FREE WHITEWATER

Monthly Archives: November 2010

Monday Music: Who Killed Bambi?

I’ve posted this song before, for hunting season. I think I’ll make it a tradition — from the 70s, here’s Who Killed Bambi?

Enjoy.

Link to Video on YouTube, uploaded by a connoisseur of fine music and film.

Lyrics:


Gentle pretty thing
Who only had one spring
You bravely faced the world
Ready for anything
I’m happy that you lived
For your life is mine
What have I except to cry
Spirit never die
Birds of the air
Beasts of the earth
Overjoyed at Bambi’s birth they gambolled in the glade

[Chorus] Who killed Bambi? [x9]

Murder murder murder
Someone should be angry
The crime of the century
Who shot little Bambi
Never trust a hippie
‘Cause I love punky Bambi
I’ll kill to find the killer
In that rotten roll army
All the spikey punkers
Believers in the ruins
With one big shout
They all cry out
Who killed Bambi?

[Chorus x2] more >>

David F. Nolan, LP Founder, Passes Away | Libertarian Party

We have received news that David F. Nolan, a founder of the Libertarian Party, passed away this weekend. The Libertarian Party was founded in 1971 in Mr. Nolan’s living room. He had remained active with the Libertarian Party including currently serving on the Libertarian National Committee and running for U.S. Senator from Arizona in the recent elections. He is survived by his wife Elizabeth. He will be dearly missed by the Libertarian Party and the liberty community.

Via David F. Nolan, LP founder, passes away | Libertarian Party.

Daily Bread for Whitewater, Wisconsin: 11-22-10

Good morning,

Whitewater’s forecast calls for a say of showers with a high temperature of sixty-two degrees.

The City of Whitewater will hold a public meeting [Update] next week, 11/29 at 6 p.m. to present a draft of a lakes protection plan for Trippe and Cravath Lakes. The meeting agenda is available online.

On this day in 1963, President Kennedy was killed while riding in a motorcade in Dallas. Here’s how the New York Times covered the story in the next day’s edition:



Recent Tweets, 11-14 to 11-20

GM’s IPO: Suckers, Found! – Newsweek http://bit.ly/8XhO1v
21 hours ago

Warhawks put sights on Franklin College — GazetteXtra http://bit.ly/9BbiOM
21 hours ago

RT @IJ: Arizona forces taxpayers to pay for politicians’ campaigns. Seriously. Don’t let your state be next: http://iam.ij.org/9X5MY3
17 Nov

The Dodgy Statement About Violations of a Federal Grant for the Whitewater Innovation Center » FREE WHITEWATER http://bit.ly/c8d4hk
16 Nov

On Whitewater, Wisconsin’s 2011 Municipal Budget » FREE WHITEWATER http://bit.ly/aNO00p
16 Nov

RT @WiStateJournal: Caterpillar to buy Wisconsin-based Bucyrus for $7.6 billion http://ow.ly/19Z17k
15 Nov

RT @WiStateJournal: Curiosities: Why isn’t Pluto considered a planet anymore? http://ow.ly/19YcJu
14 Nov

83-20! Badgers show no mercy against Hoosiers – JSOnline http://bit.ly/dpl7hC
14 Nov

‘One giant cup of jet fuel’: New York cafe owner serving up a 20-ounce, 10-shot espresso | Mail Online

A coffee bar has started selling an extra-strong espresso with a staggering 10 shots in it.

The 20-ounce drink has been called the Dieci, which is Italian for 10, but its creator claims it is more like ‘one giant cup of jet fuel’.

At five times stronger than a normal cup of espresso, the Dieci will guarantee to wake you up in the morning – and probably keep you up half the night too….

Via ‘One giant cup of jet fuel’: New York cafe owner serving up a 20-ounce, 10-shot espresso | Mail Online.

Few Businesses Sprout, With Even Fewer Jobs – WSJ.com

In the early months of the economic recovery, start-ups of job-creating companies have failed to keep pace with closings, and even those concerns that do get launched are hiring less than in the past. The number of companies with at least one employee fell by 100,000, or 2%, in the year that ended March 31, the Labor Department reported Thursday.

That was the second worst performance in 18 years, the worst being the 3.4% drop in the previous year.

Via Few Businesses Sprout, With Even Fewer Jobs – WSJ.com.

Cowboys & Aliens



Universal pictures offers the odd tale of Cowboys & Aliens for 2011:


The Old West.. where a lone cowboy leads an uprising against a terror from beyond our world. 1873. Arizona Territory. A stranger with no memory of his past stumbles into the hard desert town of Absolution. The only hint to his history is a mysterious shackle that encircles one wrist. What he discovers is that the people of Absolution don’t welcome strangers, and nobody makes a move on its streets unless ordered to do so by the iron-fisted Colonel Dolarhyde (Ford). It’s a town that lives in fear. But Absolution is about to experience fear it can scarcely comprehend as the desolate city is attacked by marauders from the sky. Screaming down with breathtaking velocity and blinding lights to abduct the helpless one by one, these monsters challenge everything the residents have ever known. Now, the stranger they rejected is their only hope for salvation. As this gunslinger slowly starts to remember who he is and where he’s been…
more >>

Friday Comment Forum: Should Some Foods Be Banned?

Here’s the Friday open comments post.

Update: Sorry — comments now open as of 1:22 PM.

Today’s suggested topic — should some foods, like raw milk be banned? If they are banned, how should a ban be enforced?

The use of pseudonyms and anonymous postings is, of course, fine.

Although the comments template has a space for a name, email address, and website, those who want to leave a field blank can do so. Comments will be moderated, against profanity or trolls. Otherwise, have at it.

I’ll keep the post open through Sunday afternoon.

Have at it.

Raw Foods Raids: The Fight for the Right to Eat the Food that You Want

Guns drawn, property destroyed — all over milk.



Here’s the description accompanying the video:


This summer armed government agents raided Rawesome Foods, a Venice, California health food co-op. What were the agents after? Unpasteurized milk, it turns out.

Raw milk raids are happening all over the United States. The Food and Drug Administration warns that raw milk consumption can cause health problems, but a growing community of raw foods enthusiasts are ignoring government recommendations and claiming that they are getting tastier, more nutritious food by going raw.

Reason.tv visited Rawesome to examine the circumstances of the raid and discovered that this particular raw foods case stretches across county lines and involves at least five separate government agencies, despite the fact that not a single member of Rawesome has complained or been harmed by the raw foods. In fact, members have to sign a contract stating that they understand and accept the risks of consuming raw foods before they are allowed to step inside.

If members of a private club sign a waiver stating that they want to drink a certain type of milk, why is the government getting involved? As Jarel Winterhawk, a manager at Rawesome, puts it, “This is America. How are you going to tell me what I can and cannot eat?”

Though no charges have yet resulted from the raid, Rawesome is threatened with shutdown due to the involvement of yet another government agency, Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety, and the club’s raw goat milk supplier, Healthy Family Farms, has had its dairy license suspended.

“Raw Foods Raid” is written and produced by Zach Weissmueller. Camera by Alex Manning and Weissmueller. Senior Producer is Ted Balaker. Music by Jami Sieber, Five Star Fall, and Kammen and Swan (Magnatune Records).

Approximately 7 minutes.
more >>

Capital Times: Scott Fitzgerald, Senate’s new top dog, says GOP rule will shake things up

In the liberal Capital TImes, there’s an interview with the Scott Fitzgerald, who will be the Wisconsin Senate’s new majority leader. (His brother Jeff will be Assembly Speaker.)

I’m not sure what to make of it — there’s certainly not a lot of humility on display:

SF: Well first, I think we are the right people, the right party, at the right time to get the job done. Scott Walker has a huge opportunity to become a reform governor. We’re seeing the same thing with Gov. Chris Christie in New Jersey. There’s almost an expectation we’re going to shake things up.

CT: So, the more feathers you ruffle, the better off you will be?

SF: If someone tries to make their case by saying, look, we’re not the niche group that should be cut, or this is not the program that needs to be eliminated, or we are not the union that should be picked on, you know, they can go right ahead. They can be as loud and vocal as they want to be because I have a constituency back home that is going to say this is exactly what we wanted to have happen. And that is going to empower us…

CT: Would you ever run for governor?

SF: I would never say anything that would preclude me from running for higher office.

CT: So maybe Congressman Fitzgerald?

SF: You never know. This is the term for redrawing the district lines.

Via Scott Fitzgerald, Senate’s new top dog, says GOP rule will shake things up.

Daily Bread for Whitewater, Wisconsin: 11-19-10

Good morning,

Whitewater’s forecast calls for a breezy day, with a high temperature of forty-seven degrees.

On this day in 1863, President Lincoln delivered the Gettysburg Address, at a dedication ceremony for a national cemetery at Gettysburg. Lincoln saw suffering, yet was an optimist, believing that some things would endure even through suffering. I believe it was Stanley Crouch who once referred, with respect, to Lincoln as a ‘tragic optimist.’

Whitewater, Wisconsin’s Next Municipal Budget

Whitewater voted on its 2011 budget this week, and there were no surprises. The city lacks a majority of incumbents willing to cut spending, on a budget of over nine million. (Quick note: a local paper has reported that Whitewater’s tax levy is nine million; that’s incorrect. The budget is nine million, a portion of which is the levy, with another large portion coming from other revenues. That is, of course, part of Whitewater’s long-term problem — those other revenues are uncertain.)

Among the suggestions for cuts, even simple suggestions were beyond a majority’s assent. Under those circumstances, a reduction in personnel was even less likely. There’s a lot of effective, but still summer-stock, acting in Whitewater, with much fuss that a single personnel cut is a transgression against humanity. One would think that a bum had tracked mud into the Sistine Chapel. It carries the day, but it’s dumb show, all the same. (I would advocate cutting more than one position, starting near the top.)

One should not doubt that some positions, although of uncertain type and department, are sure to be cut in the years ahead. (I would advocate cutting leaders now, but it’s most likely that Whitewater will cut field workers in the years ahead.)

There’s a funny contention that without an increase in the levy (only a portion of the budget) that Whitewater would not be able to maintain its quality of services. It’s just silly, and presupposes a level of current need and efficiency that few believe exists in Whitewater. This is, though, a status quo town, and anything that avoids hard choices now (over harder realities tomorrow) will carry the day.

Worse, of course, is that this multi-million dollar budget ignores the real difficulties of ordinary people. It’s a satisfied person’s budget.

Who believes, for example, that quality of life in Whitewater truly depends on an increase in taxes, to feed local government? Who, when he wakes, looks out the window, and cries: Thank you, Dear God, for the municipal government that assures our well-being? When most people consider what matters most in life, they think of private, not public, things. There’s a bureaucrat’s vanity in supposing that a municipal government is — in whatever size that it seeks to be — the wellspring of the quality of life. These men and women talk as though a percentage point less in spending would be a loss not only of expenditure, but to the very future of all living things within the city limits.

To exaggerate the need for local government isn’t a grand mistake, but simply grandiose.

Consider this observation, from a post at Reason that Nick Gillespie wrote, about federal spending:

….when you look at the 60 percent increase in total federal outlays (in constant 2010 dollars or 104 percent in 2000 dollars) since Bill Clinton left office, the real question becomes: How the hell did we ever get by as a country without all that extra crap that’s been around for a decade or less? My memory is fading, but in the surplus year of 2000, didn’t we all live in old washing-machine boxes and prepare holiday dinners by cutting pictures of food out of grocery-store circulars? Sure, we were poor (by which I mean unprecedentedly wealthy) but at least we had each other (by which I mean the Internets).

No wonder that the good war-happy people at AEI are bitching and moaning that we oughta crank up defense spending from its puny 4.9 percent of GDP to an Eisenhowerian 10+ percent? More guns, less butter! Then there’s John Podesta, former Clinton admin chief of staff and now head of the liberal Center for American Progress, fretting that trimming $255 billion from a 2015 budget coming in at over $4 trillion would “do lasting harm to the health of the American middle class.” More butter (or cholesterol-free equivalent) and about the same amount of guns!

Some who advocate for the status quo believe it a good option; others are probably hoping to get out of town before the futility of current efforts is undeniable.

Whitewater’s reaching the very limits of rhetoric. (For many, who do not feel the benefits of a bureaucrat’s budget, those limits were passed long ago.)

There’s no rhetorical settlement in any of this; what will matter is what happens five or ten years from now.

Our old business park is a perfect example. When built, like all new things, there was so very much promise and hope. Now, years later, no one thinks that way — it’s a park all right, with lots of vacant land. No one bothers to trumpet it now — it’s middling condition belies proud claims of success. There’s now a new, next big thing.

Expect more, not less, of how the municipal administration has to ‘get its story out,’ or ‘communicate better,’ or develop a ‘good PR’ story.

(You know, and I know, too, that there’s a way in which some think that if there were no criticism, there would be no problems. For those who believe this way, there’s no convincing otherwise. Although they dislike the remarks of others, they adore their own statements. It’s as though, when they see their own words on newsprint, no matter how improbable or silly their claims, they’re sure they’re looking at the natural laws of the known universe.)

It’s lack of good policy, not a lack of public relations, that’s killed real prosperity in our small town.