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Home > Gwinnett > Rick Badie / My Opinion

Sailing on

… to a new blog platform. Starting today, check out the Badie Blog at new web site. And please keep posting! PEACE

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To the original questions: Are illegal immigrants taking part in elections? Is voting by non-citizens a problem in Georgia? Probably a little bit, but I don’t think it’s a statistically significant portion and I don’t think it’s

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Homeland Insecurity

I was channel-surfing last night when I came across the Lou Dobbs Show. He had a segment on the E-verify system, the government’s most effective program against illegal immigration.

It allows employers to check and see if workers are eligible to work in the United States. The program, according to Dobbs, has a 99 percent accuracy rate. Verification results from the Internet-based system are available in seconds.

Well, E-verify is set to expire.

Congress has stripped language from the stimulus package that would continue funding for the program. Monday night, Mr. Dobbs asked viewers to contact their representatives and tell them to save E-verify.

Now you know, if you didn’t already.

PEACE

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Cadillac customer feels bad vibration from GM

Bud Layson bought his first Cadillac 15 years ago.

“My wife wanted one,” says Layson, a retired salesman who still works every other week selling steel pipe fittings across the Southeast.

In May, Layson bought a new 2008 DTS. He says it just may be his last General Motors vehicle. The DTS vibrates during acceleration, going up hills, when it’s hitting 60 miles per hour or so.

It used to make a pitched, whiny noise, too. A new gear was supposed to stop both problems.

“But it did nothing for the vibration,” said Layson of Duluth. “It feels like it’s coming up through the acceleration pedal, but you can feel the vibration all over. It’s not a safety problem. It’s an aggravating problem.”

After he had the Caddy serviced at a local Cadillac dealership, he filled out a survey he received in the mail regarding the experience. In the comment section, he explained the car’s vibration and the repair(s) that hadn’t fixed the problem.

Then Layson, 73, made a promise: “I told them that I’d never buy another GM product.” Days later, Layson got a voice message with an 800-number from General Motors. Layson called.

A customer service rep pulled up the service record on his car. Then he put Layson on hold and contacted the area dealership shop that had worked on it.

“When he finally came back to the phone, he said [the company] had no resolution for the problem at this time,” Layson told me. “But he said that, if and when we do, that I’d be the first in line to get my car fixed. I may be dead by then. I tried to control my temper, but I was upset.”

Online, there were at least two automotive forums in which car owners sought help with the same problem. I didn’t find any reports about recalls of the Cadillac DTS due to vibration, so I called GM headquarters and was hooked up with company spokesman David Caldwell. I told him about Layson’s car.

“This is not a repetitive problem,” he said, noting that there had been no official recall of the Cadillac DTS for vibration issues. And even if a handful of owners have raised the issue online, he said, they pale in comparison to the hundreds of thousands of satisfied customers who apparently enjoy the car.

As for Layson’s vehicle, Caldwell suggested that he schedule to have a regional GMC engineer have a look-see. Layson can call the dealership and make arrangements, he said, or he can call 800-333-4CAD.

“We’ll have someone at his front door,” Caldwell said.

Layson didn’t know he had the option. He might heed the advice, but right now he’s pretty put off with Cadillac. After all, he owns a nearly $50,000 car that doesn’t run right.

On the news, meanwhile, all he hears about is GM’s need for a bailout.

“It’s disheartening,” Layson said. “If they can’t take care of the customers they got, why the heck do they want to keep making cars? Not standing behind the product — it says more to me about integrity than anything else. I guess this car might be something I have to live with. As mama used to say, ‘Get over it.’ ”

On a recent business trip, Layson rented a DTS. The vehicle had the same vibration as his personal car.

“Only worse,” he said.

* Rick Badie updates his blog Monday through Friday.

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Illegal immigrants at the polls

On Tuesday, the Senate passed a bill that would requires voters to show proof of U.S. citizenship in order to register to vote.

Senate Bill 86, sponsored by Sen. Cecil Staton (R-Macon) now goes to the house.

Mr. Staton has said he wants to make sure non-citizens don’t vote, and that’s fine. But one argument used by supporters of the proof-of-citizenship bill has never sold with me. It’s this notion that illegal immigrants are taking part in U.S. elections.

The last thing any illegal immigrant wants to do is bring attention to himself. After all, he is in the country illegally. They tend to live in the shadows of society, relatively low-key. So the likelihood that Jose is hankering to cast a vote in a national or local election rings shallow. He probably couldn't care less.

What do you think?

Are illegal immigrants taking part in elections?

Is voting by non-citizens a problem in Georgia?

Or a nonexistent one?

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Newspaper Industry crumbles

Friday was a sad day for the newspaper industry.

The list of two-newspaper towns got shorter with the closing of the Rocky Mountain News.

Nothing to cheer about here, though I’m quite certain the usual opinions will surface in this blog about print media, its demise and so forth.

So be it.

But what’s unfortunate about the loss of a major daily — any daily — is the loss of reporting on issues, both the routine and in-depth.

Where will people who like to be informed about their community, their state, turn for content?

Or does that really matter any more to a majority of citizens?

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