that in 50 more years, life in Georgia will not be anything like what it is today. That may have been an exciting thought in the past when running out of space and water and open spaces was not really a concern, but now it is a little scary to think of Metro Atlanta as being twice as big as it is today. When I think of that I see those weird cities in the science fiction movies where the city is all inside another building.

More on Water: Georgia Water Planning and Policy Center

Doug Wilson is the Exective Director of the Georgia Water Planning and Policy Center (GWPPC). If you have never heard of GWPPC, you probably aren’t alone. Formed in 1999 with the support of the Georgia General Assembly and the Georgia Research Alliance, GWPPC serves as a think-tank on water in Georgia.

Although the GWPPC is not involved in rule making, it is contracted with the Legislative Services Committee and the Georgia Department of Agriculture to advise them on the recently proposed “Water Plan.” It has also produced about 80 white papers dealing with various water issues, all of which can be found on its website.

Water is not just a Metro Atlanta issue or problem. Not only has Georgia’s population almost doubled since 1970, but its irrigated agricultural acreage has also increased by 1 million acres since 1970.

Consider this: Seminole, Early, Decatur, Miller, Baker and Mitchell Counties have between 400,000 and 500,000 irrigated acres of agricultural lands. Spring Creek in Early and Seminole County is dry.

Most of the water used in South Georgia comes from the Floridan Aquifer which extends roughly on a line from Blakely to Screven County. In the Albany area the aquifer lies very close to the surface and is recharged quickly when it rains. In Southeast Georgia the aquifer lies deeper and it takes longer for surface water run-off to recharge it. In Savannah and other coastal areas, heavy industrial use of aquifer water has caused episodes of saltwater intrusion into the aquifer, something that is to be prevented at all costs. This impacts commercial and industrial development because of restrictions on the amount of water that can be pumped from the aquifer.

As you may know, Lake Lanier is under the control of the Army Corps of Engineers and was originally built primarily for the production of hydroelectric power. Its use as a source of drinking water came much later, I guess when population growth made it a necessity to find new sources of available water.

When there is no drought, Georgia is all wet, about 50 inches of rainfall over the whole state each year. That 50 inches of rain equals 50 trillion gallons of water. Demand for all types of water consumption in the state is about 1.2 trillion gallons a year, and a lot of that, particularly in South Georgia, is satisfied from ground water. Thus, if we could just catch and hold more rainwater, we could have all the water we could possibly need without depriving people who live downstream of their need for surface water in the rivers and creeks.

We might even need a reservoir or two for South Georgia to use in times of drought when rivers and streams are low.

With the supply of available water growing low in Metro Atlanta, Governor Perdue and others have criticized the Army Corps of Engineers for releasing water from Lake Lanier, water that could be used by Atlantans. But it isn’t the mussels and fish living in the waters of South West Georgia and Florida that are to blame. This is well explained in a recent Op-Ed by Dusty Nix, writing for the Editorial Board of the Columbus Ledger-Enquirer. While the drought has brought the problem home, the real reason Atlanta is in such dire straits is poor planning and unrestrained development that everyone has known for years was going to result in this kind of shortage someday.

The truth is that Atlanta’s water consumption is at its absolute maximum and the drought has only served to emphasize this fact. If no more water were released and the drought continues, Atlanta is still going to be out of water in the not too distant future.

 
 Doug Wilson, Georgia Water Policy and Planning Center [31:06m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (177)

What Do Larry Craig and Genarlow Wilson Have in Common?

I hardly know where to begin, so I will begin at the end. The end of Genarlow Wilson’s imprisonment came Friday, October 26, 2007, 32 months after it began. It came at the hands of the Supreme Court of Georgia and its decision that his sentence constituted cruel and unusual punishment which is prohibited by the Eighth Amendment to the U. S. Constitution.

As a lawyer, the first thing I noted was the fact that the Supreme Court’s decision was not unanimous. It was one of those 4 to 3 results that always make me wonder why the law is apparently so hard to understand. I don’t generally like to comment on a decision by an appellate court. This is for several reasons. Primarily because, it does no good. A decision by the highest appellate court in the state or the nation is the law for that case, for those parties, like it or not, and there is nothing you can do about it. Your client either won or lost. You may think you did not receive justice, but that does not change the fact that your case is over. It will be up to someone else with another case to come along with the opportunity to change the law.

The puzzling thing is that if you read (in a fair and impartial way, mind you) the majority’s opinion, you can easily agree with its reasoning and rationale. But then, if you read the dissent (again, fairly and impartially), you can easily agree with its rationale. Why is this? First, you need to understand that this same phenomenon occurs quite frequently in court decisions–if you make an effort to look at both sides fairly. Second, court cases always involve real people in real situations, and they are rarely, rarely, black and white, cut and dried–if you are looking at them fairly and impartially. It is the unique obligation of judges and juries to look at both sides, fairly and impartially, BEFORE making a decision. But ultimately, decisions by judges and juries are not the result of giving both sides the benefit of the doubt. At some point, a particular fact, a particular line of reasoning makes sense to the judge or juror. Other facts and other rationalizatons get put into a differenct category from the facts that seem important. The outcome: a decision that in many cases people can argue about.

That is the process. It is unavoidable in my opinion. But it does not mean that justice was not done. It does not mean that one party was screwed and one party won. It simply means that it is very hard to be a judge or a juror and make these decisions. And that is why, when lawyers lose a decision, we don’t or shouldn’t take it personally. It’s just life and life ain’t always fair. But the courts should be, or maybe I should say, the courts and the law should appear to be fair.

Enter Genarlow Wilson and Larry Craig, not necessarily in that order. Wilson’s case got all the attention because most people thought the outcome of his conviction was not fair. I was one of them. As for Craig, anyone that knows anything about the law, scratched their head and said how in the hell can tapping your feet and never uttering a word be a crime. I am no fan of Craig, but if what he did (assuming he did it) is a crime, there are some street corners in Atlanta you better not stop near or you may be soliciting prostitution.

Wilson and Craig, both have a new found appreciation for the power of sex crime laws to reach out and touch you in ways you never imagined (no pun intended). Both have an understanding of how important judges and their discretion are in dispensing justice. Both wanted a second chance. One won. One lost–or at least so far.

At the risk of oversimplifying the Supreme Court’s opinion, I will tell you why I think both the majority and the minority are right.

The majority of the justices that voted to free Generlow Wilson did a brave thing. Whether you agree or disagree with their view of the law, it can be said that they were striving to accomplish justice, and many people will surely think they did. Nevertheless, they may very well be criticized for their decision. They may even find themselves with opposition in the next election and their opponent may try to make them eat their words in setting Genarlow free.

The minority of the justices that voted to keep Genarlow Wilson in jail, also did a brave thing. Their vote was a statement that, in their view, the legislature of Georgia had the power and the right to decide what constituted a crime and how it should be punished and that, while that law may appear unfair in any particular circumstance, the Court, in this case, should not undo what the legislature had done.

My goal here is not to convince you to agree with the majority or the minority. My hope is to say something fundamentally true about our court system and about our legislative process.

We all make decisions, but that, in and of itself, does not make us wise. We make decisions for a variety of reasons and I think most everyone can appreciate the fact that in many instances, it is hard to make a decision because there are competing interests, issues and goals. Which job to take? Which house to buy? How to discipline a child? How to repair a misunderstanding with a friend? We can make a good decision or a bad one even if we thought it was a good decision at the time.

But, when it comes to our courts and our civil and criminal justice systems, the making of decisions has always had a special requirement: Decision should be made fair and impartially, whether made by a judge or jury. And this is especially true when it comes to dispensing punishment, particularly in a day and age where we know dozens of people have been convicted and sentenced to death or jail for crimes they did not commit.

As parents, we have probably recognized situations where we felt punishment in some form or another was the only just result, although in similar situations on different occasions, we may have been more prone to forgiveness or a “second chance.” If we, as parents or as employers or in any role in which we exercise power over the life of another, have competing thought processes, we should not think a judge is any different. The difference is that a judge has taken an oath to be fair and impartial in making his/her decisions. It seems to me that if a judge is expected to be fair, then by definition a judge must be able to access a punishment that fits the crime.

When cases like Genarlow’s come before our judges, our trial judges, the ones that sit alone, by themselves, on the bench and render judgment over others, the same considerations which the majority and minority on the Supreme Court considered must be considered by one judge. The one judge sitting on the Superior Court bench doesn’t get the right to say he/she decided the case 2 to 3.

Where judges make decisions, the lawyers and their clients have no clue which way the judge will rule. They have but one hope: that no matter what the judge decides he will do justice. It is precisely for this reason that victims have finally been guaranteed the right to speak to the judge in the punishment phase of a criminal proceeding. Because the circumstances from case to case may vary significantly, “doing justice” is not necessarily an easy thing. However, I can tell you from personal experience that there is no greater feeling than the feeling that justice has been done.

And now to my point. We can argue about whether the Justices of the Supreme Court of Georgia made the right decision or the wrong decision, but it will do no good. They have decided. The skies willl not fall because Genarlow is now free. But, I suggest, the lesson to be learned from this experience is this: When Legislatures remove the discretion of judges in determining a just punishment, they are undermining our system of justice and its inherent sense of fairness.

If you do not realize it by now, you need to understand that the ultimate responsibility for the Genarlow Wilson controversy (regardless of which side you are on) lies with the Georgia Legislature. Had the legislature, in all of its moral self-righteousness, not passed a law that required a minimum 10-year sentence for oral sex between teenagers, we would never have heard of Genarlow Wilson. What he did may still have been a crime. He may still have been convicted. He might even have still received a 10-year sentence. But, whatever punishment he received, if the judge had had the discretion, the simple ability to consider all the surrounding facts, in determining Wilson’s punishment, Genarlow would probably have never received a 10-year sentence. It was that inability to make the punishment fit the crime that inflamed sensibilities and eventually catapulted Wilson’s case to national attention.

The Georgia Legislature is to blame. It alone is to blame. It is one thing to severely punish child molesters. It is another thing to brand teenagers engaging in oral sex as child molesters and punish them by imprisonment for a minimum of 10-years, no probation, no parole. This is one of those laws that a lawyer would realize in a minute that it is going to cause problems because it treats sodomy with a minor (oral sex under 16 years old) as a felony, while statutory rape is a misdemeanor. Most crimes get the benefit of a judge’s discretion, good or bad. However, the 10-year minimum required sentence effectively removed any ability of the judge in Wilson’s case to impose a lesser sentence.

While the Georgia Legislature may be excused for passing a bad law without realizing it at the time, in this case, they did something totally reprehensible. In 2006 the legislature decided that the law under which Wilson was convicted needed to be changed such that the crime for which he was convicted was now a misdemeanor, rather than a felony. While I am glad they changed the law, they did it in a manner that only highlighted the unfairness of the previous law. The 2006 law specifically provided that it was not the legislature’s intent to change the status of anyone convicted under the prior law. There was a big push be certain legislators to pass a bill that would allow judges to at least go back and reconsider the 10-year minimum sentences and exercise their discretion. The legislature would have none of that. It sure wasn’t going to do anything that could be construed as favoring sex offender, even if that sex offender was a 17 year old teenager.

Essentially, the legislature said to the people that were convicted under the bad law: Too bad we didn’t come to our senses before you were convicted and jailed for 10 years. This is another way of saying: You can spend 10 years in jail to pay for our mistake.

If the Georgia legislature is going to claim the moral high ground, then it ought to have the guts to do what it takes to be moral. Playing with peoples’ lives like the ancient gods and goddesses of Greece is not close to the moral high ground. Recognizing an injustice and doing nothing to correct the injustice on the lives of people affected by it, is not the moral high ground. It is hypocrisy. It is despicable.

When the Georgia Legislature changed the law under which Wilson was convicted to make the crime a misdemeanor, not a felony, and intentionally refused to correct the wrong done individuals convicted under the harsher law, it demostrated a lack of understanding of a basic principal of democratic government: fairness. For that, they should truly be ashamed. If it were my child who received 10 years without regard to the circumstances, if it were my child who was in jail for 10 years and the guy next to him for 1 year for exactly the same crime, if it were my child, I would be mad as hell.

And that is what this Republican controlled legislature does not get. It has no sense of fairness. In 2005 it had no sense of fairness when it changed hundreds of years of Georgia common law and made it impossble to sue emergency room doctors when they are negligent and hurt you. Today, it has no sense of fairness when its leaders constantly acknowledge that ER physicians should not be treated differently from the rest of us, and yet, a majority of them cannot oppose the insurance companies sufficiently to correct their error. They had no sense of fairness when they took away the discretion of judges to give due consideration to the circumstances when a sex offender lives a half mile from a school bus stop and is still, under the law, 10 feet too close, so the entire family has to move. They have no sense of fairness when they fail to give any serious consideration to meritorious bills dealing with credit freeze and title pawn lending.

If you wonder why I am so agitated about this, it is because I do not want Genarlow Wilson’s freedom to become a debate about the courts or “liberal” versus “conservative” judges. I want everyone to recognize that courts make difficult decisions about messes that others create. In this case the mess was created by the Georgia Legislature and it should have been fixed by the Georgia Legislature. It wasn’t and that is no one’s fault but the Georgia Legislature.

The last thing Larry Craig and Genarlow Wilson have in common: ultimately, they got what they deserved. I sincerely hope the Georgia Legislature is equally as fortunate.

Genarlow Wilson: The Supreme Court Decides!

I am still pondering Friday’s ruling by the Supreme Court of Georgia, but if you have any desire to read the opinion, I suggest that you first read the news. GriftDrift did a good job of keeping up with Wilson’s case from start to finish.

If you go to the trouble to read the opinion or the news, keep one thing in mind: Can you be fair and impartial?

More later, after I too have contemplated this question a while longer.

Get the Skinny on Your Town!

Someone sent me the link to this website: ZIPskinny. Here’s the skinny on Vidalia.

Do you know the skinny on Albany, Atlanta, Athens, Augusta, Columbus, Macon, or Savannah.

Jekyll Island Revitalization Group Outlines Flaws in Bid Process!

The scandalous bid process for the redevelopment of Jekyll Island enters the next phase. In a protest letter to Bill Donahue, Executive Director of the Jekyll Island State Park Authority, Robert G. Brazier, the attorney for the Jekyll Island Revitalization Group, outlines numerous objections to and flaws in the bid process.

You may recall my interview with Wade Shealy in which we found out that political favoritism appears to be alive and well in Georgia. I don’t know how many people called Governor Perdue’s office to protest the shenanigans, but apparently the Jekyll Island Authority is going to stick by its guns and stand by its acceptance of Linger Longer’s bid.

That leaves the Jekyll Island Revitalization Group (JIRG) with little choice but to hire a lawyer and assert their rights, ultimately the right to go to court. (Which by the way, is probably the greatest right we have.) If you take the time to read the protest letter, you will find an overview of the various legal and constitutional issues resulting from the manner in which the bid process was handled.

What does JIRG want?

JIA is advised to consider these constitutional objections, as well as the facts presented to the JIA. JIA is requested to strike the proposal submitted by Linger Longer Communities and select the proposal submitted by Jekyll Island Revitalization Group. In the alternative, JIA is requested to re-start the entire bidding process for RFP 244.

Violations of the foregoing list of rights and guarantees with regard to Jekyll Island Revitalization Group give rise to a direct cause of action under 42 U.S.C.A. $ 1983 and $ 1988 for the violation of Federal Constitutional rights. Such causes of action allow for the recovery of all losses accruing to Jekyll Island Revitalization Group as a result of the JIA’s violation of these constitutional rights and guarantees, including attorneys fees and monetary damages. In addition, the violation of rights and guarantees could give rise to actions for a writ of mandamus or injunction.

Stay tuned. I am sure this ain’t over yet!

All Politics is LocaL, So…Here are Interviews with 3 Candidates for Vidalia City Council

The race is on, locally, for election to the Vidalia City Council from Ward 4. There are 4 persons seeking the post, but only three are being interviewed: Lisa Chesser, Don Davis and Craig Stuckless. The fourth candidate, Daren McClellan, declined my invitation.

Lisa worked for me as a paralegal for 16 years or so and retired to raise her family. She has two children, Abbie and Doug; three if you include her husband, Hal. (That is a joke, Hal!) Hal is the President of Vidalia Federal Savings and Loan and is also a member of the Vidalia Board of Education.

Don is retired from Plant Hatch (the Georgia Power nuclear facility in Baxley) in 2004. I had never met Don before the interview so I can’t say a lot, other than what is in the interview. Don has been married to a local Vidalia girl, Gwen McMichaels, for 37 years. After retirement he started tutoring math and algebra at Sylvan and working with at-risk teenagers in the alternative school system.

Craig is employed with our local hospital, Meadows Regional Medical Center. I have known Craig for years. We used to go to the same church. Craig is from Canada and had the good fortune to fall in love with a Vidalia girl, Kelly Brantley. Craig was in the Canadian Air Force when they married, and when he put in enough time to retire, he did, moved to Georgia and has since become a U. S. Citizen.

Listen and Vote!

 
 Candidates for Vidalia City Council [36:17m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (163)

Tough Choices or Tough Times: Something About Education You Need to Know!

This interview with Dr. Charles Knapp, former President of the University of Georgia, may scare you, but that may be what it takes. Over the last 2 years I have interviewed a lot of educators and politicians trying to find out what is going on with our school systems. Dr. Knapp knows because he was chairman of a blue-ribbon committee that may have actually done its job, The New Commission on the Skills of the American Workforce.

Dr. Knapp chaired the committee which was composed of former cabinet officers, former Congressmen, former governors and former university presidents.

There was a previous report in 1990 by the first commission on the Skills of the American Workforce. That report, America’s Choice: high skills or low wages, focused on the ability of the American worker to compete with cheap, unskilled labor in other countries. The world has changed dramatically in 15 years. Now the world is flat. The problem in 2007 is competing with skilled workers in other countries like China and India.

Dr. Knapp told me some of those facts that make you think:

1. There are more honor graduates in China than there are students in America.

2. The real average weekly wages in America has been declining for the last 30 years.

3. The per capita costs of a K-12 education in America has increased 2.5 times in the last 30 years, but test scores have not improved.

4. The low income 3 year old has less than half the vocabulary of a 3 year old from a professional family.

5. We are the only industrialized country in the world where older workers are better educated than the younger workers.

Dr. Knapp was frank enough to say that we are not headed toward a train wreck, we are in the middle of it and unless we are willing to revamp the system to meet the needs of the 21st century, we are truly in dire straits.

The study was comprehensive and seems to have endeavored to speak the truth about education in America, like it or not. This may be a little strong, but basically, the Commission determined that our educational system simply fails to meet the needs of an industrialized country and recommends changes that are nothing less than revolutionary.

The problem: Our current system is not high performance, but rather one of low expectations, exactly the opposite of our competitors.

There are 3 primary reforms that need to be instituted sooner, rather than later. However, since nothing changes overnight, the proposals contemplate bringing the educational system to where it needs to be over the next 15 years.

1. Eliminate the last 2 years of high school and prepare kids to graduate at age 16. Even kids know the last year of high school is a waste and the study proved this to be the truth, unfortunately. This would save $50 billion annually nationwide. The kids take a test at age 16 and the test determines whether you get to go to college or to a technical school. No more wasting time and money for kids to go to college to play and find themselves.

2. The savings would be funneled into: 1/3 into pay raises for teachers, 1/3 to pre-K, early childhood learning programs, and 1/3 on the hard to educate kids.

3. Teachers would be paid on performance only. Colleges would not have a monopoly on training teachers.

Last but not least, Dr. Knapp says these recommendations are for the states to implement, not the federal government. The recent Georgia legislation establishing Career Academies and Charter Schools are a step in revamping the educational system in Georgia. We just need to go faster. He also gives high marks to Governor Perdue, Lt. Governor Casey Cagle and School Superintendent Kathy Cox for their efforts in this new direction.

The Committee’s work is published in book format under the title “Tough Choices or Tough Times.” The Committee’s website has an executive summary that you can read online. You can also review a short powerpoint presentation.

And what is the price we will pay as a nation if we don’t get real with education? Simple: a lower standard of living than we have ever had, one we don’t want!

 
 Charles Knapp, Former President UGA [28:53m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (152)

Erickson Mixes It Up!

Erick just returned from a Values Voters Summit in DC last weekend. I didn’t know that when I asked for the interview, but it did prompt a question or two. Like, does the religious right have the influence in politics that it had 4 years ago? The answer is interesting.

The first thing Erick told me was that some Republicans are mad at him for getting Democrats elected. That’s good! We need more bipartisanship. I assume Erick was referring to his support of Robert Reichert, a Democrat, in the mayoral race in Macon. Believe it or not, I worked for Robert’s law firm in 1979-1981 when his father was the Senior Partner–before Robert went to law school even.

Fred Thompson: Fred made a better non-candidate than candidate. Erick’s information is that the Thompson campaign is in the “play it safe mode.”

Mike Huckabee: Huckabee was a close second to Romney in the Values Voters’ straw poll. According to Erick, many of the Republicans who are focused on value issues are not happy with Thompson and are turning to Huckabee. However, Huckabee scares the business community to death because of his fiscal policies.

The 2008 election may determine whether or not the grand coalition put together by Ronald Reagan of business and religious interests can survive the ideological failures of the Bush administration. According to Erick, the fiscal conservatives (I guess the ones that are tired of deficit spending to finance the Iraq War rather than the ones who want tax cuts.) are ready to jump from the GOP and support Hillary. Now that’s a thought to ponder!

Apparently, the business interests believe the social conservatives have gotten more for their dollar since 2000. As Erick says, the fiscal conservatives got the tax cuts, and the social guys got everything else. I am not sure two Supreme Court appointments, a partial birth abortion ban and a stem cell veto are enough to represent everything else.

Another interesting thing is Erick’s statement that the conservative right is shifting its focus from abortion to gay rights, particularly gay marriage. Since abortions are decreasing and polls suggest people are less likely to support a total ban on abortion, gay rights and gay marriage are the new frontier.

Erick suggests that while Christian leaders, like Chuck Colson and James Dobson, don’t necessarily agree with the shift in focus, there is a growing appreciation within the Christian community that legislating morals may not be a good thing, particularly if you cease to be the party in power. While legislating morals is a dangerous practice, I am not sure I can see this shift in Georgia.

Erick thinks that while Christian influence on a national level is decreasing, it is still strong on the state level.

We discussed briefly the proposed constitutional amendment to define life that may come to a vote in the 2008 legislature. Erick has seen the definition of “life,” which apparently says that life begins at conception and ends at natural death. (Is death by execution a “natural” death?) The interesting thing is that Erick says the National Right to Life and Americans United for Life oppose the Georgia amendment. The consensus is that it is unconstitutional and a waste of taxpayers’ money to even put it on the ballot. Now, does anyone want to bet whether or not they (the Republican leaders of Georgia) go ahead and waste out time and money?

Rudy Giuliani: I had never heard there was an “Italian vote,” but Erick says there is a big one and it could make the difference if the final match is Hillary versus Giuliani. The Italian vote generally splits 55/45 Democrat, but with Rudy it splits 85/15 Rudy. If the final duel is between two New Yorkers, Erick says Hillary will have a harder time in the South than Giuliani because she has to also overcome the “woman” factor. Maybe, maybe not.

And what issues will the 2008 election turn on? I wasn’t surprised to hear that the usual domestic issues from healthcare to the deficit would be significant, but I almost fell over when Erick told me that big business CEOs were now primarily supporting Democratic candidates because they want big government to take some of the big issues off their shoulders, such as health care. Make it a government program! Who cares, just get it off the bottom line of the profit and loss statement. I guess that makes sense, but I just don’t see the CEO of Walmart as a Democrat.

Opposing the Democratic CEOs are the Republican Entrepreneurs, those who still think the private sector can deal with most of these problems. What problems? I guess like Blackwater solving the problem of not enough troops on the ground.

I guess only time will tell if Erick’s observations about trends prove correct, but it is always a pleasure to get his viewpoint. We did agree on one thing: No one wants another Bush!

 
 Erick Erickson, Republican Commentator [31:14m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (182)