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Monthly Archives: September 2009

Daily Bread: September 8, 2009

Good morning, Whitewater

Common Council meets tonight at 6:30 p.m.

The Wisconsin Historical Society reports that on this day in 1958, women could lawfully drink while standing at a bar:

1958 – Janesville Women Belly Up to the Bar

On this date the Janesville city council voted 4-2 to finally end a paternalistic and discriminatory ordinance that prohibited women from drinking at the bar. Since the end of Prohibition in 1933, women had been banned from being served while standing at the bar in Janesville taverns.

There’s a P.A.T.T. meeting at Washington School tonight at 6:30 p.m.

Here’s today’s almanac:

Almanac
Tuesday, September 8, 2009 Sunrise Sunset
Official Time 06:22 AM 07:17 PM
Civil Twilight 05:58 AM 07:46 PM
Tomorrow 06:27 AM 07:15 PM
Tomorrow will be: 3 minutes shorter
Amount of sunlight: 12h 51 m
Amount of daylight: 13h 48 m
Moon phase: Waning Gibbous

more >>

Music Monday: The Kinks — Twentieth Century Man

The video has lyrics as captions, but I will add them as text, too. Quick note — I disagree with the Kinks about the police: Very few people in America are actually trigger happy. Far, far more common is the conformity that middling bureaucrats and meddlesome politicians expect.

This is the age of machinery,
A mechanical nightmare,
The wonderful world of technology,
Napalm hydrogen bombs biological warfare,

This is the twentieth century,
But too much aggravation
It’s the age of insanity,
What has become of the green pleasant fields of Jerusalem.

Ain’t got no ambition, I’m just disillusioned
I’m a twentieth century man but I don’t wanna be here.
My mama said she can’t understand me
She can’t see my motivation
Just give me some security,
I’m a paranoid schizoid product of the twentieth century.

You keep all your smart modern writers
Give me William Shakespeare
You keep all your smart modern painters
I’ll take Rembrandt, Titian, Da Vinci and Gainsborough,

Girl we gotta get out of here
We gotta find a solution
I’m a twentieth century man but I don’t want to die here.

I was born in a welfare state
Ruled by bureaucracy
Controlled by civil servants
And people dressed in grey
Got no privacy got no liberty
Cos the twentieth century people
Took it all away from me.

Don’t wanna get myself shot down
By some trigger happy policeman,
Gotta keep a hold on my sanity
I’m a twentieth century man but I don’t wanna die here.

My mama says she can’t understand me
She can’t see my motivation
Ain’t got no security,
I’m a twentieth century man but I don’t wanna be here.

This is the twentieth century
But too much aggravation
This is the edge of insanity
I’m a twentieth century man but I don’t wanna be here more >>

Famous Speeches: To Kill a Mockingbird

I was recommended the closing argument from To Kill a Mockingbird. There’s no particular message behind my posting of the clip – the scene embodies fine writing, oratory, and acting on its own.

I could not have received a better recommendation, and it is much appreciated.

Here’s Gregory Peck as Atticus Finch, delivering that closing speech from To Kill a Mockingbird.

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Incumbents Use Map Giveaways at Taxpayer Expense, Critics Say – JS Online

The Journal Sentinel has a story this morning that shows how incumbents of both parties use maps printed at state expense to promote themselves. In 2009 alone, some legislators have distributed tens of thousands of the maps.

Lawmakers get 500 per year – and that should be enough, really – but can request more. As it turns out, some have requested tens of thousands more.

Too funny and too predictable.

(Quick note: This is no right wing complaint. The Journal Sentinel quotes two public policy critics of the practice, neither of whom is remotely conservative.)

See, Incumbents Use Map Giveaways at Taxpayer Expense, Critics Say.

Feline Friday: Catblogging at FREE WHITEWATER

Here’s the sixth installment of cat blogging.

The Cat Fanciers’ Association of America recognizes about forty breeds of domestic cats, but all cats, single or mixed-breed, are admirable.

Cats have an independent spirit that’s a fine reminder of the individualism which Americans — at their best — so abundantly possess.

Today, I’ve posted a video with TONKINESE kittens, a recognized CFA breed. Cute, aren’t they?

Here’s a clever, satirical video from Kelly Reeves (of urlesque), who feels there have been too many cat videos on the web. She’s promoting a September 9th boycott called a Day without Cats on the Internet. In Wired, she’s interviewed for a story entitled, “Web Boycott: Just Say No to Viral Videos Starring Cats.” Enjoy.

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Daily Bread: September 4, 2009

Good morning, Whitewater

There are no municipal, public meetings scheduled for today for the City of Whitewater. Your holiday weekend is unobstructed.

It’s Spirit Day at Whitewater Middle School.

Here’s today’s almanac:

Almanac
Friday, September 4, 2009 Sunrise Sunset
Official Time 06:22 AM 07:24 PM
Civil Twilight 05:53 AM 07:53 PM
Tomorrow 06:23 AM 07:22 PM
Tomorrow will be: 3 minutes shorter
Amount of sunlight: 13h 02 m
Amount of daylight: 14h 0 m
Moon phase: Full Moon

more >>

Janesville Gazette: Marine Fighting Whitewater for Repair Costs

In a Janesville Gazette interview, Whitewater City Manager Kevin M. Brunner reveals how unaccountable is the city’s position involving property damage to a resident, how quickly he’ll hide behind someone else, and how shameless is his self-righteous posturing.

Over at the Janesville Gazette, there’s a story about Lt. Joseph Cull, a Whitewater resident and citizen who experienced tens of thousands of dollars damage to his home from a Whitewater sewer backup. See, Marine Fighting Whitewater for Repair Costs.

(I have no connection to Lt. Cull, and my remarks are wholly my own.)

I’ve posted before on the story, first reported at WISC-TV in Madison. See, Accountability Begins….Somewhere Other than in Whitewater, Wisconsin, Inside (Whitewater) and Outside (America), and Anatomy of a Municipal Bureaucrat’s Explanation.

Brunner’s position in the interview shifts, but only to the detriment of his reputation and that of the city he manages.

Consider his latest remarks:

Brunner said the problem now is out of the city’s hands.

“We feel terrible when this happens to anyone – and doubly so with this poor property owner who is serving his country thousands of miles from home – but the plain fact of the matter is it doesn’t make any difference who the person is; we have to look at the circumstances of the claim, he said.

“It comes down to, ‘Did we know anything about this? Was it due to negligence on our part?’ and our insurance company has said, ‘No.’ ”

Local service groups are working on ideas to help Cull pay for the damage at his home, and city officials said they will cooperate with anyone who comes forward to help with fundraising.

Unaccountability. Brunner manages this city, but he won’t take responsibility for a decision about the actual operation of city services.

He declares, “It comes down to, ‘Did we know anything about this? Was it due to negligence on our part?’ and our insurance company has said, ‘No.’ ”

Who really manages this town? When Brunner asks if anyone knew anything, or if it was negligence, he doesn’t provide his own answer. He says that “our insurance company has said, ‘No.’ ”

Is this a joke?

Here’s a man who — no matter what he thinks of himself — is not press-ready. He’s not even ordinary person-ready. Someone answering this way just makes himself look ridiculous.

Brunner discards the expression, “I’ll get to the bottom of this,” and replaces it with “Umm…ah…let me ask…ah…my insurance company.”

Hand-washing. Is anyone surprised that Brunner would contend that it’s not his — or the City of Whitewater’s — problem? Of course not. In fact, he puts a new cast on an old expression: When the news gets tough, Brunner gets going. Somewhere, anywhere.

(As Oshkosh and Janesville wouldn’t have him, he’s still our problem bureaucrat.)

There’s a City of Whitewater task force for every problem under the sun, and regulation for almost every aspect of life, but now, Brunner cannot be troubled.

When it’s not his gain, it’s your pain.

The Appearance of Sympathy. Brunner contends that he feels sorry for “this poor property owner.” Please. Brunner’s supposed sympathy repairs…. absolutely nothing.

In his August 28th Weekly Report, Brunner tried — laughably — to identify with the injured property owner. By suggesting that since he once had a much smaller version of this problem, a resident should lump it, too, Brunner shows his community betterment rhetoric is rhetoric alone.

Sham Charity. What’s Brunner’s idea of charity, of helping a resident, as part of a better community? In his Weekly Report, Brunner wrote that “We have been in touch with some community groups that are interested in possibly raising money for him….”

I thought that was tentative and unworthy.

Oh, but look what he says now. The Gazette reports that “Local service groups are working on ideas to help Cull pay for the damage at his home, and city officials said they will cooperate with anyone who comes forward to help with fundraising.”

In his Weekly Report, Brunner wrote that “we [the Administration] have been in touch with some community groups,” but now one sees what that means. His administration is taking a passive role and they’ll cooperate with anyone who comes forward.

Cooperate.

So when private citizens do all the work, Brunner will stand with them, or write about it, to get some credit for himself.

Shameless, Self-righteous Posturing. Worst of all, far worse than washing his hands of the damage, is Brunner’s feeble attempt to position himself as — wait for it — above favoritism or partiality. The City Manager contends that “…but the plain fact of the matter is it doesn’t make any difference who the person is; we have to look at the circumstances of the claim.”

Brunner ignores what Lt. Cull himself said — on camera and published in print and online — about why he wants compensation.

Here’s what Lt. Cull said: “My service over here is strictly voluntary and I don’t think the city of Whitewater owes me anything for it. But what I do think they owe me for is the fact that I pay taxes, just like everybody else who lives on my street.”

Cull isn’t claiming preferential treatment — he’s asking for ordinary respect and municipal accountability.

Brunner is shameless — all self-righteousness — preening as though the refusal to compensate was a step against favoritism. (That’s temerity — Brunner posturing against favoritism as leader of a city lousy with complaints about unfair and unequal enforcement.)

Unpersuasive, too, is Brunner’s attempt to contend that “…we have to look at the circumstances of the claim.”

What does he mean, we?

He told the Gazette that “our insurance company has said, ‘No’ to questions of liability.

Not Brunner, not one of the task forces he may have created, not even a PowerPoint he once saw — no, the insurance company.

That’s not a “we.” That’s an “it.”

Unless, of course, Brunner’s forgotten for whom he works.

Here’s a gentleman who cannot offer a coherent, consistent explanation in his own Weekly Report, or an interview thereafter.

Daily Bread: September 3, 2009

Good morning, Whitewater

There are no municipal, public meetings scheduled for today for the City of Whitewater.

The Wisconsin Historical Society recalls that today is the anniversary of Britain’s formal surrender to America, ending her war against American independence:

1783 – Paris Peace Treaty Signed

On this date the Paris Peace Treaty was signed. The treaty demanded land, including Wisconsin, be ceded from Britain to the United States. Two years after the conclusion of the Revolutionary War, American and British delegations met in Paris to formalize Britain’s recognition of the United States of America. The treaty articles were drawn up on November 30, 1782 and formally agreed upon on September 3, 1783. [Source: University of Oklahoma, College of Law]

Here’s today’s almanac:

Almanac
Thursday, September 3, 2009 Sunrise Sunset
Official Time 06:21 AM 07:26 PM
Civil Twilight 05:52 AM 07:55 PM
Tomorrow 06:22 AM 07:24 PM
Tomorrow will be: 3 minutes shorter
Amount of sunlight: 13h 05 m
Amount of daylight: 14h 03 m
Moon phase: Waxing gibbous

APME Survey: Young Journos Are Fading from Newsrooms

One true means to a better community is a strong and inquisitive press. Some of the most reasonable Americans are those in their twenties, having grown up with a healthy individualism and natural skepticism of hide bound institutions.

That’s why it’s troubling that many newsrooms may be losing a generation of journalists well-suited to defend a free press, and free society.

See, Young Journos Are Fading from Newsrooms.