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Monthly Archives: October 2010

Whitewater, Wisconsin’s Innovation Center: The Limits of Photography

I wrote on Friday, in a post entitled, About that Public Hearing… (Part 2), that one could

show how a recent announcement about Whitewater’s Innovation Center isn’t merely ineffective, but counter-productive, to the interests of that project’s proponents. I’m a critic of the project, and there are times when I think: I wish proponents would publish more announcements, as their notices about the project are so inartful, odd, and self-defeating…

My post was scheduled for Saturday, but it’s a few days late. I’ve been searching for the best way to describe how public relations, marketing, and boosterism fail. There’s an example that comes to mend, but first, the latest description of the Innovation Center’s progress.

A few men, officials and board members supporting a multi-million dollar office building at public expense, stand wearing construction vests and helmets, on top of their coats and ties, as they smile for the camera while real construction workers labor in the background. The men in the photo look mostly alike, and nothing like a fair representation of all Whitewater’s residents.

The captions accompanying the photo, and a few others, mention an “upper facade of large entry and meeting area.” They mention this as though it were a good thing, apparently unaware how it all sounds to ordinary people.

It’s an expensive public project, relying on a publicly-funded anchor tenant, drawing the public employees of the anchor tenant from another struggling town, offering no concrete value to justify the multi-million dollar cost, failing to meet simple, clear federal standards in competition for a federal grant, and that serves as a distraction from serving the real needs of Whitewater’s many poor residents and struggling, small businesses.

The only way a project could be more ill-suited to Whitewater would be if the Tech Park Board announced a unicorn-breeding program for all the office space they’ve yet to fill with productive, private businesses.



I’m sure that everyone connected with the project has a thousand reasons that these photos and captions — like so many fawning press stories before them — make sense: A picture is worth a thousand words, stay on message, accentuate the positive, emphasize community leaders, etc., etc. There may be thousands of variations, the subjects of tens of thousands of books, essays, seminars, and consultants’ reports, from nationally-known experts on public relations, marketing, advertising, and communications.

And yet, descriptions like this are self-defeating, and mere merely show how ill-conceived the project is.

Why don’t so many experts behind the project understand as much?

Because all this boosterism ignores what Whitewater’s really like, what’s important to help Whitewater’s residents’ actual needs, and flies in the face of simple, enduring principles of governance.

It’s easy to lose one’s way when one loses sight of what a town’s like, and what it needs.

Decades ago, men (and women) more experienced and renowned that the men supporting the Innovation Center project made a mistake far greater.

Here’s that mistake:



To answer questions about then-Governor Dukakis’s commitment to a strong defense, his advisers had him visit a defense contractor and ride in a tank. He looked odd riding there, and the Republicans seized on the photo opportunity to create a commercial that showed Dukakis riding in a tank.

The Democrats’ effort was counter-productive. Instead of focusing on what Dukakis offered, in a simple way, his campaign tried a too-clever-by-half photo opportunity to answer concerns about defense policy. Perhaps a picture is worth a thousand words, but it’s only useful if it’s the right picture, about sensible concerns.

The Dukakis campaign should have stuck to what Dukakis did well, and how what he did well would be useful, and appealing, to America. It’s not lack of talent, but lack of perspective, that led his campaign down the wrong path.

Fancy projects are Whitewater’s wrong path. They don’t fit our needs; they can’t be made sensible, appealing, or impressive.

The Federal Civil Suit Against Former Calumet County District Attorney Ken Kratz (Update 8)

The crime victim who received a series of vulgar, propositioning text messages from Calumet County’s then-District Attorney Ken Kratz while he prosecuted her attacker has filed a federal civil suit against him.

I have embedded below a copy of the federal complaint, filed Friday, October 15th. (Meanwhile, Kratz is under state criminal investigation for his conduct, and is the subject of a re-opened professional misconduct inquiry. See, ‘Sexting’ DA held up to Wis. DOJ scrutiny.)

For prior posts in this series, see Official’s Misconduct: Calumet County District Attorney Ken Kratz’s Treatment of a Crime Victim, Official’s Misconduct: Calumet County District Attorney Ken Kratz’s Treatment of a Crime Victim (Update), Update 2, Update 3, Update 4, Update 5, Update 6, and Update 7.

Daily Bread for Whitewater, Wisconsin: 10-18-10

Good morning,

Whitewater’s forecast calls for a mostly cloudy day, with a high temperature of fifty-eight degrees.

It’s another week of school, and one sees that in the WSJ there’s a story about a (Big Apple) school concern — New School Fear: Bedbugs Coming Home in Backpacks. Reporter Jill Caryl Weiner writes that

The new academic year opened just as bedbugs became seemingly ubiquitous in the city, spreading to retailers, movie theaters, government buildings, hospitals — even the offices of Google and, most recently, this newspaper. School administrators, sensing a wave of parental concern, have adopted a new openness to discussing the risks of student-to-student bedbug transmission.


These new times seem more like old times than anyone would prefer.

A Read-the-Bill Rule for Congress

Hannah Volokh, while at visiting at Emory University’s law school, published an intriguing proposal in the Missouri Law Review: A Read-the-Bill Rule for Congress:

In this Article, I argue that legislators have a duty to read the text of proposed legislation before voting to enact it. A Read the Bill political movement has formed in response to recent high-profile instances of rushed legislation.

Putting aside partisan concerns, a rushed legislative process creates real problems because it forces legislators to vote on bills without having the time to properly evaluate the new legal rules that are being imposed on citizens. If a rule or norm of reading the bill can slow the legislative process enough to provide for thorough consideration of proposed legislation, it would bring a substantial benefit in the form of better laws.

The rule would also draw the attention of legislators to their primary, fundamental role of making good law.

The article is available at Volokh, Hanah M., A Read-the-Bill Rule for Congress (August 4, 2010). Missouri Law Review, Vol. 76. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1597281.

Recent Tweets, 10-10 to 10-16

Hundreds attend anti-hate-crime rally at UW-Whitewater — GazetteXtra http://bit.ly/bwU21V
16 Oct

SSRN-A Read-the-Bill Rule for Congress by Hanah Volokh http://bit.ly/cZXNJk
16 Oct

FY2010 deficit: $1.3 trillion, Treasury says – Oct. 15, 2010 http://bit.ly/cDjKHw
15 Oct

Legalized Marijuana in California: Polls Now Show a Close Call http://bit.ly/cRxtre
15 Oct

Overdue – RT @WiStateJournal: State opens criminal probe of ex-DA Kratz http://ow.ly/19t0h7
15 Oct

RT @wsjfree: Bedbugs Spread to Metropolitan Opera House http://on.wsj.com/cVPlKx
14 Oct

RT @IJ: Don’t like the campaign ads you see on T.V.? Change the channel: http://iam.ij.org/d0XrYt
14 Oct

RT @radleybalko: L.A. Weekly blogger deftly shows off his ethnic bigotry, economic ignorance in one short post.
http://tinyurl.com/2vtoakt
12 Oct

A brown & gold kind of green solution: Madison [WI] promotes composting to reduce street leaf piles
http://bit.ly/apWrnD
12 Oct

New at Reason: Michael C. Moynihan on the Libertarian Nobelist – Hit & Run : Reason Magazine
http://bit.ly/cZldYb
10 Oct

Mental Health Complex staff ring up major overtime – JSOnline http://bit.ly/a6uOWS
10 Oct

Milwaukee County finances on brink, report says – JSOnline http://bit.ly/9YbmGh
10 Oct

U.S. Won’t Recover Lost Jobs Until March 2020 At Current Pace http://bit.ly/9ebTte
10 Oct

Saturday’s 85-degree high beats a record that lasted 131 years http://bit.ly/aZJW5p
10 Oct

Number of the Week: Slow Growth Adds to Deficit – Real Time Economics – WSJ

If, for example, the U.S. economy grows at an inflation-adjusted annual rate of 1.7% — about the rate it’s currently growing — government debt will reach 122% of annual economic output as of 2015, up from 93% now. Annual growth of 2.7% would cut that estimate to 110%. The difference equates to about $2.2 trillion, or close to $7,000 a person.

….In any case, the U.S. and other countries will have to get the trajectory of their debts under control, either by cutting spending or raising taxes. In a separate report, IMF economists offer some evidence that cuts are preferable. Looking at the experience of 15 advanced nations over nearly three decades, they find that a spending cut equal to 1% of GDP has, on average, had a negligible effect on economic output over the next two years. A tax hike of the same size has shaved a cumulative 1.3% off output over the same period.

Even if cuts, which cuts?

See, Number of the Week: Slow Growth Adds to Deficit – Real Time Economics – WSJ.

Wait, Herbert Hoover Wasn’t a Libertarian? – Reason Magazine

No, he wasn’t!

Yet, one often hears — erroneously — that Hoover was a laissez faire Republican, and that Roosevelt’s election marked a sharp break from those policies. That’s not only false, but wildly false. Hoover was a big-government Republican.

(It was Coolidge — who had numerous disagreements with Hoover — who was a defender of limited government.)

In Reason, Damon Root shows how ignorant some remarks about late twenties, early thirties American history really are:

The Atlantic’s Joshua Green just published a long profile of Rep. Ron Paul entitled “The Tea Party’s Brain.” Cato Institute Executive Vice President David Boaz also took a close look at the piece and caught Green making a pretty embarrassing factual error about President Herbert Hoover’s response to the Great Depression….

Now watch as Boaz walks Green through some American history 101:

“Hoover didn’t cut federal spending, he doubled it. He established the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. He propped up wages and prices. Indeed, he launched the New Deal.…”

See, Wait, Herbert Hoover Wasn’t a Libertarian? – Hit & Run : Reason Magazine.

For a sharp description of how similar were many of Hoover’s and Roosevelt’s policies [but not their political skill in describing them], see The Forgotten Man: A New History of the Great Depression. The book affords a quick corrective to ignorance and false notions about Hoover’s policies..

Cat-Abusing Savagery in Florida

In a shocking story from Florida, a cat recovers from severe torture while the cat’s abusers face the law:

[Judge] Nazaretian called what happened to the cat the worst case of abuse he’s ever seen. Investigators say the cat was shot multiple times with a BB gun, locked in a crate and thrown into the water to drown.

The cat, named “Lovie” because she was so affectionate toward her caretakers after being discovered, is recovering, and is in a home with new owners. Vets decided against removing the dozens of BBs embedded inside her to spare her from more trauma.

Here’s a television news account of the cat’s ordeal:



See, Abused cat’s former owner in court.