Monday, May 4, 2009

Florida Supreme Court Should Follow Iowa's Lead on Gay Marriage

An edited version of my Editorial appeared on May 3, 2009 in the Ft. Lauderdale Sun Sentinel (see http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/opinion/sfl-iowa-marriage-wolfe-m0503sbmay03,0,310715.story).  The full text is below:

Florida Supreme Court Should Follow Iowa's Lead on Gay Marriage

 

Equal Protection Record Lights the Way for Florida's High Court

 

By Curtis Wolfe *

Far to the north of Florida, in a rural Midwestern state known for long, cold winters and with barely a fifth as many residents as the teeming "Sunshine State," on April 3rd the Iowa Supreme Court unanimously struck down the state legislature's effort to ban gay marriage as unconstitutional, upholding the most important constitutional principle underlying the American way of life—Equal Protection.

Nearly 1,500 miles from the Iowa State capitol, our Florida Supreme Court justices should take note of the challenge presented by the Iowa Supreme Court as they consider whether to set aside or let stand our state's "Constitutional Amendment" banning gay marriage. If the Florida high court chooses the latter course, it will render toothless our constitutional guarantee of equality and will continue the discouraging history of discrimination that haunts, or should haunt, each Florida resident. 

Why should the Florida Supreme Court and more than 18 million Floridians living in the fourth most populous state in the nation attach any particular consequence to what happens in a far-off, sparsely populated Midwestern state?

History provides the best answer to that question, with Iowa at the forefront of anti-discrimination rulings since the fight for equal protection began in our country. 

In 1839, the Iowa Supreme Court ruled that a human being could not be treated as property to enforce a contract for slavery – 17 years before a U.S. Supreme Court stuck in an uncivilized past infamously elected to uphold the rights of a slave owner in Dred Scott v. Sanford. In 1868 and 1873, the Iowa court denounced segregation in a stand that the U.S. Supreme Court would not take until 1954 with Brown v. Board of Education. 

And, in  1869, Iowa's Supreme Court led the way in promoting equality by allowing women to practice law in the state -- the U.S. Supreme Court would affirm Illinois' denial of a woman's right to practice law three years later and as late as 1894 go on to quash a Virginia woman's right to practice law.

In contrast, Florida's disappointing record on slavery and desegregation are well known and the State only granted women the right to practice law in 1898, nearly a generation after Iowa recognized this right.

In each of its historic decisions, Iowa's highest court ignored public outcry and stood firm in upholding the Iowa state "constitution's ideal and reaffirm the 'absolute equality of all' persons before the law as the very foundation principle of our government."

Similarly, the court has braved a conservative backlash in its current decision to overturn the ban on gay marriage, in its 69-page opinion judiciously and thoughtfully addressing each of the government's rationales supporting the popular opposition to gay marriage and dismissing each one of them.

Like Iowa's Constitution, our Florida Constitution guarantees that all Floridians are "equal before the law and have inalienable rights, among which are the right to enjoy and defend life and liberty and to pursue happiness." And, like the Iowa law banning gay marriage, the Florida constitutional amendment defines a "marriage" as a union between one man and one woman.

The Iowa Supreme Court found in its ruling that "the right of a gay or lesbian person under the marriage statute to enter into a civil marriage only with a person of the opposite sex is no right at all. Under such a law, gay or lesbian individuals cannot simultaneously fulfill their deeply felt need for a committed personal relationship, as influenced by their sexual orientation."

The Iowa court's analysis and explanation are thorough, thoughtful and learned. When coupled with the court's distinguished history of being early and right on issues of equal protection, the decision should help the Florida Supreme Court to recognize the prejudice and stereotype embedded in efforts to preserve "traditional" marriage through persecution of same-sex couples and to acknowledge that under the law those relationships have the same level of legitimacy, corresponding benefits and detriments as do opposite-sex relationships.

In Iowa, the Supreme Court justices wrote that "we give respect to the views of all on the issue of same-sex marriage—religious or otherwise—by giving respect to our constitutional principles." In Florida, our Supreme Court should similarly seek to uphold this same, profoundly American principal of equal protection that is enshrined in our state Constitution.

 

# # #

 

* Curtis Wolfe is an Iowa-born, Florida-resident attorney licensed to practice law by the Florida Bar. He is also founder and CEO of Boca Raton-based whocanisue.com.

 






Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Real Consumer Protection Needs Strong Court Systems, Not Just Re-regulation

As President-elect Barack Obama is in his initial days of his presidency, we Americans continue to experience the devastating effects of decades of deregulation of our financial markets and of industries central to our economy, not to mention the years of steady funding cuts to government watchdog agencies designed to protect the rights and safety of individual consumers.  From Enron to the importation of dangerous toys and tainted foodstuffs, from the sub-prime mortgage crisis to Bear Stearns, AIG and Bernard Madoff – what we see at the core of countless scandals in recent years is the tragic legacy of excessive deregulation to the detriment of the public interest.

The incoming Obama administration has the opportunity to change the course of that downward deregulatory spiral and revive the salutory role of regulations and norms, which even some fiscal conservatives, and registered Republicans like myself, believe to be necessary if our economy and financial markets are to function properly to the benefit of American businesses and the American public, and ultimately the American economy.

Even so, such a course of action alone will hardly be sufficient to stem the steady erosion that has occurred over decades in the protection and defense of the rights of the individual and consumers in our society.  What separates the United States from many developing nations is our well developed and generally reliable, fair, and independent judiciary.  As an institution, an efficient and effective United States' civil justice system is the cornerstone of our first-world status that separates us from other economically or militarily powerful countries.

Chronic underfunding of the federal and state court system and prevelant misguided attacks on those diligently defending the rights of those who have been unfairly harmed undermine our civil justice system and threaten both the safety and economic well being of every American.  Instead, we should be supporting an appropriate level of funding for courts and judges at both the federal and state level and we should oppose the economically inspired attempts at tort-reform that will destroy our civil justice system which serves precisely as the last and best protective defense of our individual and collective rights as consumers.

Now more than ever before, America needs a well-funded and vibrant court system. Why is this so urgent today? Three good reasons, made evident by our ongoing national financial and economic crisis, come to mind immediately:

Mortgage foreclosures – the millions of Americans losing their homes today include untold numbers whose initial loans were illegally structured with ineffective, non-compliant disclosures or who may be victims of hasty and illegal foreclosure proceedings, pushed through courtrooms overwhelmed by the sheer volume of filings.  Shouldn't individuals faced with the loss of their homes have recourse to an effective  well-funded court system and qualified attorneys to assert their rights against possible injustices in the foreclosure process?

Unemployment -- millions of Americans are today losing their jobs or having their hours and benefits cut, but under the constant mind-numbing barrage of negative financial and economic headlines few bother to question how many of those layoffs or reduction of hours or benefits have occurred outside the bounds of state and federal labor legislation. Wage and salary earners who believe they've been wronged need access to properly functioning courts and trial attorneys to help them assert their most basic workplace rights.

Financial malfeasance -- those who may have lost fortunes with financiers such as Bernard Madoff are just the "tip of the iceberg," with millions of small investors having lost years of careful savings and cautious retirement investments that were to see them through old age. These small investors deserve access to a functioning justice system that encourages them to assert their rights toward recovery of some portion of their monies lost through negligence or malfeasance of fund operators and money managers.

Congress and State legislatures need to vigorously pursue the adequate funding of trial and appellate court systems at the State and Federal levels to ensure that Americans seeking to avail themselves of the judicial process are not hamstrung by underbudgeted court systems.  At the same time, both the general public and the trial lawyers of this country have roles to play that can make the courts once again a trusted and honored venue for vindication of our rights as individuals and consumers.

The American people need to re-examine and dispense with the uni-dimensional attorney-bashing stereotype of trial lawyers as money-grubbing ambulance chasers that has been steadily fed to them over the years by special interests. It's time for the public to recognize and to give credit where credit is due -- in our deregulated last quarter century,  it has been trial lawyers working through the courts who have most consistently stood up as the last line of defense for consumer and individual rights against those seeking unchecked profit and gain.

In this time of crisis, trial lawyers can also help by dispensing with the legal billing "meter" that the public perceives to be always running in the background when it comes to basic information about consumer and individual rights and their protection, making as  much of that basic information available to the general public as possible. Attorneys who actively promote informing the public of their rights in areas that include those mentioned above will be seen as providing an invaluable public service, helping both to improve the sometimes tainted image of the legal profession and to stand it in good stead with the American public for years to come. 

* * *

Curtis Wolfe, an attorney who lives in Miami, is President and CEO of Boca Raton-based Internet startup, WhoCanISue.com. 

Monday, January 26, 2009

Tribute to Karl Wolfe


Three years ago today, I received a phone call that my father had committed suicide.  After returning to Iowa to be with my step-mother Kathie and my brothers and sisters, I learned that my biological mother who was suffering with the final stages of Alzheimer's was in the hospital with pneumonia.  After my father's viewing on the following day, the hospital called to inform us that my mother also passed away. To say it was a bad week would be an understatement.  

As a tribute to my father, I am publishing the eulogy that I gave for him on that Saturday. 

"Sort of funny… 
 
A person lives 67 years and 243 days and someone is supposed to stand up here and expound on their life in just a few minutes.  24,363 sunrises.  24,363 sunsets.  584,712 hours.  35 million 82 thousand and 720 some odd minutes.
 
After a while, 24,363 days or 584,712 hours seems as constant as time, as dependable as the changing of the leaves in the fall, the freezing Iowa winters, or fields of tall corn in August. 
 
But it really isn't.  Unlike eternity, we are humans and we are born and we die. 
 
Life itself is ephemeral, it comes and it goes. 
 
Today is the day we ask, Who was Karl Frederick Wolfe? 
 
Karl was born to Dwight and Wilma Wolfe right here in Des Moines, Iowa on May 22, 1938.  He grew up on Marella Trail near Witmer park, graduated from North High School and studied briefly at Drake University.  He enlisted in the Air Force in 1960 and served his country for two years, including a stint in Newfoundland, Canada.  After leaving the Air Force, he went to work at the Post Office in 1963 where he worked for nearly 40 years, until he retired in 2002.
 
That is what he did, but it really doesn't tell us who he was.  To each of us, he was someone a little different.
He was "Husband" to my Mom Kathie. 
 
"Dad" to me and my brothers and sisters--Chris, Cory, Shawn and Shelley. 
 
Father-in-law to Monica, Molly, and Julie.
 
Son-in-law to Grandpa and Grandma Lawrence.
 
"Grandpa Karl" to nine beautiful kids and two buns in the oven.
 
He was "Yellow Cat" to those who shared a boat, a bridge, or a lake shore with him in the many years that he sought his nemesis—catfish.  He fished the rivers, lakes and ponds of Iowa, Missouri, and Canada.
 
Karl was also known as "Zip Code" to his friends at Isaac Walton League Club—or simply Ike's as he called it--where he ate, drank and played pitch every Tuesday after work for twenty some odds years.  He got the name Zip Code because he always went directly from work in his uniform with his US Postal Service cap.
 
In good Eulogistic form, I'm supposed to sprinkle somewhat memorable, insightful or humorous anecdotes about my father and his 24,363 days on this planet.  I leave the judgment about whether anything I say is memorable, insightful and especially humorous to you, but in the little time I have today, I hope they touch on aspects of who he was.
 
Some fifteen years ago, Dad was cleaning a record-sized catfish that he had dragged out of Lake Ahquabi when the knife slipped and he gashed through his index finger nearly removing it from his left hand. 
 
Luckily, Mom rushed him to the hospital where a skilled surgeon saved the finger.  Now you know how close he came to becoming known at Ike's as "9-Digit Zip Code."
 
Back to the list.
 
He was "Brother" to his sister Virginia and her husband Bill.
 
He was "Can Man" to those who knew him during the period that he spent all of his free time collecting refundable soda and beer cans.  Sometimes he even spent your free time picking up cans.  You could be with him on the way to Iowa City for one reason or another and if he spotted, with hawk like precision—pun intended—a can on the side of Interstate 80, he insisted you bring the car, truck or van to a screeching halt to collect the can and the five cents that it would bring to his endeavor. 
 
Sure, he spent $1 of gas to go from 65 to 0 and back again, but you knew that any debating the point was useless. 
 
The nickel was his, the gas was yours!
 
Back to the list.
 
He was the "Ex" twice over to my biological mother who followed my father and succumbed the day after he died to her own fight of debilitating health issues of her own, including Alzheimers that had destroyed her mind to the point that she thought that I was the father of her children. 
 
Maybe her fading mind saw a glimpse of a younger Karl in my face. 
 
I prefer to think that people mistake me for Brad Pitt, but I, like my father, am a realist.
 
He was the "Passport guy" to the hundreds or thousands of people he helped with their passport issues during the time he ran the passport desk at the Post Office.
He was an anonymous Good Samaritan to many people.  He was always willing to spend his time and energy to help people that he didn't even know.  When we lived on Lincoln Road, he would dig people out of a snow bank during a blizzard who were foolish enough to think they could traverse that hill.  Watching for them was a pastime during blizzards (this was before cable t.v. and the Internet).  Helping them was his calling.
 
Once on a trip to my grandparent's house in Forsyth, Missouri, we came upon a car accident that had obviously just occurred.  Much to our chagrin, Dad volunteered to take the injured people to the hospital some 20 miles in the opposite direction from Grandpa and Grandma's house even though we already had 2 adults and 3 restless children in our five passenger Mercury sedan.  Not only did he deliver these people to the hospital, we waited until they had all been treated and released, so we could take them with the tow truck back to the accident scene to retrieve their car.  The number of times this happened was literally countless.
 
Back to the list.
 
He was a "Cribbage Guru" to anyone who dared sit across a cribbage board from him.  A fierce competitor who never let you win out of pity or to make you feel good.  If you beat him, you earned it.
 
He was a devout democrat to those running for public office.  Independent to those seeking donations for their campaigns.
 
He was a collector.
 
His collector gene dominated his being.  From the time I was little, he collected signatures, record albums and paraphernalia from country music stars. 
He built and collected covered wagons. 
Then covered bridges. 
Then he collected covered bridge post cards,
Then hats. 
Then Jim Beam car decanters. 
Then slot machine tokens. 
Then miniature semi trucks and race cars. 
He was a collector. 
 
Our house is a testament to this—it could be a museum.  Maybe not a museum that anyone would pay to go through, but something in line with the World's second largest free standing mud dwelling from National Lampoon's Vacation.
 
My dad claimed to be an atheist.  He really wasn't.  His God created the earth that he loved.  The rivers, the streams, the ponds and lakes where he loved to fish.  The fields, woods and ravines where he loved to hunt.  He was one with God on his boat, by himself in the middle of a lake.  That was his chapel.
 
Only he knows for sure exactly what his true faith was, but his doubt about God surely stems from his deep-seated belief in the plight of the little guy.  Rage against the machine.  Common man's fight against the proverbial Man. 
 
He also struggled with the eternal question of why would the God of mainstream Christianity, who is supposed to be so good and so benevolent, bestow so much suffering in this world on those who love and worship Him. 
 
He trusted religion about as much as he trusted the government or corporate America.
 
His policy: keep them out of his wallet and out of his boat.
My father was a bright man with a quick, sardonic wit. 
 
He was hard working and honest. 
 
Some would say too hard working. 
 
Many would say too honest. 
 
He told it like it was.
 
His passion for accomplishing a goal would have made him a great entrepreneur, except he lacked the self confidence to make the leap from the security that he knew and was comfortable with and that provided for his family into what he probably would have loved. 
He was a good father, not a great father. 
 
He wasn't the most patient man with children, whether his or others. 
 
He didn't spare the rod or spoil the child that's for sure. 
 
Nonetheless, I think we all knew that he loved us for who we are and the adults we have become.
 
Karl Wolfe loved his family, NASCAR races, fishing, and Johnny Cash. 
 
In what order, only he knows for sure.
My Dad was the "P" word. 
 
Pragmatic. 
 
For those of you who thought the "P" word was "patient," well you didn't know him very well. 
 
In the end, he wasn't even patient enough to wait for death to come to him. 
 
I could spend hours with stories about his lack of patience, many hilarious others not so much. 
 
For those of you who were thinking of another P word, you'll get your chance in a few minutes to share that with all of us.
 
My P word is Pragmatic.  He did what needed to be done.  When I was three, we had a dog named Lassie.  Very original name for a Collie. 
 
We loved Lassie as only two, three and four year old children could. 
 
Lassie loved us…but hated everyone else in the world. 
 
Lassie bit the paper boy, the meter man, the mail man and finally, the landlord. 
 
We were on the verge of being evicted from our house on Lower Beaver Road. 
Dad knew what he had to do.
Today, we would take the dog to the pound, drop him off and let someone else handle the dirty work. 
On a long, hot, Iowa summer day in 1966, Dad got out his 22 rifle, loaded Lassie into the car, took her into the country and shot her in the head, twice. 
 
He didn't want her to suffer. 
 
Lassie's time had come and my father did what he thought was necessary and best for his family. 
 
That night and for many days to follow, I saw my father cry and mourn Lassie's passing.  In fact, he bawled. 
 
On his 24,343rd day on this planet, Dad felt it was his time.  I'm sure he did what he thought was necessary. 
 
Now, we cry and grieve his passing.
 
He was indeed pragmatic.
 
That's the end of my list.
 
If I left anything out that won't offend women and children, feel free to speak up now. 
 
I believe that the true measure of your life on earth should not be the number of breaths you take, but the number of times your breath is taken away. 
 
I hope his breath was taken away many, many times.
Please don't mourn my father's passing. 
Of course, we will all miss him, but he left this planet on his own terms. 
 
Instead, celebrate his life.
 
Celebrate that your life is richer because you knew and spent time with Karl Frederick Wolfe.
 
When you catch a big ass catfish, say "this one's for you Yellow Cat!"
 
When you pick-up a refundable can on the side of the road, say "this one is for you Can Man!"
 
When you shoot-the-moon in a good game of pitch and actually pull it off, say "this is for you Zip Code!"
 
When you teach your kids to play cribbage, say "this is for you Dad!"
 
He will appreciate it.
 
Dad, we all love you and will miss you greatly."

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Time for Major Changes Mr. President

With the present economic situation and the popularity and expectations for the new administration, President Obama has unprecedented latitude to make sweeping changes that would otherwise be politically unconscionable.  The following suggestions range from the simple and obvious to the more daring:

1.  Abandon the Penny.  In 2008, it was reported that it costs 1.7 cents to make a penny.  With inflation over the last century, the penny is actually a rounding error for most purchases.  We could round all costs to the nearest nickel saving time and effort.  This is a no brainer.

2.  Adopt the Metric System.  As my 2008 New Years Resolution, I went metric.  One year later, I am still fully functional and no worse for the wear.  We have been using the British system of measures for hundreds of years.  Even the British have abandoned this useless system of jumbled, non-sensical measures, and they invented it!  When we were in first grade, we learned the metric system and were told that by the time we grew up everything would be metric.  Now, some 40 years later, we are still no closer to being fully metric than we were in the 1960s.  We are the only country in the world that sticks to the non-metric system.  If we bit the bullet and went metric, we would have to spend money on the conversion, but this could be underwritten by the government and at least at the end of the day we would have something to show for it.  In one year we could do it and believe it or not, we would survive.  I'm confident.  

3.  Legalize Internet Gambling.  Those who want to gamble on the Internet DO IT despite the fact that our government has taken a hard line against it.  What do we really gain from having gambling illegal?  A recent 20/20 show investigated the online gambling industry and discovered that there are individuals who manipulate the system and cheat gamblers out of millions of dollars per year.  Because it is illegal, the world of online gambling resides in off shore computer banks in Costa Rica, Antigua and other non-descript, unregulated countries.  If gambling were legalized, reputable, regulated entities could operate the systems with transparency and fairness that is incapable of confirmation with the present underworld operations.  More importantly, these entities would pay taxes on the money they make and would have reporting obligations for the gamblers who win, who presently do not pay taxes on those winnings.

4.  Legalize Drugs (personal disclosure, I don't use drugs).  This is an example of how we seem to never learn from our past.  During prohibition, alcohol production, sales and consumption were all illegal.  This opened the door for criminals to control a multi-million dollar industry using violence, corruption and intimidation to protect their territories. The same is true with the drug trade.  President Bush (41) declared a war on drugs in 1990.  We are no closer to winning the war on drugs in 2009 than we were in 1990 even though we have spent $20 billion per year for the last two decades. While we continue to use drugs at a rate equal to or greater than we did at the start of the war on drugs, the countries that supply us with drugs are mired in corruption, violence, and organized crime.  The benefits to Colombia and Mexico go way beyond the economic benefits we would realize.

There is a very thin line between someone who ends up on the wrong end of a criminal drug charge for use and our last three Presidents (Clinton, W. Bush and Obama have all admitted to using drugs at some point in their lives).  Our prisons are filled with people involved with drug related criminal offenses, costing us additional billions of dollars even though politicians, civic and business leaders, and pillars of our community use marijuana like the generations before them would have nightly martinis. 

With the savings in not engaging in a senseless war on drugs and the earnings we would get from taxing the importation and sales of marijuana and cocaine, we could add $100 billion per year to the national coffers.  Yes, there are people who have addiction issues and they need help, but dedicating one percent of the earnings from the sales to help them with their addiction issues would likely be sufficient (note: these people are likely already in a 12 step program or on their way).  


Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Anti-Gay Marriage


I am very sorry to report that while I voted against the Florida constitutional amendment that defines marriage as the union between one man and one woman, I didn't do enough.  I didn't speak out.  I didn't write.  I didn't ask what I could do to make sure the amendment failed.  I was wrong.  I didn't fail because I didn't care.  I just thought that there was no way it would pass. Unfortunately, similar amendments passed in California and Arkansas.  

I recommend that you read Leonard Pitts' op-ed piece that appeared in the Miami Herald this morning.


and watch the video of Keith Olbermann's diatribe on the topic...


I don't think I can articulate a better argument than either of these two men have.  It really is a matter of justice.  Why can't we as Americans see how we perpetuate these forms of discrimination?  A lesson in empathy would be useful.

When it comes to individual rights, it isn't something that should be put to a popular vote.  Could we vote on whether interracial marriage should be allowed?  Of course not.  Federal judges should settle this once and for all.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Post Election Open Letter to Barack Obama from Joe the Plumber

President Elect Obama (yes, it sounds so good),

I am Joe the Plumber. Not really, I'm an attorney by training and an entrepreneur by choice and my name isn't Joe. I'm a product of public schools. I've served in our military (11 years In the U.S. Air Force with service in a foreign military conflict--Operation Just Cause). I put myself through college and then law school. I am a registered Republican. I have supported Republican candidates for President since Gerald Ford in 1976 (with one exception, I voted against George W. Bush in 2004) and I have always considered myself a conservative, that is the kind of conservative who believes in small government, low taxes, unintrusive policies, freedom of and from religion. I supported Barack Obama as the 44th President of the United States. I manned phone banks, canvassed the streets of the West Grove in Miami, volunteered as a poll observer on election day and proudly cast my vote for Barack H. Obama on November 4, 2008.

I cheered as you won the election by an electoral landslide and the Democrats won greater control of both houses of Congress.  While the current Congressional leadership has done nothing to warrant retention of their jobs or their leadership posts (approval ratings are practically subterranean), it seems likely that Representative Pelosi and Senator Reid will continue in their present posts.  What is important for you and all of our elected officials to understand is that this is not a mandate for liberal partisan politics to replace conservative partisan politics, or liberal political realignment.

We, the Joe the Plumbers (and Josie the Plumbers) of the country, are fed up with the petty, partisan politics that has crippled Washington DC for the past 8 years, and probably longer. We want solutions to serious problems.  We want leaders who lead.  We want elected officials to repair our ailing economy, shore up our financial system, and return to capitalistic principles (our government shouldn't own our banks or our businesses) as soon as possible.  We want an energy policy that is sustainable, respects the planet, and rids us of dependence on foreign oil. We want the United States to be the most respected country in the World, not the most reviled. We want to return the balance of power from an overly powerful administrative branch to the legislative and judicial branches.  Most importantly, we want to stop the divisive rhetoric that inflames the far right or the far left base because it is politically expedient. The solutions to our nation's problems likely lie outside the "box" but are not on either extreme.  Be mindful, there is nothing  you can do that will make the twenty percent on the far right admire you and there is very little you can do to make the twenty percent on the far left abandon you.  It is time to govern for the sixty percent in the middle.

This is the mandate that I supported with my volunteer work and my vote for Barack Obama. The silent majority of Joe the Plumbers across the country have similar expectations.  I expect no less (in fact, I expect far more).  I will accept no less.  This is the mandate.  We will continue to fight for these basic principles until our elected officials listen to us and start governing with honesty, dignity, and integrity with the single goal to solve problems that make America great rather than appease their base or perpetuate petty partisan bickering.  I believe that you, Mr. Obama, have the intelligence, judgment, and temperament to rise above the status quo and truly effect change, but I know that you cannot do this alone.  You will need the help of great Americans.  Not great partisan political advisors, but great Americans.  We must begin to separate the two and only elect and empower great Americans.

God speed Mr. Obama.  This is not a religious endorsement, just a very nostalgic phrase from a time when America's greatness wasn't in doubt.

"Joe the Plumber"
aka Curtis Wolfe, an Obama Republican (Obamacan!, you read it here first)
Miami, FL

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Man without a Party

After leaving my post as a volunteer attorney observer (we need those in Florida) at a polling place in South Miami on election day, I spent the balance of the evening watching the election returns with a group of Democrat friends and many hugs, tears, and glasses of champagne, the handful of die hards who remained decided that I was a decent enough person that I should be invited to leave the Republican party and join the dark side.  This was not the first time in the past three months since I had spent many days and nights working phone banks and canvassing neighborhoods for the Obama for Florida campaign and even attended a rally in Miami when Senator Obama was visiting in October, but I know that I don't fit into the Democratic party.  I'm a fiscal conservative who believes in free markets and capitalism, and a social moderate who believes in limited government, personal responsibility, and unintrusive government policies.  

So, how is it that I have come to the point where I find myself not only voting for a Democrat, but working to ensure he is elected?  The Republican party is adrift in a sea of divisive partisan politics, engaging in unparalleled spending, trampling on civil liberties by spying on Americans and imprisoning people with a complete lack of respect for due process.  The Karl Rove Republican party is not the party that I joined many years ago and because the party has lost its morale compass with regards to fairness, justice, and equality, it has lost its soul and has been hijacked by the religious right who believed that by dividing the country, the moral majority would actually be a majority.  

Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity and other ultra-conservative pundits have said since election night that the party lost the election because its candidate was not resolute in conservative principles and have vowed to take the party farther to the right.  Clearly, the Republican party is at an impasse.  Moderate Republicans don't identify with either the Democratic far left or the Republican far right.  We are without a party.  

Becoming an "independent" isn't an valid option.  Independents are by definition without identity.  They decide each issue on its merits, which is respectable, but without a core set of values, like a small, limited government, Independents are destined to always be joiners rather than leaders.  I want my party back.

Real Republicans can take back the party of Lincoln by divorcing the party from the radical right (they are welcome to form a new party) and recommitting to its core principles.  By doing so, the party will actually grow (much like when the government cuts tax rates, yet collects more tax revenue) by being an attractive alternative for moderate Democrats and other libertarians.  

The time has come for the Republican party to regain its original mandate.  Religious conservatives should take note that we want our party back.  We must not tolerate Karl Rove's followers to destroy the Republican party.  The time is now.