FREE WHITEWATER

Monthly Archives: January 2011

Curiosity Thrilled the Cat — The American, A Magazine of Ideas

….the free market promotes another virtue [additional to  independence, productivity, and self-responsibility] that is rarely mentioned: curiosity. In 2004, psychologists Martin Seligman and Christopher Peterson created an index of 24 character strengths, such as kindness, wisdom, and gratitude; based on their research, curiosity was one of the top five most closely linked to fulfillment and happiness….

In more controlled economies, featuring larger governments, curiosity is not a prime virtue. State ownership of industries reduces the number of available jobs, closing off career opportunities. By prohibiting private competition, the state also decreases incentives for organizations to adapt and improve. A 2002 study of international airlines in about 40 countries found that privately owned airlines have higher profit levels and employee productivity than public airlines, with “mixed” airlines falling somewhere in the middle. And when organizations are not constantly improving, their employees have little incentive to be curious and increase their knowledge and skills. The same occurs, to a lesser degree, when extensive regulations prohibit certain types of business activities.

Via Curiosity Thrilled the Cat — The American, A Magazine of Ideas.

Institute for Justice Fights to Unleash Free Speech

It’s not too much to ask that American business people — like all other citizens — should be allowed the rights of a free people. Unfortunately, not every local official understands or respects those rights.

Consider the illegitimate and unconstitutional restrictions that Arlington, Virginia wants to place on Kim Houghton’s liberty. The Institute for Justice tells of her situation. First a brief video on the case, then an accompanying description from the IJ:




No one should have to choose between their right to speak and their right to earn an honest living. And the First Amendment does not let government officials play art critic.

Kim Houghton is the owner of Wag More Dogs, a canine boarding and grooming facility in Arlington, Va. Long a fan of the dog park that is located right behind her business, Kim commissioned an outdoor mural of cartoon dogs, bones and paw prints in order to give something back to the community.

But a few months later, Arlington officials blocked Kim’s building permit and told her that she could not open unless she painted over the mural or covered it with a blue tarp. Her crime was painting a piece of art that – in the eyes of Arlington officials – was “too related” to her business. In the eyes of the county regulator, a mural that depicted dragons would be perfectly fine. But because it shows dogs and bones, it’s illegal. Under the threat of losing her livelihood, Kim complied and covered the mural.

But now she is waging a fight to vindicate not only her own right to free expression, but also the rights of other small businesses who must continually face seemingly all-powerful government regulators who arbitrarily and abusively wield the authority.

Arlington County’s zoning ordinance unconstitutionally burdens certain speech based on its message. And the complete vagueness of the ordinance gives government officials unbridled discretion to decide what is art and what is a sign. That is why Kim has teamed up with the Institute for Justice to file a federal First Amendment challenge to Arlington’s zoning ordinance in court.

Kim’s lawsuit, filed on December 2, 2010, in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, will vindicate her right to earn an honest living free from the unconstitutional conditions that Arlington is trying to impose. And it will strengthen and expand on a very simple and important legal principle: Under the First Amendment, the right to speak is just that – a right – and not a privilege to be doled out by government officials.

And so it is: a right, and not a privilege granted by officials.

A litigation backgrounder on the case, Wag More Dogs, LLC v. Artman, is available online.

Friday Comment Forum: Polar Plunge?

Here’s the Friday open comments post.

Today’s suggested topic — Would you take a polar plunge, for charity, or even just for the experience? (As with the Special Olympics, one can always donate to a charity without getting wet.)

Would you, though?

These brave volunteers did, in support of the Special Olympics, last year:



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.

Whitewater’s Freeze Fest 2011

Whitewater’s Freeze Fest will take place on Saturday, February 19th at the Cravath Lakefront. Freeze Fest benefits the Special Olympics, and offers a fundraising Polar Plunge:

Cravath Lakefront Park – Map
341 S. Freemont St., Whitewater, WI 53190

Opening Ceremony & Plunging: Noon
Day of registration: 10 a.m. – 2 p.m.

Early Registration and Check-in
Friday, February 18 from 1 p.m. – 5 p.m. at UW-Whitewater University Center Concourse

Register Online

Avoid waiting in line, turn in pledges, get prime plunge times & pick up incentives EARLY!

Those who’d like to support the Special Olympics, but don’t want to take the plunge, can register as chickens:

Too chicken to Plunge? No problem! Register as a chicken, raise pledges, get your chicken shirt & incentives (and a special prize), then enjoy preferred plunge viewing in the “chicken coop!”

Polar Jam ’11 will be going on, too:

POLAR JAM-SKI AND SNOWBOARD COMPETITION

Saturday, February 19th, 2011

1:00pm Registration and Check-in Begins

Cravath Lakefront Parking Lot

341 S. Fremont Street Whitewater, WI 53190

262-581-5844

cbairdcoulter@hotmail.com

FACEBOOK: tinyurl.com/polarjam

There will also be a Chili Cook off with proceeds of the $5.00 registration fee split between the Special Olympics and Downtown Whitewater.

Friday Catblogging: Almond the Tree-Loving Cat Has True Friend Who Watches Over Him

Food, water, and a straw bed in the tree —

In the hollow of a maple tree not far from the road, Ron Venden has made a cozy dwelling for the 7-month-old cat he swears has never left its tree home… How is Venden certain the cat never leaves? Mostly because there are never any paw prints around the tree when it snows, Venden explains — something a State Journal reporter confirmed Wednesday. Relatives corroborate the story, saying they’ve never seen it anywhere other than in the tree.

Via Almond the cat never leaves his tree, but he has a true friend who watches over him.

Also posted at Daily Wisconsin.

Daily Bread for 1-21-11

Good morning,

Whitewater’s forecast calls for a cold day with a high temperature of five degrees.

It’s a computer age, but how are computer chips made? Here’s a video, from Wired, that shows how Texas Instruments makes the chips.



more >>

MLB.com: Wisconsin’s Kilar family turns to baseball amid tragedy

MILWAUKEE — It had already been a very long day at the Brewers’ annual fan fest, and Prince Fielder had signed a few hundred autographs. But there were still fans waiting in line, so when one little boy lingered next to his favorite player and mom fiddled with the camera, an official asked the boy to please move along.

That’s when Fielder put a big arm around the boy’s shoulder.

“I’ll never forget it,” said Mary Kilar, the mom trying to coax the camera to cooperate. “Prince looked right at him and said, ‘You stay right here, little man,’ and he kind of held him there so I could take the picture.”

….The picture came out a bit fuzzy, but 6-year-old Treyton Kilar didn’t mind. Prince was his FAVORITE, and Treyton decreed that the No. 28 jersey he was wearing that day would never be washed again. Mom honored the order.

Eight months later, Treyton was buried in that jersey. In early September, he was killed in a car accident caused by a drunk driver.

Today, the Brewers are putting the final organizational touches on the next installment of “Brewers On Deck,” and the Kilars are trying to turn their personal tragedy into a positive for the community. They are seeking a $250,000 grant from the Pepsi Refresh Project to build the “Treyton Kilar Field of Dreams,” a youth facility in Whitewater, Wis. They need help.

Winning proposals are selected via online voting at www.refresheverything.com/treytonkilar, and only two will win at the $250,000 level. As of Thursday morning, Treyton’s ballpark was in the money, but balloting continues through Jan. 31, and one vote can be cast per day via e-mail, text and Facebook.

Via Wisconsin’s Kilar family turns to baseball amid tragedy | MLB.com: News.

The Entrepreneurial Spirit

There’s a fine story over at the GazetteXtra entitled, New Janesville business planning to stick around, about a cane and walking stick manufacturer.

[Lenny] Staller, a self-taught cabinetmaker, spent years making wooden toys. Now the 70-year-old Janesville man creates canes, walking and hiking sticks. He works in a shop in the back of the store he opened in December on Highway 14 west of Janesville.

“I think I’ve got the biggest selection in the Midwest,” he said while standing in the Lenny’s Canes showroom.

On display were 1,500 unique creations, among them walking sticks made from sunflower and Brussels sprout stalks, canes made from black walnut, palm tree and willow tree branches, plus a rain stick with rabbit fur.

The selection is attractive and considerable; a walking stick with a turkey topper looks particularly sharp.

I’ve no connection to the proprietor or his business (with a website at lennyscane.com), but admire the evident commitment behind the venture.

Best wishes, surely.

Walworth County Today: Whitewater developer pays $1 million for Delavan Industrial Park properties

D R Plastics Inc., a waste material recycling company, and Wild Impact Marketing, a marketing and merchandising firm, are expected to begin operations March 2011, once the build-outs are completed.

Premier Real Estate Development, a Whitewater, Wisconsin-based real estate specialist company, purchased the two industrial buildings for $1.1 million, or about $21.26 per square foot, according to a news release on www.costar.com

See, Whitewater developer pays $1 million for Delavan Industrial Park properties.

For more concerning D R Plastics, see Whitewater Community Development Authority meeting agendas for 12/13/10 and 12/22/10.

Daily Bread for 1-20-11

Good morning,

Whitewater’s forecast calls for a chance of snow showers, with a high temperature of seventeen degrees.

There’s no school today or tomorrow in our district. Play responsibly.

If you thought that holographic images from Star Wars and other movies would always remain merely the fanciful ideas of science fiction, the you may be underestimating American ingenuity. Over at ScienceNews.org, there’s a story entitled, Coming soon: Holographic Skype – Researchers close to creating real-time 3-D TV – that reports

Arizona researchers have created the first 3-D hologram movie that plays almost in real time, they report in the Nov. 4 Nature. It?s the fastest known demonstration of telepresence, where a 3-D hologram depicts a scene from another location.

The key to the invention is a new type of plastic that can refresh the hologram once every two seconds. While that?s too slow to watch the World Series in 3-D, the researchers estimated holographic TV could be coming in seven to 10 years.


LIVE IN 3-D from Science News on Vimeo.

more >>

Whitewater’s Emerald Ash Borer Plan



The City of Whitewater’s municipal administration has offered a plan to combat a small, invasive insect that threatens ash trees. See, Whitewater’s Emerald Ash Borer Plan.

Whitewater, Wisconsin proudly bears a designation as a Tree City USA. Having sought the designation, it’s predictable that residents would be proud and concerned over trees in the community. We’ve had contentious debates in town over the city’s trees, more than once. We’ve gone from a Tree Commission to an Urban Forestry Commission, and several Council meetings have been occupied with the care of Whitewater’s trees.

(Many of these debates have been made far worse by the municipal administration, hurling overblown charges about officials being ‘maligned’ or citizens committing ‘egregious’ acts.)

The Emerald Ash Borer (EAB) isn’t the first pernicious insect or disease that’s threatened North American crops or trees; it won’t been the last. Pioneers faced locusts throughout the nineteenth century, and Dutch elms and chestnut trees succumbed to diseases in the twentieth. I recall my father describing the effects of Dutch Elm Disease, and how startling it was for neighborhoods to see so many fine trees lost to infection.

There are vast numbers of ash trees in America, of different varieties, so the borer threatens many communities, and whole groves may be destroyed. It’s nearly poignant that a threat to their survival comes from a tiny, beautiful insect. Whitewater’s EAB plan, with a picture of the insect on top of a penny, does not do that small insect justice — in so many other photos, the EAB is a striking, iridescent green. If it were not so destructive, the EAB would be a tiny jewel among insects. (Perhaps, even now, it’s worthy of that honor.)

When I first heard of Whitewater’s plan regarding the EAB, I thought: Perhaps, as in earlier times with locusts, we will fight against any infestation, even if the odds are long. (I’ve learned that there’s uncertainty about what caused locusts, in huge numbers, to disappear; many scientists doubt that they disappeared through human efforts, however strenuous they were).

Still, there’s something admirable in the trying, in that case and this one. If — regarding trees rather than crops — we could save some ash trees, would that not be a commitment to conservation, to preservation of part of the created order?

I’ve linked to Whitewater’s plan, and embedded it previously. But before commenting on it, I wanted to check and see if my own instincts about the plan — those of a layman — were sound.

Whitewater’s Management Plan. One sees, from the Executive Summary and other passages within the document, that this plan is not original to Whitewater. It’s from Beloit, and has been adopted for use here. There’s no dispositive wrong in taking a good plan from elsewhere and using it here.

(I’ve contended that Whitewater often takes too little of outside practices, and instead clings to a false, local exceptionalism in substitution for a genuine American exceptionalism. America, after all, does not end where Whitewater’s city limits begin.)

There is, however, a question about commitment to implementation, here in this city, if the plan’s a cribbed effort. A purchased term paper may be accurate, but it’s also evidence of indolence.

Process Boilerplate. Virtually the entire plan is collection of generic summaries or process boilerplate.

It’s not that it’s wrong, it’s that, after all, a Coversheet, Executive Summary, Index, History of EAB in Wisconsin, generic Planning Process, vague Goals/Priorities/Actions, Historical Background, full-page picture of a composite site, States Notification System, City of Whitewater Notification System, info on the City of Whitewater Command System (yes, ‘command system’), List of Regulatory Authorities, Applicable Laws Statutes Administrative Codes, outdated(!) EAB Quarantine Map, and blank end page

do not constitute a plan of action.

There’s nothing that indicates commitment or zeal to fight this infestation. On the contrary, Beloit’s plan, now Whitewater’s plan, hedges on just about every remedial measure:

There are Chemical Treatment options that may be looked at for protecting ash trees from E.A.B. It should be noted however, that Chemical Treatment carries with it trade-offs, that may not be environmentally safe. Caution should be exercised and all product information should be reviewed before product treatment is done.

Yes, but what will Whitewater actually do? There are ways to protect these trees, but there’s so much hesitation in this plan. Consider Whitewater EAB Management Plan, page 16:

Table 1. Insecticide options for professionals and homeowners for controlling EAB that have been tested in multiple university trials. Some products may not be labeled for use in all states. Some of the listed products failed to protect ash trees when they were applied at labeled rates. Inclusion of a product in this table does not imply that it is endorsed by the authors or has been consistently effective for EAB control.”

Yes, but what, if any of these, works in our state, and is there any recommendation from those who wrote this plan? Of what use is a plan that disclaims much, but offers little? For prevention or cure, wouldn’t no plan be as preventive as this plan?

Managing Infestation. In the end, that’s what this plan, such as it is, does — it simply manages infestation and destruction. It’s not prevention, or cure, but a passive response to a serious problem. I’m sure referring to it as a passive response will produce consternation among some bureaucrats. Yet, that’s all these two-dozen vague pages are — not a plan, but a resignation to loss.

There’s all the zeal in the world, to defend every last bureaucratic action as above reproach, but not so nearly much for hard work that would justify a reputation for industry and dedication.

Whitewater deserves a municipal plan as committed and dedicated to conservation as are so many of her residents.

This isn’t it.

Ilya Somin: Libertarianism and the Reliance Interests of People Who Depend on Government Programs

Prof. Somin writes that

It is indeed true that there are people who depend on government programs that should be abolished, and in some cases it would be unjust to simply cut them off immediately. But that doesn’t mean we should simply leave the programs in place forever. There is a wide range of options in between going cold turkey and feeding the addiction indefinitely. For example, we could lower program benefits without eliminating them completely. We can also continue paying current beneficiaries, but gradually eliminate the program for future ones (who generally rely on the program less). Another option might be to give some or all of the beneficiaries a lump sum “severance payment” to cushion them through the transition they face.There are also some relevant moral distinctions to be made between different classes of program beneficiaries. There is a difference between an ordinary citizen who relies on a program he or she had no hand in creating and a politically sophisticated, powerful interest group that aggressively lobbied for its establishment and perpetuation. That’s the distinction between, say, a low-income old lady who lives off a Social Security check and big agribusiness interests that lobby for massive farm subsidies and then whine about having become dependent on them.

Via The Volokh Conspiracy » Libertarianism and the Reliance Interests of People Who Depend on Government Programs.

In a small city like Whitewater, there’s vast spending on programs that are nothing up a kind of wasteful business welfare, while the city budget ignores pervasive poverty in favor of a narrow, and well-fed constituency.  Our present direction is not merely wrong, but wrong also for being built on dodgy, absurd claims of success.

P.J. Byrne: The Secret to a Libertarian State

Byrne writes:

I read an intriguing story last month about Toby Ord, a lecturer at Oxford University, who has pledged to donate £1,000,000 to charitable causes over his lifetime. Dr Ord is no millionaire – he currently earns £25,300 per year. He and his wife have pledged to give annually 10% of their income to charitable causes, and they’ve convinced others to do the same through his internet-based organization, Giving What We Can….

[Ord’s] organization and its members are proof that human nature and social responsibility are not mutually exclusive, and that people are certainly able—though perhaps not predisposed—to engage in meaningful voluntary altruistic activity. Second, we should note that Giving What We Can states openly that its members commit “to give 10% of their income to the most effective charities they can find,” as measured by the number of “Disability-Adjusted Life Years” preserved by their donations. One wonders what our society might look like if all social welfare provision were as rational, efficient, and accountable as this.

A community of those who traditionally tithe as an expression of faith would achieve similar results.  Efforts such as these can reliance on the state.

Via The secret to a libertarian state – CSMonitor.com. more >>