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Monthly Archive for November, 2007

Josh Lanier, Candidate for U.S. Senator from Georgia

Josh Lanier is a native of Statesboro, GA, but has spent the last few decades in Washington and the world. Born in 1952, he served the Army in Vietnam, and then worked for Herman Talmadge. He also served as a lobbyist for organizations like Cable TV and consulted with small businesses. In 1984 he became a trustee for the Presidential Yacht Trust and helped lead the restoration of the U. S. S. Sequoia. In 1998 he went green and helped start a company that specialized in water and air treatment, through which he gained international experience and business associations. In 2006 he retired and returned home to help take care of his mother. He has been writing a screenplay in his free time, but that may change in January.

Josh recently formed an explorartory committee to help him decide sometime in mid January whether or not he will join the race to become Georgia’s next U. S. Senator. You can watch his video and find out more about what he hopes to offer the people of Georgia.

Josh thinks (and I do too) that the number one problem with politics in America is money. It takes too much to get elected. It is supplied by people who expect something in return and while this influence of money is perfectly legal, it is also perfectly corrupt. Amen brother!

Okay, Josh, so how the hell are you going to get elected? Well, maybe he isn’t, but if he does he has made a committment to do it the right way. The right way is with a “Clean Campaign.”

This is an idea that deserves our closest attention. Most of us gripe about the money in politics. We know it is bad. It corrupts just about everything it touches in Washington. It completely supplants the power of the people who can give $100 to a candidate with the lobbyist who can funnel hundreds of thousands of dollars to a candidate with a few phone calls.

This is how Josh has pledged to run his campaign:

1. Conduct an exploratory period with “seed” donations not to exceed $100.

2. If the high exploratory period objectives are met, the Committee will “qualify” the next step by receiving 500 $5 contributions for individuals in every Congressional District in Georgia, plus 2,000 additional $5 contributions for individuals throughout the state.

3. Once “qualified” the Committee will raise additional funds for the Democratic primary election solely from individuals in amounts not to exceed $100. Under the “Clean Elections Now Act,” these primary funds would be public funds and no additional fundraising would be required.

4. The Committee will abide by strict formulas in the “Fair Elections Now Act” for spending in the primary and general elections.

The “Fair Elections Now Act” isn’t law, not yet anyway. The Act (S. 1285) is a bipartisan effort by Senate Majority Whip Richard Durbin (D-IL) and Sen. Arlen Specter (R-PA) to change the way elections are funded. You can find out more about it at the Common Cause website.

So how will the candidates that reject the money compete with the Saxby Chamblisses of this country? They will have a hard time until the Fair Elections Now Act and similar state legislation becomes law. But the truth is, when states require candidates to run clean campaigns, it works. It works in Arizona. And in New Jersey. We need to get it here in Georgia.

My hat is off to Josh that is going to set the example, win, lose or draw!

 
 Josh Lanier, Candidate, U. S. Senate, Georgia [29:19m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (509)

Will Cobb County Lead The Way In Enforcement of Our Immigration Laws?

I have conducted a lot of interviews about border security, particularly with regard to the issue of the fence on our southern border with Mexico. There is another equally important aspect of a sound, common sense, immigration policy: enforce our immigration laws. If the federal government is dragging its feet on building a fence, it is equally deficient in enforcing our immigration laws. This is not a criticism of the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) personnel charged with this responsibility, as much as it is a recognition that there just aren’t enough ICE personnel to enforce our immigration laws in the cities and towns of everyday America.

Well, there is an alternative and, I think, a good one: local law enforcement enforcing our immigration laws. Now, doesn’t that just make good old, common sense? I am not sure how many ICE enforcement officers there are, but there are literally hundred of thousands of local law enforcement officers all across America. Why spend the money to hire more immigration officers? Why not harness the abilities of law enforcement officers already out in the field?

To effectively enforce our immigration laws on a local basis, cities and counties need two things: (1) training for law enforcement officers, and (2) state and local laws which assist in identifying illegal aliens.

On Tuesday night D. A. King, Founder of The Dustin Inman Society appeared before the Cobb County Commission and proposed that the Commission require applicants for business licenses to declare whether or not they are citizens of the US or otherwise here legally. We require pharmacists to report people that buy certain drugs on the basis that they may be manufacturing methamphetamine. We require doctors and preachers to report information of possible child abuse. We even require people to swear their tax return is accurate. I cannot imagine but one reason that we don’t ask people to declare their legal status when they want to get a driver’s license or open a business: we didn’t think about it.

Well, now we have thought about it. Cobb County has thought about it. Hopefully, they will act on it, as well.

And apparently, Cobb County Sheriff Neil Warren is the only sheriff in Georgia who has thought about it and decided to do something about it. Sheriff Warren has taken advantage of the provisions of existing federal law to have several of his deputies go through the training necessary to have them authorized to enforce our immigration laws. As a result, in Cobb County when someone is arrested for DUI or speeding or whatever, his legal status in the country is checked and if the person is illegal, local law enforcement can initiate the deportation process. Without this ability, even if the illegal status is discovered, getting ICE personnel to do something is not necessarily easy or efficient.

So what is the sheriff or the chief of police in your town or county doing to enforce these laws locally? If you don’t know, maybe it is time to find out!

 
 D. A. King, Dustin Inman Society [28:52m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (502)

“Race: A History Beyond Black and White”

It is hard for me to discuss “race” in a meaningful way. Like most whites, I would swear that I am not prejudiced, and yet, as a lawyer I see people get screwed everyday at the hands of people who would also swear they are not prejudiced. I have no reason to believe I am any more capable of being objective than they are. I get confused about who can say this word or that word, and who can joke about or criticize this or that conduct based on some perceived racial characteristic.

In this interview Marc Aronson discusses this not so simple question: “What is race?” His new book about race deals with the issue of race from an historical perspective. Actually, according to Marc, this idea of racial (color) discrimination is a relatively modern one and it may be one that is unique to America. Consider this: Of the 10 to 12.5 million slaves abducted from Africa, less than 4% were brought to America. The overwhelming majority, 96%, went to Brazil and the Caribbean. Why? The surgar plantations? So why does the social aftermath of slavery seem to be so different when comparing the US to Brazil or a Caribbean nation?

You will have to read the book and form your own opinion, but one point Marc makes is this: The civil rights movement resulted in legislation that swept away, virtually overnight (okay, a little literary license here), the public exhibitions of racial prejudice. However, it did nothing to change our private expressions of racial prejudice. In fact, it seems there was an unwritten rule that racial prejudices were not matters to be discussed, just denied. They were not issues for us to understand, just excoriate.

Compare the racial sins of Germany in its treatment of Jews. Marc points out that after the fall of Hitler the German people not only transformed the public display of discrimination, but they also sought to understand how it had happened, how individuals fell prey to such strong racial prejudices, and in addition, the struggle through which they dealt with them after the war. As a nation, we have not had this introspective analysis of our own feelings and experiences. We simply subjugate the racial rumblings and deny they have a right to exist. Have you ever read a book devoted to someone’s struggle in overcoming racial prejudice in America? I don’t mean the two paragraphs that explain the before and after, I mean the struggle! It is almost like it wasn’t a struggle, it was just a decision and once decided, it was over, done with.

Obviously, it can’t be that easy. So, a lot of our current struggles with “race” is probably the result that we never went through any national therapy.

According to Marc, race is an 18th century phenomenon that replaced religion as the standard by which people judged themselves superior to others. In the days of Rome, that superiority was determined by whether or not you were free or a slave. Slavery in Rome was not associated with race, but depended on whether you were poor and sold into slavery by your family or whether your community had been conquered by the guys in short dresses with swords. After Rome, the church’s influence in society made religion the standard by which people were judged to be good or bad. And then, along came America with a novel idea: All men are created equal! Social status and religion were discarded, but not color. Race conveniently provided the judgmental standard: black, red-man, yellow horde.

Did you know the 1795 Naturalization Act described the qualifications for a person to become a naturalized US citizen? Those qualifications: (1) free, and (2) white. The law remained on the books until 1952. “Americaness” was “whiteness” even before there was a “colored bathroom.”

Does Marc have a way out of this racial mental illness? Read the book!

 
 Marc Aronson, Author, Race [10:07m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (1317)

Candidates for Ward 4, Vidalia City Council

The general election on November 6th resulted in a run-off for Ward 4, Vidalia City Council, between Lisa Chesser and Daren McClellan. I thought I ought to update their pre-election interviews and find out what the two top candidates are doing to assure victory next Tuesday, December 4th.

The general election resulted in Lisa receiving 235 votes to 190 votes for Daren. Assuming each candidate holds their own, the real question is how the folks who cast 129 votes for two candidates who did not make the run-off will vote the second time around. Actually, the real question may be how many people will go to the polls to vote in a run-off election. The victor will definitely be the candidate that gets the most voters back to the polls. Sad, but true.

Vidalia is just like most other towns, I guess. It putters along, as if on auto-pilot (at least, that is the way it seems to most citizens) and every year or so it has a scandal or a controversy or something that gets everyone’s attention. In the meantime, everyone that has to deal with City Hall thinks things need changing and everyone that doesn’t have to deal with City Hall could care less.

The most telling thing I can say about the City of Vidalia government is the fact that, as far as I can tell, City Council has not had a vote that was not unanimous in years. I had occasion to review the Council minutes last year and went back 4 or 5 years and was amazed at the consistently unanimous votes. (I may have missed one, but someone will have to prove me wrong.) Now, you may think that good. I don’t. All this means is that either we don’t need a City Council or we don’t need some of them who just do what another tells them to do.

If you listen to Daren’s interview, at the end he explains why this is the way it is in Vidalia. His explanation is interesting. Essentially, he says that at the end of the council meetings, they go into closed session and work out their differences. I am not sure how Daren knows this, but I do know that if this is the way City Council makes decisions, they are violating the law. We have an Open Meetings law in Georgia and while some subjects must be discussed behind closed doors (land purchases, personnel), the purpose of closing the doors is not to allow discussion of general business.

But, I must admit, for years, the rumor has been that City Council gets their stuff done before the meeting is convened and the meeting is just a formality.

This unanimity obsession results in something Lisa mentions in her interview: the fact that people who do go before City Council generally don’t feel that anyone is listening to them. They don’t feel welcome, just tolerated, and when their 5 minutes are up, ignored. What part does unanimity play in this? Simple! If you have to convince all of them, then you can never convince one to take up your cause because it is more important to be unanimous.

Maybe this is just sour grapes on my part, since I don’t think City Council has ever listened to me the few times I went there. I admit it, they generally piss me off! But what do I know, I’m just a lawyer.

Will this election bring about change? For the better? Only time will tell!

 
 Candidates, Ward 4, Vidalia City Council [24:48m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (467)

Congressman John Barrow on the Southern Border

Congressionman John Barrow recently went to the Border (you know, the one with Mexico) to find out for himself what was going on. (BTW, this interview aired Thanksgiving Eve, but unfortunately, I just could not get it posted until today.)

John’s group visited El Paso, TX and Tucson, AR. I was encouraged by John’s report. John makes it clear that we need border security. Like most everything else that we think and believe about things we don’t experience personally, the idea that our borders are being crossed by men, women and families that just want a better life is just wrong. Sure, some may just want to come to work (and send the money to Mexico), but there is also the reality that many of these individuals are nothing more than criminals and drug smugglers. While John and his group were present, a guy with $30,000 on his person (drug money) was apprehended, as well as someone wanted for murder and a tractor trailer transporting drugs. Imagine what would be coming into this country if we had “open borders,” which is the ultimate goal of those who want to reform immigration policy, rather than enforce the law.

While John didn’t call it a war, it sure seems to be one. He said that the Border Patrol has the highest rate of fatalities of any law enforcement agency in the USA. Everyday, in border cities like El Paso, the border patrol have rocks thrown at them from the Mexican side of the border as they try to apprehend someone crossing illegally.

John explains that the purpose of a border fence is not to be an absolute barrier that can’t be crossed, but more of a “force multiplier” that increases the border patrol’s available response time. In a border city, such as El Paso, TX, law enforcement only has a few seconds before an illegal alien disappears into the crowd. A fence that takes more time to cross increases the available response time to minutes. Further out, in the middle of nowhere, motion detectors and sensors accomplish the same thing by increasing the response time to hours and even days.

The most amazing thing is that thanks to former Republican Arizona Congressman, Jim Kolbe, there were absolutely no “check points” along the Arizona border with Mexico. You’ve heard of earmarks to put pork in a congressional district, well Kolbe used earmarks to prevent any funds being spent in his district for check points. Incredible! How in the hell can the security policy of this country be controlled by one congressman? At least, Kolbe did not run for re-election in 2006! The idiot.

But, as John points out, border security is not a priority for everyone and there is a lot of feet dragging. On 9-11, there were about 10,000 border patrolmen, now, six years later there are only 15,000. That’s not a lot when you think of how much border there is.

Ultimately, this issue of border security and law enforcement is an economic one. You can continue to be in favor of amnesty and paths to citizenship if you think the issue is that simple, but illegal aliens are a work force that take American jobs. You know, the ones that Ameicans won’t do! Well, John puts that argument into perspective: Americans won’t do them, sure, because you pay a Mexican wage. Pay an American wage and Americans will do it.

They (the NAFTANS) exported our manufacturing plants in the 1990’s. The next target is to cheapen the labor that can’t be exported. Think about it! Mexico does!

 
 John Barrow, Congressman GA-12th [28:15m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (507)

The Jekyll Island Saga Is Taken Up A Notch!

If you have been following the interviews concerning the Jekyll Island controversy (1, 2, 3, 4, 5), you may be interested in this.  (BTW:  If you read the post in #3, it begins with a comment that the interview should piss you off. That reference was apparently confusing, particularly if you did not read the entire post. I was not referring to the person interviewed, Wade Shealy. Rather, I was referring to the subject of the interview, a corrupted bid selection process in which Shealy and his company did not appear to have been fairly treated.)

There was an article in the AJC last Friday about a lawsuit filed November 15th in Fulton Superior Court seeking judicial review of the process by which a politically connected developer, Linger Longer, was selected as the Revitalization Partner of the Jekyll Island Authority in the proposed development of 45 acres on Jekyll Island.

The Jekyll Island Revitalization Group (JIRG) and its related company, Jekyll Island Company are the plaintiffs in the lawsuit. The defendants are:

JEKYLL ISLAND – STATE PARK AUTHORITY; BENJAMIN G. PORTER, Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Jekyll Island – State Park Authority; EDWARD E. BOSHEARS, Secretary of the Board of Directors of the Jekyll Island – State Park Authority; HOMER DELOACH; MICHAEL D. HODGES; BECKY KELLEY; SYBIL D. LYNN; ROBERT W. KRUEGER; SAMUEL B. KELLETT; STEPHEN B. CROY, Members of the Board of Directors of the Jekyll Island – State Park Authority.

You can read a copy of the petition for judicial review, but these are the basic allegations:

COUNT I: THE PROPOSAL SELECTED BY JIA WAS NOT RESPONSIVE TO RFP 244, IT SHOULD NOT HAVE BEEN CONSIDERED BY JIA, AND IT SHOULD NOT HAVE BEEN SELECTED BY JIA.

COUNT II: JIA EXCEEDED ITS AUTHORITY IN CONSIDERING AND SELECTING THE LINGER LONGER COMMUNITIES PROPOSAL.

COUNT III: JIA VIOLATED ITS DUTIES AS A TRUSTEE.

COUNT IV: JIA VIOLATED THE OPEN PUBLIC MEETINGS ACT, AND JIA FAILED TO FAIRLY AND EFFECTIVELY COMMUNICATE ALLEGED CHANGES IN THE REQUIREMENTS OF RFP 244.

COUNT V: JIA VIOLATED JIRG’S RIGHT TO DUE PROCESS.

COUNT VI: JIA VIOLATED JIRG’S RIGHT TO EQUAL PROTECTION.

COUNT VII: JIA’S ACTIONS CONSTITUTE A TAKING WITHOUT JUST COMPENSATION.

COUNT VIII: INJUNCTION AGAINST FURTHER NEGOTIATIONS BETWEEN DEFENDANTS AND LINGER LONGER COMMUNITIES.

In seeking an injunction, Count VIII alleges:

107. JIRG lacks an adequate remedy at law. Unless JIA and Linger Longer Communities are restrained and enjoined from conducting planning and contract negotiations concerning RFP 244, JIRG will suffer irreparable harm in it ability to not only seek and obtain effective judicial review of the Final Decisions, but also to obtain an effective and fair remedy if the Final Decision is reversed.
108. The public has a substantial interest in honest and fair bidding on public projects and decisions concerning requests for proposals. The public interest would likewise suffer immediate and irreparable injury should JIA and Linger Longer Communities not be enjoined from planning and contract negotiations.

And what does JIRG want the Superior Court to do?

WHEREFORE, the Plaintiffs pray:
(a) that this Court enjoin the following parties from taking any action in furtherance of negotiating a contract for RFP 244:
(i) Linger Longer Communities, including any person or entity that created or submitted any information on behalf of Linger Longer Communities in response to RFP 244, and the directors officers, members, employees, and agents of those entities; and;
(ii) Defendants, and the officers, employees, agents, and those acting in concert with the Jekyll Island – State Park Authority;
(b) that this Court order JIA to transmit the entire record in this matter before JIA to this Court;
(c) that this Court order, adjudge, declare and decree that the Final Decision is void and unenforceable in its entirety;
(i) that this Court order JIA to strike the proposal submitted by Linger Longer Communities and select the proposal submitted by JIRG;
(ii) in the alternative, that this Court order JIA to re-start the bidding process for RFP 244; and
(d) that this Court grant such other, further, plenary, and different relief as may be deemed just and proper.

Injunctions require hearings and I assume there will be a humdinger sometime in the near future.  If a temporary injunction is granted, the development projected will be on hold indefinitely.Â

Jason Pye on the Speaker’s Tax Proposal: Going Down in Flames!

Anyone who keeps up with politics in Georgia, keeps up with JasonPye.com. It’s always a pleasure to talk to Jason and get his take on issues and people.

In this interview, Jason discusses some of the details of Speaker Richardson’s proposal to eliminate the property tax and broaden the sales tax. Jason gives credit to Travis Fain for the details of what goods and services would be taxed under the plan. Jason says there is a need for clarification as to some of the things that will be taxed. For example, the plan would tax temporary lodging over 90 days. Does this refer only to the extended motel or hotel stay, or does it include your apartment rent. For a list of what exemptions will be eliminated, go here.

If the Speaker has his way, we will be paying sales tax on water bills, phone and long distance services, dental services, and haircuts, just to name a few. The state portion of the sales tax we pay is currently 4% and, as I understand it, would remain unchanged.

Of course, one of the most important issues is whether or not enough revenue can be generated from the expansion of the sales tax to make up the revenue lost through the elimination of the property tax. Jason said there was a study by Georgia State University which indicates there would be a significant shortfall. However, the Speaker insists there won’t be a short fall. The question is whether the Speaker’s optimism is merely blind faith or reliable economic analysis.

Jason points out that one of the problems with the Speaker’s plan is the manner in which it is being revealed and promoted. For example, Speaker Richardson has made it apparent that he is not receptive to any criticism of his plan, and generally avoids discussing it in public.

Politically, the unknown consequences of this battle over the Speaker’s tax proposal is the repercussions it will have on Republicans in the ‘08 elections. The elimination of the property tax is a sticky local issue for two reasons: (1) every citizen is likely to jump up and salute the elimination of the property tax, and (2) the local city and county governments oppose its elimination since it is their main source of revenue. There is not, at least as far as Jason and I are aware, any city or county elected officials that support the Speaker’s plan. In fact, Jason said one mayor compared it to the centralized government proposed by Karl Marx. Next year in seeking re-election, Republican representatives are going to have to explain their support for the plan and that could make them vulnerable to significant criticism at home. And if they don’t support the plan, they are subject to criticism as well.

Everyone believes, thinks and assumes that Speaker Richardson controls the House Republicans with an iron rod. Jason thinks he is literally staking his political future on passing this plan. But, when all is said and done, Jason says the plan will go down in flames because it has no chance of passsing the Senate. And maybe that is part of the Speaker’s plan, too! Is this a strategy to build a platform to run for Governor in 2010? Trying to eliminate the property tax may get the vote of a lot of Georgians, regrdless of whether or not it is a bad idea. And what happens if an opponent in the Governor’s race, say one from the Senate or elsewhere, opposed eliminating the property tax?

I was disheatened when our discussion turned to the Atlanta Water Shortage. I thought Jason, smart guy that he is, would jump at my offer to rent my trailer to him when they run out of water in Atlanta. He seems oddly unconcerned, even though I was only charging two grand a week for hot water and 6 baths a day.

Jason says there is no sense of panic, at least not in the county where he lives, Newton. Its reservoir is full. Although no outside water use is allowed, he thinks people, generally, have a degree of blind faith that the problem will get resolved. No one seems to be laying blame for the situation getting this bad–other than whoever caused the drought. On top of that, the Governor is getting favorable approval ratings for the manner in which he is handling the problem.

Jason did say that if the optimism proves unfounded, he is coming to live with me. Fine Jason, but without a paid, advance reservation, the rate goes up!

We ended the interview with a few comments about Ron Paul and the libertarian philosophy. Ron Paul seems to be experiencing a spike in his campaign and support. He is one of those who says what he means and means what he says and to that extent he is refreshing. But then, you ask the next question and find out he thinks the Food and Drug Administration (or a dozen or so other federal agencies) should be eliminated, not reformed, eliminated. Jason seems to think that is a good idea and believes the drug companies and market forces will make sure dangerous drugs don’t stay on the market.

Me? I am not concerned about bad drugs staying on the market. I am concerned about them getting on the market in the first place. Apparently, Jason thinks a few deaths to test a drug out are well worth the costs savings in not having the FDA require proof a drug is safe.

Back to Ron Paul. Jason doesn’t think America is ready to support a strong, independent third party, whether Libertarian or otherwise. Neither do I–right now. But if any man can birth a viable political party, virtually overnight, its George Bush. Rarely, has one man done so much, so wrong, so faithfully.

 
 Jason Pye, Blogger [30:32m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (504)

Driver Licenses for Aliens–Not in Mexico!

This article is copied from azcentral.com: (Arizona) (Emphasis added for a quick scan.)

MEXICO CITY - The question of whether to give driver’s licenses to illegal immigrants ignited a national debate in the United States. But in Mexico, the largest source of U.S. immigrants, there’s no question: Here, you must be a legal resident to get a driver’s license.

All of Mexico’s 31 states, along with Mexico City, require foreigners to present a valid visa if they want a driver’s license, according to a survey of states by The Arizona Republic.

“When it comes to foreigners, we’re a little more strict here,” said Alejandro Ruíz, director of education at the Mexican Automobile Association.

Immigrant drivers zoomed into the national spotlight after presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton said a move by the New York governor to give licenses to illegal immigrants “makes a lot of sense” during an Oct. 30 debate.

On Wednesday, Clinton backed off that plan.

Proponents said the plan would have made the roads safer by ensuring that drivers are trained and insured, but the ensuing public outcry forced Gov. Eliot Spitzer to abandon the effort Wednesday.

U.S. Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y., planned to file a bill this week that would bar states from any future attempts to give licenses to illegal immigrants.

Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah and Washington allow drivers to get licenses without proving they are legal residents, according to the National Immigration Law Center. Most other states, including Arizona, require applicants to prove they are citizens or legal residents.

Mexicans make up the bulk of illegal immigrants in the United States, accounting for an estimated 6 million of the 11.5 million undocumented residents as of March 2005, according to the Pew Hispanic Center.

Mexico’s Foreign Relations Secretariat declined to comment on the controversy this week, but the Mexican government has fought U.S. restrictions on licenses in the past.

In 2004, the former Mexican consul in New York, Arturo Sarukhan, called such rules “a policy without a purpose” during a hearing in the New York State Assembly.

Sarukhan is now the Mexican ambassador in Washington.

Yet, licensing offices in all of Mexico’s 31 states, along with the Federal District, where Mexico City is located, said they require applicants to prove their citizenship, preferably by showing a federal voter-registration card issued by the Federal Elections Institute.

Of those, 28 states and the Federal District said they would issue licenses to foreigners only if they present valid FM-2 or FM-3 residency visas.

The central Mexican states of Morelos, Puebla and Guerrero are more lenient. Foreigners there can get a driver’s license with a valid tourist visa, or FMT.

Tourist visas are issued by federal immigration agents at airports and border crossing points.

Foreign tourists who are in Mexico temporarily can also drive using their foreign licenses, states said. Most U.S. states, including Arizona, have a similar exemption for temporary visitors.

Mexican officials said the application rules are strictly enforced, especially in southern states that have a problem with illegal immigrants from Central America.

“Last week a man came here (with a tourist visa) and said he was working as a deliveryman,” said Denia Gurgua, manager of the driver’s license office in Tuxtla Gutiérrez, the capital of the southern state of Chiapas.

She said she denied him a license because he did not have a visa to work in Mexico.

“Our constitution has certain restrictions for foreigners,” she said.

U.S. proponents of tougher restrictions worry that having a driver’s license helps legitimize illegal immigrants, making it harder to detect and remove them.

“The fact that all 31 states in Mexico would have such a common-sense position . . . shows to me a certain hypocrisy on the part of the Mexican government, because they are constantly criticizing those of us in Congress who want immigration laws to be tougher up here,” said King of New York.

But immigrant advocates says the two countries don’t compare. U.S. states are trying to protect other motorists from millions of illegal immigrants who are already driving, said Tyler Moran, an expert on driver’s licenses at the National Immigration Law Center.

Mexico’s pool of foreign residents is much smaller, about 492,000 people in a country of 105 million, according to the 2000 census.

“It may be a bit like comparing apples and oranges,” Moran said. “The (U.S. states) are dealing in reality, and it’s better public policy to have people actually have licenses, have identification, have insurance than not.”

Water and Property Taxes: Senator Tommie Williams Says…

I think he gets it.  I hope he gets it!  But only time will tell and it will take the 2008 session of the Georgia legislature to reveal just how Senator Williams and the rest of the Republican leadership are going to deal with the issue of water.   This interview focuses primarily on water, but near the end we discuss Glenn Richardson’s proposal to eliminate the property tax. 

When it comes to Speaker Richardson’s proposal, Tommie makes it clear that while it may pass the House, it will not pass the Senate, at least not in its original form.  I am not sure what that means, but Senator Wiliams is equally emphatic that the 2008 legislature is going to do something about property taxes.  According to Senator Williams, people are upset about their property taxes are going up. 

He points out that people on fixed incomes have to worry about their property taxes increasing to the point they can’t afford to pay them.  I don’t think anyone would argue with the idea that the elderly and people on fixed incomes need some protection, I don’t think this justifies a criticism of the property tax as an effective and fair tool for raising revenue.  There are two basic reasons the taxes of homeowners go up significantly:  (1) correcting years of under-stated property values because assessors did not do their jobs, or (2) the inflated value of real estate in this economy. 

I mentioned to Tommie that Warren Buffett, the billionaire, had recently announced that he paid 18% of his income in taxes and his secretary paid 33% of her income in taxes and had challenged members of Congress to disclose their tax rates.  I then asked Tommie if he thought the shifting of the tax burden from a wealth basis, such as the property tax, to a consumption basis, such as the sales tax, would result in his paying less taxes.  He readily admitted that he had already done the math and that he would pay less tax. 

And that, ladies and gentlemen, is the primary reason behind Glenn Richardson’s efforts to eliminate the property tax: less taxes for the rich, more taxes for consumers.

Water, is not an easy topic to discuss, since it seems that no one wants to talk specifics.  However, in light of Governor Perdue’s recent public confession of sin regarding the way the water problem has been handled, I really wanted to know what sins had been committed that may be affecting the delivery of water from the heavens.   I am still not sure what those sins are, but I still resent having my supply of water affected because of them.

It did not take long to establish that the water plan proposed by the Water Council is not going to receive the legislature’s approval.  The real question is what plan will pass, because some plan has to pass unless they change the law.

Tommie also pointed out that everybody is sick and tired of the hassles that come from too much growth and development in Metro Atlanta.  Too many cars.  Too much traffic.  Too little water.  However, I did not detect any real desire to curb the enthusiasm of developers for more. 

Tommie readily acknowledges that South Georgia is not going to stand for having its water sent to Atlanta.

He doesn’t think that building more reservoirs is a long term solution to the water shortage, mainly because he thinks the EPD and the Endangered Species Act would effectively prevent a reservoir being approved. 

He mentions the possibility of a desalinazation plant to pump water from the coast to Atlanta as a possibile means of providing more water to the Metro Atlanta.  That is certainly a possibility, but the costs is going to be a big issue.  Not only that, will Atlanta pay for it?  Can Atlanta pay for it?

I was surprised when he mentioned the Tennessee River, which he indicates Georgia owns half of.  Hmmm!  Never thought of that, but Tommie indicated that Georgia might claim a right to pump water from the Tennessee River to Metro Atlanta.  Of course, there are all sorts of issues with this, such as the power and control of the Tennessee Valley Authority over the Tennessee River, not to mention building the pipeline to Atlanta.

While these long term possibilities are interesting to discuss, I was more interested in finding out if anyone, including Tommie, had any idea what Atlanta was going to do in 250+ days, if and when the water ran out.  He indicated that the emergency managment agencies were working on that problem and I really did not get any idea what short term options were under consideration, other than, of course, hauling water to and fro.

The only thing that is still certain is that 2008 is going to be interesting, to say the least.

 
 Tommie Willians, Senate Majority Leader [32:13m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (534)

One Year After the Secure Fence Act: Where’s the Fence?

Are you concerned about border security?  Do you think your government is actually doing something to secure our borders?  NOT!

On October 24, 2007 the GAO issued a report on the status of the DHS’s (Department of Homeland Security) efforts to build the fence on the border with Mexico. In 2006 those fine people in Congress passed a law, the Secure Fence Act, that required Homeland Security to build 850 miles of fence along specific stretches of the southern border.

DHS was supposed to construct 70 miles of the fence in the first year. The GAO says it built 73 miles, but according to Steve Elliott, the Executive Director of Grassfire.org, the GAO isn’t exactly telling the truth. Yes, 73 miles of fence have been constructed, but only about 5 miles of it is of the type mandated by the law: a double barrier fence. The other 68 miles might keep out a blind man in a wheelchair during a sandstorm–my analogy and totally without a factual basis.

Steve checked out the GAO report by actually going to the border and inspecting the construction of the fence with Glenn Spencer, a member of the American Border Patrol.

Here is what the Secure Fence Act said should be built and where:

(1) SECURITY FEATURES.
(A) REINFORCED FENCING.—In carrying out subsection (a), the Secretary of Homeland Security shall provide for least 2 layers of reinforced fencing, the installation of additional physical barriers, roads, lighting, cameras, and sensors—
(i) extending from 10 miles west of the Tecate, California, port of entry to 10 miles east of the Tecate, California, port of entry;
(ii) extending from 10 miles west of the Calexico, California, port of entry to 5 miles east of the Douglas, Arizona, port of entry;
(iii) extending from 5 miles west of the Columbus, New Mexico, port of entry to 10 miles east of El Paso, Texas;
(iv) extending from 5 miles northwest of the Del Rio, Texas, port of entry to 5 miles southeast of the Eagle Pass, Texas, port of entry; and
(v) extending 15 miles northwest of the Laredo, Texas, port of entry to the Brownsville, Texas, port of entry.
(B) PRIORITY AREAS.—With respect to the border described—
(i) in subparagraph (A)(ii), the Secretary shall ensure that an interlocking surveillance camera system is installed along such area by May 30, 2007, and that fence construction is completed by May 30, 2008; and
(ii) in subparagraph (A)(v), the Secretary shall ensure that fence construction from 15 miles northwest of the Laredo, Texas, port of entry to 15 southeast of the Laredo, Texas, port of entry is completed by December 31, 2008.
(C) EXCEPTION.—If the topography of a specific area has an elevation grade that exceeds 10 percent, the Secretary may use other means to secure such area, including the use of surveillance and barrier tools.

You can see a presentation by Steve Elliott prepared with the help of Google Earth explaining precisely where the fence is. You can also visit American Border Patrol and see the fence that is being built, as well as videos of activity at the border.

If you want to make sure your representatives know how you feel about border security and the construction of the fence, you can sign Grassfire’s online petition.

 
 Steve Elliott, Grassfire.org [27:00m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (483)