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Monthly Archives: March 2012

Daily Bread for 3.30.12

Good morning.

It’s a rainy morning for Whitewater, with a high temperature on Friday of forty-seven.

Google’s daily puzzle asks about a place, but the answer lies in a famous remark: “What is the modern name of the city which was the battle site associated with the phrase, “Veni, vidi, vici”?”

So how far do leapin’ lizards really leap? At ScienceNews, there’s a story and video from earlier this year that describes the reasearch of a team at Berkley.

Turns out they can leap well and far, and the acrobatics of Agama lizards are now memorialized on video:

Agama lizards leaping from Science News on Vimeo.

Daily Bread for 3.29.12

Good morning.

It’s a chilly morning for Whitewater, followed by a mostly sunny day with a high of fifty-two.

On this day in 1973, the last American soldiers left Vietnam.

Thanks to a reminder — that I very much needed — here’s a clip of James Cameron’s dive to the bottom of the ocean —

Remarkable.

Google’s daily puzzle is about mysteries closer to home: “Did your brain’s frontal lobe or temporal lobe have more to do with planning out which movie you’d like to see this evening?” more >>

Daily Bread for 3.28.12

Good morning.

It’s a mostly sunny day, with a high temperature of sixty-four, ahead for Whitewater.

On this day in 1978, America saw her worst nuclear disaster, at the Three Mile Island reactor.

The Wisconsin Historical Society notes that on this day in 1954,

McCarthy Recall Campaign Begins in Sauk City

On this date, “Joe Must Go,” a bipartisan grassroots campaign to recall Sen. Joe McCarthy from the Senate, began in earnest with an organizational meeting in Sauk City. The campaign had to collect 403,000 signatures in 60 days to force a recall election. With little money, a hastily thrown together organizational structure, and unenthusiastic or non-existent support from existing organizations (including farmers and organized labor), the group was still able to secure 335,000 signatures. Later in 1954 Sen. McCarthy was publicly censured by his Senate colleagues.  [Source: The History of Wisconsin, v.6: Continuity and change, 1940-1965 (Madison, State Historical Society of Wisconsin, 1973-1998).]

Foodies, here’s a question from Google: “Some call this famous dessert a cake, some a torte, some a custard pie. What was it called in the culture that created it?

Daily Bread for 3.27.12

Good morning.

It’s a twenty-percent chance of thunderstorms, and a high of seventy, for Whitewater’s Tuesday.

Purple Martin

At 4:15 PM today, Whitewater’s Urban Forestry Commission meets.

On the agenda for the meeting, linked above, at No. 9 one will see an item about a Bird City designation for Whitewater. Two quick point about this designation: (1) it’s a great idea, and (2) I’m more than skeptical that the Urban Forestry Commission is the place to advance and manage this program.

I’ll write more about being a bird city — there are now fifty such communities in Wisconsin — another time.

Google wants to test one’s geography today: “It’s June 1 and you leave America’s largest independent city on foot bound for “the Biggest Little City in the World.” What day will you arrive if you walk non-stop?”

Daily Bread for 3.26.12

Good morning.

It’s an overcast day, with a chance of showers and a high of forty-six, ahead for Whitewater.

On this day in 1979, Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat signed the Camp David peace treaty at the White House.

The Wisconsin Historical Society records today as a the day in 1881 when a famous Wisconsin mascot died:

1881 – Old Abe Dies

On this date Old Abe, famous Civil War mascot, died from injuries sustained during a fire at the State Capitol. Old Abe was the mascot for Company C, an Eau Claire infantry unit that was part of the Wisconsin 8th Regiment. During the Capitol fire of 1881, smoke engulfed Old Abe’s cage. One of his feathers survived and is in the Wisconsin Historical Museum. [Source: Wisconsin Lore and Legends, pg. 51]

 

Recents Tweets, 3.18 to 3.24

Mar 23
@DailyAdams
The Koch Brothers’ Political Avarice | Daily Adams http://bit.ly/GT9wtp #koch #libertarian
Retweeted by FREEWHITEWATER

22 Mar
@DailyAdams
Suddenly not free-market at all: The Right and Immigration | Daily Adams http://bit.ly/GNOvVI #immigration
Retweeted by FREEWHITEWATER

22 Mar
@DailyAdams
Libertarians who support immigration restrictions simply aren’t libertarian; they’re conservatives http://bit.ly/GQPbqn
Retweeted by FREEWHITEWATER

22 Mar
Best local-government marketing is good policy & good law Nothing government does will or could matter more

22 Mar
Conservative blogger threatens liberals with libel over worthless kerfuffle http://bit.ly/GHvnZO

21 Mar
MacIver poster beclowns himself: No one of any seriousness presents a *legal demand* via Twitter http://bit.ly/GE6KvZ

21 Mar
MacIver Institute: Delicate Little Flower or School Yard Bully? Edgy reaction via tweets(!) shows insecurity http://bit.ly/GKP67N

20 Mar
Candidate’s a cushy job all its own – Santorum: Unemployment Rate “Doesn’t Matter To Me” – http://bit.ly/GBSgOv

Republican Betting on Walker’s Recall Opponent

The Republican Governors Association expects Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett to be a candidate in the recall race against Gov. Walker (Barrett’s promised to announce his intentions between 3.30 and 4.3). Most people expect him to be a candidate. (I’d guess that, should he run, he’d beat candidates Kathleen Falk and Kathleen Vinehout in recall primary).

One can tell what the RGA thinks because they’ve unleashed a thirty-second anti-Barrett and anti-Falk ad. The ad, though, emphasizes Barrett.

In that emphasis, I’d say the GOP is right – Barrett will run, and he will win the Democratic nomination in a May 8th primary.

Here’s the ad:

Posted originally on 3.23.12 at Daily Adams. more >>

The Right and Immigration

Steve Chapman, writing in a reposted 2007 article at Reason, explains Why the Right Shifted on Immigration.

Chapman thinks the shift began with the fall of the Berlin Wall, when many conservatives no longer saw immigrants trying to reach our shores as proof of America’s sound economy and society.

If so, consider the cynicism of the Right: they didn’t support individual liberty for its own sake, but as a talking point in an ideological battle with the Soviet Union.

Broad-based free markets in capital, labor, and goods are superior in efficiency and morality to their alternatives. They didn’t become less so because the Cold War ended.

Then or now, a free flow of labor benefits America. Conservatives will have none of it today.

Libertarians might, of course, decide that a battle with the Left requires support for conservative candidates who back immigration restrictions, however Draconian. Those libertarians may choose as they wish, but they would do the liberty-movement a courtesy if they were to call themselves by another name.

Conservative, I think, would fit nicely.

The rest of us will do better to stay as we are, advocating for individual liberty, limited government, free markets in capital, labor, and goods, and peace abroad.

Posted originally on 3.22.12 at Daily Adams.

Note about Whitewater: It’s unlikely that legislation as bad as AB 173 will ever become Wisconsin law. Enactment of those provisions over this community, or any community, would justify a diligent and zealous campaign by every legal means, at whatever cost or difficulty it would bring (“One should be prepared to seek legal redress against each and every exercise of a wrongful law in one’s community. Time for this effort, and the cost of that time, however much may be needed, should be offered without charge or expectation.”)