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Monthly Archive for September, 2008

Page 2 of 2

Sara Doyle, Candidate for Georgia Court of Appeals

Sara Doyle is our 5th Court of Appeals candidate interviewed. After 4, I was concerned that it was going to sound like “been there, done that.” It was nothing of the kind and I encourage everyone to listen and not assume you have already heard it just because you listened to some other interview.

Sara went to law school at my alma mater, Mercer, and has been practicing law for about 15 years. Currently, she is a partner with Knight & Holland, one of those big, international firms, but she began her careet in a small 8-man firm in Atlanta that did what most small firms do: a variety of this and that. When the small law firm merged with Knight & Holland, Sara was on her way. Her focus is in civil litigation and education law. Education law? I remember when there wasn’t any such thing!

Sara must be doing something right. She has been recognized as one of the top female lawyers in Georgia. I asked Sara about this rather sexist accolade. I mean I don’t know what being female or male has to do with being a good lawyer. I suspect that Sara is one of the best, male and female. Anyway, Sara was gracious in not making this a big deal. A real life example of a judicial temperament.

Listen to the interview and visit her website.

THEN GO VOTE!!!!!

 
 Sara-Doyle, Candidate, Georgia Court of Appeals [29:10m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (1806)

If You Haven’t Seen This, You Need to Be Hospitalized!

Bobby Saxon, Candidate for Congress, GA 10th

Bobby Saxon is a Democrat trying to unseat a sitting Republican Congressman, Paul Broun, who was elected last year to fill the unexpired term of Charles Norwood. Bobby is a veteran of Iraq and believes Broun has abandoned our veterans when he voted against the new veterans bill.

According to Bobby, Broun has disappointed many Republicans, particularly farmers, with his votes on such things as the farm bill (which he voted against).

He also voted against increased funding for Peach Care health insurance for kids.

Why? Paul has declared himself against anything that costs more money–except apparently the Iraq War.

Apparently, for this same reason Broun thinks Social Security is unconstitutional.

Bobby points out that Paul voted against The Safe Act, one of only two Congressmen to vote against it. The bill required internet providers to report child pornographers.

Bobby told me something surprising: there are 4000 oil wells in the Gulf of Mexico. Broun is a big supporter of DRILL, DRILL, DRILL. The only problem is that drilling offshore or in Alaska NWR, it isn’t going to resolve the current price of oil or get us very far in achieving oil independence. Bobby doesn’t oppose drilling and exploration, but points out that is just a small part of the energy problem. It is the long term solution of alternative and renewable sources of energy that we need to develop from solar to nuclear.

Bobby points out that Broun is a former lobbyist, whose conservative mantel opposes federal regulation of business and things that cost money, but who wants that same federal government to regulate our private and social lives.

Bobby describes himself as a moderate, conservative Democrat with common sense. He hopes to get the voters of the 10th send common sense to Washington.

The most disturbing thing that Bobby told me is that Broun has refused to debate him, even though Broun chastised his Republican opponent for refusing to debate. I tell you, when elected representatives won’t face their opponents in a debate, there is something wrong. Talk about elitist, now that is the epitome of elitism.
VOTE NOVEMBER 4TH!!!

 
 Bobby Saxon, Candidate, Congress GA 10th [30:00m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (416)

Bruce Edenfield, Candidate for Georgia Court of Appeals

Bruce Edenfield has law in his blood; no wonder he is seeking election to the Georgia Court of Appeals. His father, Newell Edenfield, was appointed by President Johnson in 1967 as a Judge of the U. S. District Court, Northern District of Georgia where he served until his death in 1981. By the way, his father was born in Southeast Georgia, Swainsboro, Emanuel County. His cousin, Gerald Edenfield, practices law in Statesboro and his other cousin is the Honorable B. Avant Edenfield, Judge, U. S. District Court, Southern District of Georgia.

Bruce has practiced law for 35 years, starting out as an Assistant Attorney General under one of the best, Arthur K. Bolton. Since 1979 he has been in private practice in Atlanta. He currently lives in Dahlonega.

Bruce has signed the pledge to run an ethical judicial campaign, which is being encouraged nationwide in an effort to get politics out of the election of judges.

More importantly, he has not filled out that ludicrous questionaire sponsored by Georgia Right to Life.

Listen to the interview and make up your own mind!

 
 Bruce Edenfield, Candidate, Georgia Court of Appeals [29:26m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (1391)

Of CorsI Wrote “Obama Nation”

Jerome Corsi made the rounds on all the talk shows promoting his new book, “The Obama Nation: Leftist Politics and the Cult of Personality.” Corsi seems to have a particular interest in people that run for president. You may remember him. In the last presidential election he wrote “Unfit for Command: Swift Boat Veterans Speak Out Against John Kerry.” He is still proud of that one. I didn’t like the attack on Kerry, so I decided to see if I could find out if this was just another smear campaign or was there something sinister about Obama that I needed to know.

Corsi is currently a reporter with World Net Daily, a conservative so-called, news website.

I asked Corsi what he wanted everyone to know about Obama. His reply was surprisingly mundane. The two things we got around to discussing were that Obama was liberal (actually, Corsi says “leftist liberal) and he was going to raise taxes on 90% of Americans.

Corsi’s book has resulted in anti-Corsi websites and publications which contend that many of his allegations are false. Corsi essentially admitted that there were some errors in his book, but said the attacks focused on minor discrepancies, and not the major contentions. It seems obvious in talking with him that he loves the controversy; it sells books, gets him interviews and makes him rich. Can’t say I blame him, but neither can I say this guy is a serious historian.

I don’t know about the errors, but I didn’t consider it a revelation to find Obama being accused of being a liberal or a leftist liberal, or that he might raise taxes (but, I don’t think it will be on 90% of working Americans). Hell, I am one of the most conservative people I know (used to be a Republican) when it comes to waste and efficiency in government, but I am also a liberal, a damn big liberal when it comes to me versus corporate America. People should win that struggle, not corporate America. The problem in this country is we like simple name tags for complex issues.

As for raising taxes, Americans may never admit it, but somebody better raise somebody’s damn taxes. Bush tax cuts haven’t kept the economy out of the toilet and this administration has made deficit spending a thing to be proud of. Either we pay more in taxes or our kids and grandkids do. We are the ones who allowed this, and I think this generation ought to pay the bill, not my kids.

Of course, that kind of talk is heresy. All Corsi has to do is say “Obama is going to raise taxes!” and half the brains (actually, a little more than half) in this country go dark, no further thought, just total blind acceptance that this must be true and must be bad.

I am reading Corsi’t book, but have not finished it. I try to be read books that I am probably not going to like to see if there is anything in them that I consider valid or worthwhile. So far, I think this one is not worth my time, but that is probably due to the fact that I am suspicious of Corsi’s purpose. Sorry, Jerome, but the purpose of the book is not to make anyone stop and think, just to stop thinking. The sad thing is that many Americans, too many, prefer the latter to the former.

But Corsi says he is no Republican. He is a supporter of the Constitution Party which is nothing more than the right wingingest of Republicans manipulating the constitution without a clue as to what it means to anyone but themselves. But, that is another interview.

 
 Jerome Corsi, Author, Obama Nation [27:18m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (374)

Paul Broun, Congressman, GA 10th

I always enjoy interviewing politicians, particularly when the are campaigning. This interview with Congressman Paul Broun (GA 10th) was recorded early in the week of the Republican National Convention, before Sarah Palin was announced as McCain’s choice for VP. Too bad! I wish I could have asked about that one.

Paul was gracious, but I am not sure I was. I don’t know what it is, an allergy maybe. Maybe, it is the fact that before he ran for Congress, Paul was a lobbyist for Sarfari Club International. My fear is, once a lobbyist, always a lobbyist. Sorry Paul, but I think lobbyists are the worst thing we ever invented in this country, at least the ones that shovel money to politicians.

Things started off cordially, and then Paul said those magic words: original intent. Damn, how I hate it when someone who isn’t a lawyer and who hasn’t studied government says they believe the Constitution should be interpreted according to its original intent. I even hate it when a lawyer, a Supreme Court Justice even, says it. It is so much BS. I don’t think George Washington had any idea how government should deal with 90% of the challenges we face today, except that I know he wouldn’t approve of the secrecy that the Bush administration prizes so highly.

And then, when original intent is followed by other sound bites like: leave money in people’s pocket, relieve the regulartory burden on business, get government out of people’s lives, etc., and I am close to a stroke. Okay everyone, government is cancelled, now go get on a plane that the FAA doesn’t inspect and quit griping about all the plane crashes.

Paul says we are spending our grandchildren’s future, as if it isn’t the Republicans, his party, that is doing the spending. The truth is that all of our budget problems in this country are the result of spending the Social Security Trust Fund money for non-social security purposes and the cost of Medicare. But, you can rest assured that neither Paul, nor any Republican, nor any Democrat have enough original intent to fix Social Security and Medicare.

Paul and the Republicans say they want to put money back into the hands of the people, but they won’t put money into the hands of the people by raising the minimum wage and make the corporations, who make millions from the sweat of the working man, pay for it. They just want to cut taxes and run up the deficit. I don’t get it Paul. I just damn don’t get it.

Paul attempted to give me a history lesson in what the Constitution meant, you know, way back then in 1789 when the Federalist Papers were written. He has read them and even keeps a copy on his desk in Washington. I dare anyone to read them and find an answer to any problem we face today. Just ain’t there. In fact, if I remember correctly, those Federalist wanted a strong central government, which seems to be exactly the opposite of what Paul and the Republicans want. They want no government telling them what to do.

Paul wants to restrict the federal government to the 18 things he says the Constitution allows the federal government to do. I wish we could, but it was the Republican, Teddy Roosevelt, who decided in the early 1900’s that big business would kill you if the government didn’t carry a big stick when it came to monopolies and unions. The Republicans today love to mention Teddy, but he wouldn’t recognize them. Actually, I am pretty sure he would be ashamed of the whole lot of them. TR was the original regulator of business because he recognized that the federal government was the only thing big enough to counter the power of the robber barons like the Fords, Vanderbilts, Morgans, DuPonts and a host of others. Yes sir, Teddy was a real Republican who tamed the big corporations rather than living off them.

I always ask free market, small government people like Paul, if they think we need the Food and Drug Administration. A lot of them, including Paul, feel compelled to condemn any regulartory agency of the federal government, including the FDA. He doesn’t think we need the FDA because the 50 states are quite capable of regulating the same food and drugs, should they choose to do so. I wish that were true Paul, but we both know the states won’t do it. Further, if you know anything about economics, you know that if 50 states passed 50 different standards for the quality of milk, the milk companies would be talking about the expense of complying with 50 different laws, rather than one. That is precisely why we have one federal government. One nation, one law! Now that’s patriotism!

Paul thinks the American consumer would be just as safe if the drug companies could make any drug they want and sell it to the rest of us without having to prove to anyone that it is a safe drug. Paul thinks corporate America will make sure it doesn’t sell us bad drugs, just like they won’t import cheap toys from China with lead in them that will kill our children. I am sorry Paul, but what world are you living in?

This position, this blind faith in the market, is such a naive position, it is difficult to even listen to it. Paul repeatedly says he is in favor of accountability, but he doesn’t want the federal government to be the one that makes corporations accountable. He would be fine with the states doing exactly the same thiings that the federal government does. He just doesn’t want the federal government to do them because the Federalist Papers told him so. I need a page reference!

Now ask yourself, what sense does it make to say it is okay for the states to regulate business, but not okay for the federal government to do it? I will tell you why Republicans love this idea. Paul can claim ignorance, but I bet he knows it as well. Republicans know that if the responsibility to protect us from corporate misconduct is left up to the states, they won’t do much, if anything, at least not until it gets so bad the people just won’t stand for it. Corporations are bigger than states. They have more money than states. They tell states what to do, not the other way around. Take away federal regulation and corporations would run rampant, they would have a field day with all sorts of mischief. But that is exactly what Paul wants.

I recommend to Paul (and anyone else that is interested) that you put down the Federalist Papers for a while and read “Doubt is Their Product” by David Michaels. It will literally make you sick to read how corporate America fights tooth and nail to keep OSHA, EPA, FDA and other regulatory agencies from protecting us, particularly the American worker.

I am sorry Paul. I am no socialist. I am a vigorous capitalist, but I am also a realist. No doubt there are bad regulations, and there are inefficient government agencies, but the remedy is to fix the problem, not come up with some BS idea that we don’t need government to protect us from business excess.

At the end of the day, Paul and I agreed to disagree. We did agree that the public discourse was something worthwhile. However, I still think his position is nuts.

Sorry Paul, but I sincerely do! I am sure he thinks the same of my position. Fair enough, but the real question is: What do you think?

 
 Paul Broun, Congressman, GA 10th [30:43m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (553)

Have You Heard About Insurance Company Rules?

Michael Meyer von Bremen, Candidate for Georgia Court of Appeals

Michael Meyer von Bremen is accoustomed to political campaigns. A lawyer by profession, he has been a State Senator from the 12th District (Albany) since 1998. Even though he is a Democrat in a Republican dominated legislature, Michael was appointed Chairman of the Special Judiciary Committee in 2005-06.

Michael graduated from Mercer Law School 7 years after i did. He has practiced a wide range of law over in Albany, everything from criminal law, to representing injured plaintiffs, but his primary experience is as a defense attorney representing insurance companies and their insureds in lawsuits filed by injured people. Not too long ago, Michael joined the firm of Hall, Booth, Smith and Slover, one of the biggest defense firms in the State of Georgia.

I represented insurance companies for 20 years and had a few cases in which Michael was also involved, but I don’t think we ever tried a case together.

Listen to the interview and make up your mind! AND VOTE!!!!

 
 Michael Meyer von Bremen, Candidate, Georgia Court of Appeals [26:51m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (1082)

Tamela Adkins, Candidate for Georgia Court of Appeals

Seven lawyers are running for the position of Judge on the Georgia Court of Appeals. One of them is Tamela Adkins, who practices in Lawrenceville, GA. Tamela began practicing law in Georgia in 1993 and has specialized in family law. If there is one area of law that touches most Georgians it is family law: divorce, child custody, domestic violence. Unfortunately, these problems are not receding, but increasing.

Tamela has one of the most important qualifications for a judge: experience in the trenches. Lawyers that go to court regularly, day in and day out, know the importance of good judges, expecially appellate judges. The cases that appellate judges consider involve real people with real problems trying to obtain the ultimate prize: justice. Some do and some don’t. When a judge reviews a case it is important to know that the judge has been there, has engaged in the same struggle, suffered the same defeats and hopefully, has the same thirst to do better.

Listen to the interview and decide for yourself. And VOTE!!!!

 
 Tamela Adkins, Candidate, Georgia Court of Appeals [26:17m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (1786)

The Political Analysis You Have Been Waiting For: GriftDrift on Palin!

As you can see, I have just been too, too busy lately and have not posted a lot of recent interviews. Don’t worry, they are coming, but a guy has to make a living. Nonetheless, when James Williams (GriftDrift) is the guest, I just have to make that extra effort.

After almost two weeks of political conventions, there is enough to talk about, but after Palin’s unveiling, there is only one thing to chew on: the pitbull with lipstick. James does a much better job of putting all of this into the proper perspective than those pin-heads on the networks.

You will have to listen to this one if you want to appreciate real political analysis, but here are a few highlights:

First, is there a time warp at the RNC? They seem to be blaming everything from energy/oil, the economy, deficit spending and bigger government on the people in power–as if it ain’t been them for 7 years! Reality check, please!

And everytime these people said they respected Hillary and thought Obama was a great guy, I wanted to gag. I never cease to be amazed at the depth of their insincerity.

Does Obama have the experience to be President? Yep! Does Palin? The jury is still out.

Is McCain brillant is choosing Palin? Only time will tell, but it is a risky move by the Maverick. I don’t think women are fooled by the choice into thinking that any woman in any position in the White House, even a right-wing Republican, is better than none.

What is off limits? Pregnant daughter? Working woman? Neglecting family responsibilities? A child with disabilities? (But, can you hear the right-wing outrage if a Democratic mother chose work over family? I thought that was the breakdown of the family all those people thought had ruined America. FLIP-FLOP!)

And fair game: experience to step into the shoes of the oldest guy to be elected president.

Yes, Palin hit it out of the park. I would vote for her in a minute for “National Reader.” She could read everyone’s speech, including McCain’s when he has to go to bed early. She could read bills in the Senate. Maybe even have a regular podcast and read the newspaper to the nation. Yes, she can certainly read a prepared speech which she did not write.

But, as James points out, Palin has yet to be vetted. There are only 2 months for Americans to get to know her. Two months for her to explain that she did support the Bridge to Nowhere, even though she denied it in her speech. It is going to be two intense months for Sarah Palin.

I don’t oppose Sarah Palin because of who or what she is as an individual. I oppose her because of the misguided policies of a party that talks about smaller government and has spent us into more debt and larger government that any prior administration. I oppose her because she has no intention of building bi-partisanship–she’s a pit bull and pit bulls don’t do that! I oppose her because she is part of a party that lies and decieves us without shame or apology when the lie is exposed.

There was a time when i thought John McCain was a different kind of politician. His conduct during this campaign has proven to me that he will do anything, pander to any group, say anything and choose an inexperienced person for VP if it pleases “the base,” whatever it takes to be elected. If elected, the only thing McCain is going to change is absolutely nothing!

 
 James Williams, GriftDrift Blogger [31:03m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (390)