Monthly Archives: March 2011
Recent Tweets, 3.20 – 3.26
by JOHN ADAMS •
Republican fundraiser draws 200 guests … and 600 protesters http://bit.ly/gTTEcz
26 Mar
MT@radleybalko: Number of IN prosecutors fired 4 moronic reactions 2 the WI protests: 2. Also, who still uses Hotmail?
26 Mar
MT @MSpicuzzaWSJ: Assmbly Min. Ldr Peter Barca files state open records request w/ GOP leaders abt publication of the controversial law
25 Mar
MT @MSpicuzzaWSJ: Sen Erpenbach: Sen Fitzgerald used position & ordered non-partisan LRB 2 get involved in vry partisan issue pblshng bill
25 Mar
Collective bargaining bill published despite restraining order – JSOnline http://bit.ly/eOb3VM
25 Mar
Indiana prosecutor resigns over Walker email – Initially denied encouraging Wisconsin violence WisconsinWatch.org http://bit.ly/g3Fe84
24 Mar
What Democracy Looks Like | FREE WHITEWATER http://bit.ly/fdaj08
24 Mar
‘Thugs,’ ‘Pickets,’ and Other Absurd Claims | FREE WHITEWATER http://bit.ly/dOUNQp
24 Mar
River Falls screwball arrested, fined for stealing recall petitions http://bit.ly/ez5wLI
23 Mar
RT @WiStateJournal: Editorial: Judge Sumi is right: ‘It’s not a minor detail’ http://dlvr.it/L5l2H
23 Mar
RT @ACLU: Know Your Rights? Find out — Check out our guide to your rights when stopped by police, ICE or the FBI. http://bit.ly/bEeaCX
23 Mar
620 WTMJ’s use of ‘Capitol Chaos’ 4 stories abt debate ovr budgets transparent effort 2 cast dissent as disorderly http://bit.ly/eJirQM
23 Mar
Well, yes — Controversy surrounds Walker dinner visit to Janesville — GazetteXtra http://bit.ly/hcTg1s
22 Mar
Walker Administration plans $35 million pork spending for UW-Whitewater projects Bet GOP celebrates $ as ‘investment’ http://bit.ly/ecNzK5
22 Mar
Have We Looked Into Declaring a ‘No-Fly Zone’ Over Wisconsin? « Above the Law: A Legal Tabloid http://bit.ly/f8tcJT
21 Mar
Golden Eagles upset Syracuse!
20 Mar
Cartoons & Comics
Sunday Morning Comic: Pearls Before Swine
by JOHN ADAMS •
Development, Economy, Free Markets, Government Spending, Innovation Center/Tech Park, Planning, Taxes/Taxation
Stossel: End Corporate Welfare
by JOHN ADAMS •
Over at Reason, John Stossel writes about the problem – a big, expensive one – of corporate welfare.
Particular businesses shouldn’t receive preferential treatment, including taxpayer handouts, from government. Taxes and fees should be lower across the board, and without preference for one corporation over another.
Corporate handouts only reduce competitiveness and increase dependency, and are illegitimate expenditures. There are a thousand better uses of public funds; corporate welfare is as wrong, wasteful, and destructive of American productivity as about anything government does.
Every dollar for corporate welfare increases the tax and debt burden on ordinary people, and distorts otherwise efficient markets in capital and labor.
Local versions of this kind of mistaken and wrongful spending can be found in so-called government development associations or rat holes of waste like our local tech park board.
(The work of the tech park board is so shameless that they don’t even have enough private businesses on whom to shower federal pork, so they’ve signed up public recipients of public money meant for private job creation.)
See, End Corporate Welfare.
Crime, Official Misconduct, Press
Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism: Indiana prosecutor resigns over Walker email
by JOHN ADAMS •
It’s hard to overestimate the outrageousness of this prosecutor’s actions:
An Indiana deputy prosecutor and Republican activist resigned Thursday after the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism uncovered an email in which he suggested faking an attack on Gov. Scott Walker to discredit union protesters.
Carlos F. Lam submitted his resignation shortly before the Center published a story quoting his Feb. 19 email, which praised Walker for standing up to unions but went on to say that the chaos in Wisconsin presented “a good opportunity for what’s called a ‘false flag’ operation.”
“If you could employ an associate who pretends to be sympathetic to the unions’ cause to physically attack you (or even use a firearm against you), you could discredit the unions,” the email said.
“Currently, the media is painting the union protest as a democratic uprising and failing to mention the role of the DNC and umbrella union organizations in the protest. Employing a false flag operation would assist in undercutting any support that the media may be creating in favor of the unions. God bless, Carlos F. Lam.”
At 5 a.m. Thursday, expecting the story to come out that day, Lam called Cooper and told him he had been up all night thinking about it.
“He wanted to come clean, I guess, and said he is the one who sent that email,” Cooper said.
He came into the office and gave his resignation verbally, Cooper told the Daily Journal in Franklin, Ind. The resignation was announced after the Center’s initial story was published.
Predictably, but wrongly, this officer of the court lied about his conduct when first confronted:
Email headers with detailed IP addresses suggested that the message was sent from Indianapolis.
Lam, an Indianapolis resident, at first told the Center he never wrote it.
Reached Tuesday by phone at the number listed on the email, Lam confirmed his email address matched the Hotmail address appearing on the Walker email, but said he had never written to Walker.
“I am flabbergasted and would never advocate for something like this, and would like everyone to be sure that that’s just not me,” he said, after being read the email.
Via Indiana prosecutor resigns over Walker email | WisconsinWatch.org.
Comment Forum
Friday Comment Forum: Whitewater’s First 70-Degree Day this Year
by JOHN ADAMS •
Here’s the Friday open comments post.
When will Whitewater see its first seventy-degree (or higher) day?
I’ll say April 27th
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.
Cats
Friday Catblogging: Glenda Moore’s CatStuff
by JOHN ADAMS •
Glenda Moore has a large repository of great information about cats over at CatStuff: Information Library about Domestic Cats.
Enjoy.
Daily Bread
Daily Bread for 3.25.11
by JOHN ADAMS •
Good morning.
Whitewater’s forecast for today calls for a mostly cloudy day, with a high temperature of thirty-three degrees.
It’s the last day of spring break, for our school district and campus.
Some of the UW-Whitewater faculty are walking to Madison with message for Gov. Walker. They’re walking the forty-three mile distance over these last few days. That’s news, and it’s campus news, but you’ll only find it in at a legitimate newspaper.
Over at Wired, there’s a video of the coldest and farthest brown dwarf, really a failed star, ever discovered.
Beautiful Whitewater, City, Freedom of Speech, Liberty
What Democracy Looks Like
by JOHN ADAMS •
Last Friday, there was a protest rally in Whitewater, along Main Street, and over one-hundred fifty people attended. See, Scenes from a Whitewater Rally, 3.18.11.
That’s a large number for Whitewater — especially on a Friday evening as work was ending — and larger in ways worthy of mention.
First, the pro-union gathering was one of two in Whitewater recently, with an earlier one having about ninety attendees. It’s significant that this outdoor rally drew more than the first, indoor meeting — these residents are part of a growing movement.
Second, the March 18th meeting came after Gov. Walker signed his budget repair bill. The signing ceremony didn’t slow protests down; they were larger in Madison and Whitewater after the signing ceremony.
Third, there’s no bureaucratic event that Whitewater’s town squires have backed that’s of this size. When they organize something like a meet-and-greet for someone, the attendance tops out at about fifty. That’s their limit — about 50.
By contrast, a true community event, like a civic or religious holiday, will draw hundreds. Not just a few of the same self-important people, struggling to reach a total of fifty, but hundreds or more. Independence Day, Christmas, Easter, graduation, a science fair, football games — they draw large numbers.
The March 18th rally did, too — far larger than a staged event with only a few silly, so-called dignitaries.
No one told these attendees to gather — they read the news, followed legislation in Madison, talked with others, and decided to turn out. That’s an effort of the people, more than capable of deciding and acting for themselves.
There were a few employers in town who tried to scare their own workers into staying home from the March 18th rally. These employers are predictably small, insecure, and provincial. They think the world begins and ends with Whitewater’s town line.
It doesn’t.
The way of employers like this has no future. The closed, self-promoting, rationalizing habits of these bloated abercrombies will claim fewer victims in the next generation.
It must be disconcerting to them to witness local events they cannot control, or even understand.
There is, however, a good description for events like the March 18th rally:
It’s what democracy looks like.
Freedom of Speech, Liberty
‘Thugs,’ ‘Pickets,’ and Other Absurd Claims
by JOHN ADAMS •
Whitewater’s tired, stodgy town fathers, and chief bureaucrat, aren’t really conservative or liberal: they’re simply reactionary.
So when a few working people came to town, to protest lawfully near a politician’s house, one read about this as though Whitewater were besieged by barbarians by pickets(!) from Milwaukee.
That’s Milwaukee, Wisconsin and Madison, Wisconsin — as though Madison or Milwaukee were on Mars. Has no one from Whitewater been to Marquette, or Summerfest, or a Bucks game? Has no one from Whitewater been to UW-Madison, or the Kohl and Alliant centers? Intimating that people from these cities are somehow sinister interlopers is too funny.
They are Wisconsinites, as Whitewater’s residents are.
They are working people, as we have in town.
Had they represented the slightest danger, or committed any crimes, they would have been arrested. They didn’t, and so they weren’t.
Like the vast numbers at the Capitol, they were peaceful.
But if one obstinately believes that protesters are thugs, then it leads to all sorts of political mistakes.
When protesters came to Rep. Wynn’s house, he took umbrage, and one saw on the website of a Wynn-supporter pictures of the protesters on one side of the street, and Wynn and his supporters on the other.
This was meant to be clever, to show that Wynn had anticipated the protesters’ arrival.
It might have been far sharper if, in the photo of Wynn’s supporters, one saw a coffee urn and donuts for anyone protesting. Wynn would have shown that he anticipated the protesters’ arrival, but that he was non-plussed about their presence.
Unfortunately, ire overcame a truly sharp photo, and so Wynn stuck to the contention that the very presence of the protesters was illegitimate.
To make the point clear, the supportive website assured nervous, quaking readers that those savages from another city were met with a heavy police presence.
It was a tone-deaf response.
It makes one wonder if result in the last election for the 43rd was simply dumb luck, and that the new incumbent won’t be able to deftly manage the tensions within a narrowly-held district.
Economy, Government Spending, Liberty, School District
Extended Contracts for the Whitewater School District
by JOHN ADAMS •
Over a month ago, I wrote a first take on the politics of cuts to state shared revenue. See, Cuts to State Shared Revenue: Whitewater’s Politics of It All (First Take).
Much has happened since then.
Of the school district, I noted previously that
There are so many better and higher tasks than labor disputes, but neither the leadership of the district (administrator and board) nor the faculty (union leaders and other teachers) may have the chance to pursue them. Cuts will likely preoccupy the district, and leadership and negotiation will require more tactical skill than vision.
Neither teachers nor administration seem ready for protracted conflict, and they may be so unready that they prove unwilling, and changes come without much fuss.
One can guess that there was fuss, stress, and tension to produce an extended contract for teachers and other employees, but it was the right thing to do. Hard, but right.
Preservation of collectively bargained rights, at least for two more years, was a good decision. These rights should never have been taken away, as an imposition on communities who never asked for this anti-association measure.
Note that those who talk about budgets, rather than limited government, don’t see rights of association as meaningful. For them, it’s simply about balancing a budget, and if unions have to go, then unions have to go.
The right thing isn’t budget repair, but limited government; the right thing isn’t fewer freedoms, but more.
Liberty begets prosperity.
Conditions of liberty permit freedom of association for all workers, public or private.
As for estimates of whether these concessions are enough, I cannot say. It’s worth noting that on a recent swing through northern Wisconsin, Gov. Walker began to hint that if his projections proved wrong, then workers should simply give more. (So much for his earlier, professed certainty that his projections would be enough.)
Status quo incumbents will try to have things both ways — in favor of both Walker’s restrictions on collective bargaining and the extension of these contacts. One can argue for both, but only dishonestly. Gov. Walker doesn’t want contacts extended, and he’s said so more than once.
So, pick one: with Walker, and against the extension of collectively-bargained contracts, or with the extension of contracts as a preservation of freedom of association (and against Walker’s statewide meddling with local matters).
New contracts were the right choice, as they preserve bargained contractual rights, and assure workers more freedom than this governor is willing to permit otherwise. That they involved cuts in compensation was inevitable in these tight times. Workers can – and will – make concessions without the necessity of losing their bargaining rights.
Communities should have come to these decisions without being forced to do so from the state administration.
Incumbents who contend they need the governor’s ‘budget repair’ legislation should admit that they have been incompetently managing employee negotiations previously.
Those who have been managing well don’t need Walker’s professed help; those who have been managing poorly deserve no more authority than the power they now possess.
One wouldn’t give a drunk more alcohol, and incumbents who have misused their existing authority don’t need even more from Gov. Walker.
Daily Bread
Daily Bread for 3.24.11
by JOHN ADAMS •
Good morning.
It’s a mostly sunny day with a high of about thirty-two degrees in store for the Whitewater today.
In Wisconsin history, the Wisconsin Historical Society reports that Wisconsin resident Harry Houdini was born on this day, in 1874:
1874 – Harry Houdini Born
On this date magician Harry Houdini was born in Budapest, though he later claimed to have been born on April 6, 1874, in Appleton, Wisconsin. At the age of 13 he left Appleton, where his family had emigrated, for New York City, and began his career as an escape artist and magician. [Source: Outagamie County Historical Society].
Google marks the occasion of Houdini’s birth with a doodle and a link to a biography.
Daily Bread
Daily Bread for 3.23.11
by JOHN ADAMS •
Good morning.
It’s a rainy and cold day for Whitewater, with a high temperature of thirty-seven.
The Wisconsin Historcal Society recalls that on this day in 1865
the 21st Wisconsin Infantry, made up mostly of soldiers from the Oshkosh area, finished fighting their way through the South during Sherman’s March to the Sea and reached Goldsboro, N.C., where the campaign in the Carolinas ended. Its veterans reunited 40 years later in Manitowoc. [Source: 21st Wisconsin Infantry homepage]
If you’ve been wondering about the physics of burrowing sandfish, ScienceNews has all the information you’ll need. In an article entitled Physics of burrowing sandfish revealed, Daniel Strain writes that
The sandfish lizard wriggles through desert sands like a sci-fi monster. Now, using computer simulations and bendy robots, researchers at Georgia Tech in Atlanta have taken the most complete look yet at the everyday physics of burrowing animals. And, boy, does this reptile wriggle, the team reports online February 23 in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface. “This particular behavior is built for speed,” says physicist Daniel Goldman, one of the study coauthors.
Here are two videos that show the lizards in action —
Quick getaway from Science News on Vimeo.
A desert di. from Science News on Vimeo.
City, Government Spending, Walworth County
Walworth County’s David Bretl on Public Spending
by JOHN ADAMS •
Walworth County Administrator David Bretl writes a column at Walworth County Today. His latest offers this observation on municipal spending —
The public has become desensitized in recent years regarding the true meanings of the words freeze and cuts. Tax rates for counties, for example, have been “frozen” for many years at 1992 levels. While that sounded like fiscal restraint, it meant that taxes were generally allowed to increase at the same rate as property values. During much of the past decade, as property values grew around the state at double-digit annual rates, property taxes escalated, as well.
Over the years, various governors have implemented “freezes” of their own. The latest one limited the annual growth of most municipal levies to 3 percent. Likewise, governments got in the habit of referring to limiting projected increases in spending as cuts. There’s a big difference. If I spent a dollar on something last year and plan to spend 90 cents this year, I have cut spending. If I spent a dollar this year and anticipate that I will need to spend $1.10 next year, but instead spend $1.05, I have not cut spending by a nickel….
My only point is that despite the use of the terms “freeze” and “cuts,” local government spending was generally increasing….
True enough.
Bretl also contends that calling the actual increases of these last years cuts was not meant to be dishonest.
One can’t tell whether it was meant to be dishonest; one can be sure it was false.
In a city like Whitewater, there’s been so much puffery and distortion on municipal finances from its city manager that an encounter with the truth will be like meeting someone for the first time.


