Good morning.

Wednesday in Whitewater will see a mixture of clouds and sunshine with a high of 60. Sunrise is 5:27 and sunset is 8:16 for 14 hours 49 minutes of daytime. The moon is a waxing crescent with 19.3 percent of its visible disk illuminated.
Whitewater’s Parks and Recreation Board meets at 5:30 PM.
On this day in 1609, Shakespeare’s sonnets are first published in London, perhaps illicitly, by the publisher Thomas Thorpe.
One of the problems that small towns have is that they struggle to bring younger people into positions of leadership, not merely in politics but among private community groups. In politics particularly, one can be sympathetic to the dynamic that the WISGOP faces, if not its aims: At annual convention, Wisconsin GOP’s old guard urges party to engage young voters.
(Significantly, the city’s electorate has selected the Whitewater Common Council well in this regard. The city’s councilmembers are an eclectic mix of young and middle-aged, of new and veteran members.)
Political parties and community groups across the state have the same need to bring in new, younger members in positions of responsibility. The problem these groups often face is a self-inflicted one. They place the oldest members in positions of authority, and use new recruits only for dull tasks with little recognition and reward. The rationalization for this hierarchy — that younger members need to learn the fundamentals — often becomes a justification for hoarding recognition and rewards among aged veterans of modest productivity but immense self-regard.
Younger members in these community groups come to realize that they’re not valued new members but instead disposable indentured servants. Since indentured servitude is seldom a personal aspiration, these newcomers quit the group. This leaves the group with indolent older members on the hunt for still more new recruits to dupe persuade into membership.
For successful community groups, the goal should be a few aged members advising and mentoring many more younger members who are given prominence and genuine responsibility. For unsuccessful community groups, it’s the opposite: many aged members hogging prominence and responsibility while relegating new, younger members to scrubbing and scraping.
‘That’s how we’ve always done it’ is the implicit motto of many a failing group.
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Upcoming posts (in no decided order): A Whitewater Comparative Analysis, Whitewater’s Workforce, and Outcome-Driven Argumentation.
This bacteria could help us understand the origins of life:



