Good morning.

Tuesday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 56. Sunrise is 5:43 and sunset is 8:00 for 14 hours 17 minutes of daytime. The moon is a waning gibbous with 87 percent of its visible disk illuminated.
Whitewater’s Alcohol Licensing Committee meets at 5 PM and the Whitewater Common Council meets at 6 PM.
On this day in 1862, troops led by Ignacio Zaragoza halt a French invasion in the Battle of Puebla in Mexico.
This libertarian blogger has written before about What Ails, What Heals in Whitewater (2022), Heals & Ails, General & Particular, Public & Private (2023), and ‘What Ails, What Heals’ and What’s Changed (2025).
Through it all, the list has been specific and deliberate —
What ails: boosterism, toxic positivity, regulatory capture, populism, closed government, news deserts, and violence. What heals: free markets, charity, tragic optimism, open government, impartial government, a professional press, and individual rights.
A few remarks are in order.
Whitewater has made great progress on what heals these last few years, notably in open government, impartial government, balanced development, and the rise of standard-model news reporting from the Royal Purple. These are significant gains for the city.
Special-interest cronyism is much weaker in this city than a generation ago; it’s weaker even than a decade ago. The special-interest men are no less scheming and self-aggrandizing than before, but they reason poorly, speak poorly, and do both with transparently self-interested motives.
It seems likely that they blame their decline on a few people, and in this they’re as wrong as they are about public policy. Since the Great Recession, Whitewater has been on an inexorable socioeconomic and cultural transformation that leaves yesterday’s cronyism inadequate to the next generation’s needs. Whitewater is not changing because of a few — she’s changing because of many.
It’s absurd — crazily so — to assume that a few men, each carrying on like an angesehener Bürger of a stagnant medieval town, could forever hold back change in an American city of nearly sixteen thousand. Americans have built across this continent the most dynamic and productive society in human history. We are an energetic and innovative people.
Sensible people commit to enduring principles applied uniquely in each new generation (of philosophy, religion, economics, science, or art); others senselessly commit to nothing more than their own static positions despite a changing society. It’s predictable, almost poignant, to watch aged men fight for their past against the rest of the city’s future.
How very unfortunate to think so narrowly that someone wouldn’t grasp that ‘we’ve never seen this before‘ is an expression of a limited perspective rather than a worthy critique.
If one only looks beyond one’s image in a mirror, to thousands and millions and hundreds of millions beyond, then one sees new and creative ideas waiting, all around.
Change comes from those thousands and millions and hundreds of millions.
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Upcoming posts (in no decided order): Claims of Legacy, a Particular Species of Democrat, a Whitewater Comparative Analysis, Whitewater’s Workforce, and Outcome Driven Argumentation.
Watch NASA’s X-59 quiet supersonic aircraft soar in these flight close-ups:





