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Monthly Archives: October 2012

The Local Press as a Bad Habit

If local officials (whether elected or appointed) want to be successful, they’ll have to set higher standards for themselves than our local press sets for them.

Successful leaders have been, are, and will always be those who set a better standard for themselves. There’s no partisan ideology in this – the same applies to those of left, right, and center.

I grew up enjoying newspapers, and look fondly on some even now.

We’ve two local dailies nearby, although none from within the city. It’s undeniable, to my eyes, that those papers have covered government officials poorly. For me that means that they’ve not really reported on local politics at all, but instead have fawned over elected politicians and appointed managers. It’s no surprise to any long-time reader that I feel this way.

And yet, and yet – the problem isn’t how I feel, but the damage that sycophantic coverage does to officials, themselves: mediocre coverage creates mediocre leaders, and mediocre leaders produce mediocre work. It encourages them to do less and try less, to settle for shoddy arguments and flimsy claims. Worse, it plays to the vanities of weak-minded officials: they eagerly lap the syrupy concoctions that toadying reporters too gladly serve.

A newspaper story should have some better use than as a page in an official’s scrapbook.

As a rule, local press analysis is poor, the scourcing that newspapers claim is their advantage is non-existent or laughably inadequate, and their quality of composition is wanting.

Coverage of major political initiatives, of policies supposedly worth vast sums, receives no careful review and assessment, but only the most cursory and unthinking acceptance.

It’s not true that this is the best newspapers can do.

Thousands of residents throughout our city, and millions of Americans across this continent, easily meet a higher standard each day than the flimsy coverage our politics receives in the traditional, local press. Americans are among the hardest-working and most competitive peoples in all the world. We are at the forefront of humanity’s accomplishments in science, technology, industry, and art.

Those accomplishments are not the works of a few, but the achievements of over three-hundred million of us, cooperating in countless transactions each day.

Why would any elected or appointed official set aside America’s high standards for the low standards of a local press?

Everyone is free to choose for himself or herself, but not all choices are equally beneficial. Looking outward to the best practices across America (and beyond) is our only sensible, productive, and prosperous approach.

No one in should settle for anything less.

Friday Poll: When’s a Good Time for Stores to Begin Selling Christmas Decorations?

I saw that our local Walmart had a section with Christmas decorations for sale. It’s probably the same with other Walmart stores, and similar retailers. So, today’s question: When’s a good time, in your view, to begin selling Christmas decorations? The question’s not about what should be permissible (I’d say anytime, after all), but what seems fitting to you, as a shopper.

In my case, I’ll answer that November seems a good beginning, after Halloween, and when Christmas is about six weeks away.

What do you think?


Daily Bread for 10.5.12

Good morning.

Whitewater’s week ends with a mostly sunny day, and a high of fifty-three.

On this day in 1947, Pres. Truman delivered the first televised address from the White House:

President Harry Truman (1884-1972) makes the first-ever televised presidential address from the White House, asking Americans to cut back on their use of grain in order to help starving Europeans. At the time of Truman’s food-conservation speech, Europe was still recovering from World War II and suffering from famine. Truman, the 33rd commander in chief, worried that if the U.S. didn’t provide food aid, his administration’s Marshall Plan for European economic recovery would fall apart. He asked farmers and distillers to reduce grain use and requested that the public voluntarily forgo meat on Tuesdays, eggs and poultry on Thursdays and save a slice of bread each day. The food program was short-lived, as ultimately the Marshall Plan succeeded in helping to spur economic revitalization and growth in Europe.

On this day in 1846, Wisconsin’s first state constitutional convention met:

1846 – First State Constitutional Convention Meets
On this date Wisconsin’s first state Constitutional Convention met in Madison. The Convention sat until December 16,1846. The Convention was attended by 103 Democrats and 18 Whigs. The proposed constitution failed when voters refused to accept several controversial issues: an anti-banking article, a homestead exemption (which gave $1000 exemption to any debtor), providing women with property rights, and black suffrage. The following convention, the Second Constituitional Convention of Wisconsin in 1847-48, produced and passed a constitution that Wisconsin still very much follows today. [Source:The Convention of 1846 edited Milo M. Quaife]

For today’s daily puzzle from Google, some chemistry: “What is produced when the element discovered by Joseph Priestly reacts with the metal manufactured by his “mad” brother-in-law?”

Which Romney for Wisconsin?

In January, looking ahead to Wisconsin’s big political year, I thought that Gov. Walker would be recalled in June, and Gov. Romney would win both Wisconsin and the presidency in November. The first prediction was well off-the-mark. (Gov. Walker actually did better in 2012 than he did in 2010.)

The November contest is yet ahead, leaving two of those three predictions still to be assessed. All three, though, were based on the same theory: that a moderate-conservative candidate would do better than a thoroughly conservative candidate in Wisconsin. Of course, Walker might have done even better as a moderate-conservative (rather than a thorough-going conservative), but he did well enough that it’s quibbling to speculate.

The theory may yet hold, however, if Gov. Romney’s delivery in last night’s presidential debate is how he presents himself over the next month. Romney does a poor impression of a die-hard conservative, and when he tries to speak like one, he’s off-putting. (See, Does Mitt Romney Really Want to be President of the United States?, a post describing the trouble that Romney causes himself when he describes America as divided between makers and takers.)

When Romney talks like this, the one thing that he makes is it harder for himself to win.

At the very least, when Romney sounds like he did in his first presidential debate, he improves his chances, assuring a closer race.

That matters nationally, but also in battlegrounds like Wisconsin. The current state of the Wisconsin race favors Obama, and consequently down-ballot Democrats. These local Democrats need all the help the can get when running after re-districting. By contrast, if the presidential race draws closer here, it’s sure to benefit down-ballot Republicans.

Romney doesn’t need to win Wisconsin to help WISGOP candidates, but he needs to bring the race closer than it is now.

He’ll only be able to bring the race closer if he presents himself each remaining day as he did in last night’s debate.

We’ll see.

Also posted on 10.4.12 @ Daily Adams.

Daily Bread for 10.4.12

Good morning.

Showers are likely today in the Whippet City, with a high of seventy-five.

Whitewater’s Landmarks Commission meets today at 6 PM.

On this day in 1957, the Soviets’ launch of Sputnik into orbit began the Space Age.

Here we are, fifty-five years later:

Google’s daily puzzle asks about rooms in the White House: “In what room of the White House did a U.S. President marry the youngest First Lady?”

Wisconsin: The State of the Race

There’s a new Marquette Law School Poll today, that shows a continuing double-digit lead for Obama over Romney, but a closer US Senate race between Baldwin and Thompson.

It’s Obama 53, Romney 42; Baldwin 48, Thompson 44.

A few quick impressions –

1. Obama still leads by eleven, on this poll, despite Ryan’s spot on the GOP ticket. That’s not a competitive race.

2. Although Baldwin now leads by less than in the previous Marquette Poll (where she led by 9, 50-41), there are few Wisconsinites who thought she was ever truly ahead of Thompson by that much. This current poll is probably a better measure of where the race is, and where it has been (based on other polls).

The story will be that Thompson’s closer now, but the truth is that pollster Charles Franklin’s latest effort for Marquette is simply closer to others’ polls.

3. Neither Republican is out of the low to mid-forties. That’s especially telling in former Gov. Thompson’s case, despite a long tenure as a popular governor. That native Wisconsinite Thompson and native Wisconsinite Ryan (as the second half of a team) are polling below the high forties is telling. They should both be doing better.

They may yet win, of course, but the GOP is behind the Democrats in both races, despite native sons on the Republican ticket.

That’s the current state of these Wisconsin contests.

For a previous post on the first Wisconsin US Senate debate, see The Baldwin-Thompson U.S. Senate Debate (9.28.12).

Posted on 10.3.12 @ Daily Adams.

The Common Council Session for 10.2.12

Tuesday saw a common council session in Whitewater, with topics including recognition of private accomplishments, citizen comments on housing, a municipal budget update, snow removal, council’s approval of the terms for Whitewater’s new City Manager, Cameron Clapper, and discussion of the job posting for a new Director of Public Works.

A few remarks on meeting highlights follow —

Charitable, private accomplishments. Council issued two proclamations, one designating Sunday, October 7th in honor of our local Crop Walk, and a second designating Sunday, November 18th in honor of the Fairhaven Retirement Community’s fiftieth anniversary.

These proclamations came early in the session, and that seems right: among the best work of government is the acknowledgment of private accomplishment. The Crop Walk (beginning at Fairhaven) will raise money to feed hundreds locally and elsewhere. It’s an unalloyed good.

That Fairhaven has endured — and expanded — over fifty years is no small achievement. Our conditions are so very different from 1962, and Fairhaven would not have managed those many years had it not adapted to new conditions, to new expectations.

There’s reason to be proud of the generosity and hard work behind the subjects of each proclamation.

Budget Update. Cameron Clapper (at the time Interim City Manager, by the end of the meeting City Manager) offered updates on the budget process and three topics of interest.

The city administration will offer its budget to the Common Council on 10.9.12, place it online, and then begin presentation of it at the Council session on 10.16.12. Elected representatives and residents will thus be able to think about the budget before the next council session. City Manager Clapper gave notice of three areas of the budget for particular consideration: the city’s public contribution toward the ‘Innovation Express’ (Generac’s bus), municipal funding for Downtown Whitewater, and municipal funding to combat the emerald ash borer (now encroaching upon the city).

There’s time to consider these requests, and the rest of the budget, after it’s publicly available.

There may be more than one budgetary option; it’s encouraging that these options will be balanced.

Citizen Comments on Rental Property in the City. All these years, but still we’ve seen scant progress on controversies over rental houising in the city. We’ve a chance, if only we’d try, for a general resolution of these ceaseless kerfuffles. Is there anyone in the city who wants to keep arguing about this, after so many years have been wasted?

I could battle for my way of thinking for a dozen more years, others could do the same in opposition to that way of thinking, but where will we be? Only where we have been these last several years.

If we could capitalize on changes in personnel, combine it with a more modern outlook, and zoning re-write reform, perhaps we could get past these continuous, contentious debates.

That’s a subject for longer discussion. The motivation for that discussion should be clear enough: we should, and I think can, compromise well enough to put this issue mostly behind us.

Snow Removal. Snow on city sidewalks must now be removed by 8 PM on the evening after it stops falling. Council approved a more reasonable rule — requiring a 24-hour snow removal deadline. The old requirement was a stupid one, contrary to that of other communities’ policies, penalizing late-shift workers, and requiring much more of residents than of the city government.

A New Director of Public Works. One might set the requirements for this job however one wishes, so long as one achieves these two tasks: that projects come in on time, and on (or under) budget. It’s practical accomplishment that matters, from a new leader residing within the city.

A New City Manager. Returning from closed session, Whitewater formally approved a contract with Cameron Clapper as her new city manager. The recruiting process leading to his selection was open, thorough, professional, and smooth. Two attributes matter most: the standards & principles by which one manages, and a temperament that fosters harmony within the municipal administration and inclusion within the city.

It’s not compensation, but guiding principles and equal-treatment of all residents, that’s important. Residents may differ over particular views to no matter: it’s a substantive foundation and fairness toward all that carries the day.

Quite a few have written, asking my opinion of Whitewater’s choice. I’ll answer here as I have privately: I believe it’s a sound choice, and I wish City Manager Clapper the best for his administration.

One may be confident that all the city feels this way.

Daily Bread for 10.3.12

Good morning.

It’s a partly sunny Wednesday, with a high of seventy, in store for Whitewater.

On this day in 1990, East and West Germany ended forty-five years of division, becoming one, re-unified country:

Then the President, Richard von Weizsacker, drawing on the words of the West German Constitution, proclaimed from the steps of the Reichstag: ”In free self-determination, we want to achieve the unity in freedom of Germany. We are aware of our responsibility for these tasks before God and the people. We want to serve peace in the world in a united Europe.”

If you’ve ever wondered what an astronaut sees at night, here’s a scenic answer:

Google’s daily puzzle asks about a drink, a place, and a language: “You just popped open a bottle of champagne in the country that’s the leading producer of cork. How do you say “happy birthday” like a native?”

The Baldwin-Thompson U.S. Senate Debate (9.28.12)

We’ve a competitive U.S. Senate race here in Wisconsin, between former Gov. Tommy Thompson and incumbent Rep. Tammy Baldwin. Recent polls show a Baldwin lead, but everyone in the state sees that this will be a close election on Nov. 6th.

Here’s an assessment of this first debate, on overall impression, format, style, and substance. (The debate begins @ 3:55 on the video, after a dull, seemingly endless introduction from the Wisconsin Broadcasters Association.)

Overall impression.

Both of these candidates want to convey the same idea, to a (likely) small number of impressionable voters: that they care about the middle class. Baldwin does this directly, by saying that she does care about them, but that Thompson does not. Thompson, by contrast, does this indirectly, by reminding that he was re-elected many times during which he reduced taxes and boosted employment.

Neither candidate makes a terrible mistake; neither candidate wins a triumph. It’s unlikely that this debate changed anyone’s mind, but it does give voters an impression: Thompson’s irritated. That impression will be effective if voters recall Thompson’s career favorably, with nostalgia. If they feel he has reason to be irritated, then he gains. If not, then in this debate he’s lost nothing, but gained nothing, either.

Tomorrow’s 10.3.12 Marquette Poll may show a closer race, but I doubt that this debate will be the reason.

The state of the race: while Wisconsin twice voted for Scott Walker within two years’ time, the second time by a larger margin than the first, former Gov. Thompson trails Rep. Baldwin.

That Baldwin’s doing as well as she is represents a true problem for Thompson. This debate didn’t change that.

Format.

It’s two candidates, three panelists, and a moderator, with the worst debate stage in all America. It looks like something from a high-school election: big wooden desks, heavy curtains and banners behind them, candidates seated apart from each other, with a moderator between debaters and panelists. Wisconsinites are a plain-spun people, but this stage isn’t plain – it’s stodgy. The desks look like something rummaged from a yard sale. The floor is a studio’s gray linoleum, reminding everyone that it’s a makeshift studio rather than a proper auditorium.

Style.

Baldwin’s dressed conservatively, speaking steadily but without much inflection, and directly into the camera. Her voice has grown more mature over her political career; she once had a discernibly higher pitch. The change has been good for her, and is typical of someone her age (she’s fifty). She’s not a strong speaker, occasionally glancing at her notes, but she’s able to convey emphasis well-enough.

Baldwin does this in two ways: she speaks directly into the camera, and she’s soft-spoken enough that one is almost pulled in, drawn to hear her complete each sentence. If this were an outdoor debate, she’d been at a great disadvantage; on the cooler medium of television, her understated manner of speaking presents no similar problem.

Being seated helps, too: one expects more force from a speaker who’s standing than from one who’s seated. A seated position calls for reduced energy, and a more measured style of speaking.

Thompson’s GOP rivals in the primary questioned his energy and commitment to the race, but he’s easily energetic enough in this debate. Now aged seventy, he’s let his hair go gray, and he looks better now than he did a year ago. He’s a more conversational speaker than Baldwin, and doesn’t need to glance down at notes while he’s speaking.

Thompson speaks assertively (almost angrily) in this debate, and I’d guess it’s by design. He’s down in the polls (at least by a few points), is older, and wants to show fire, vitality. A feistier presentation must have been a campaign tactic.

It’s not a good fit for Thompson, though, and not a good fit in this format. As for the format, being seated makes an angry mien harder to pull off. It would be much better outdoors, and a bit better standing up. He touts his policy successes as governor, but he does so in an edgy way. I don’t know why: he could make up any ground with a subtler, smoother approach.

Thompson doesn’t look at the camera, but rather the panelists, a contrast with Baldwin’s approach. Since he takes a more assertive, almost dismissive tone, he’s better off looking away; as Baldwin takes a less assertive one, she’s better off looking at the camera.

Neither of these candidates speaks of the other except as ‘my opponent.’ (I counted only one exception.) It’s a sign of the coldness between the two, but also their insecurities as candidates. It’s embarrassing that they won’t use their names or titles. Like the cheesy setting, there’s a second-tier approach in one calling the other ‘my opponent.’ All Wisconsin knows that she’s Rep. Tammy Baldwin and that he’s former Gov. Tommy Thompson. Baldwin & Thompson might as well use the same titles that everyone else does.

Substance.

If substance seems so brief, it’s because this was a debate of briefly stated positions. Although both candidates have held office for years, neither showed more than summary of their respective views. One would not easily guess that one was a longstanding legislator, the other a longstanding governor.

Baldwin would extend some existing (Bush Admin) tax cuts, but not all of them; Thompson would preserve them all.

Baldwin would make cuts in military spending and corporate welfare; Thompson favors wider and more comprehensive cuts, mentioning an across-the-board 5% cut.

Thompson touts his prior accomplishments like BadgerCare, and rejects Baldwin’s support for a single-payer solution. Thompson opposes ObamaCare (the Affordable Care Act); Baldwin supports it, and criticizes only a portion of existing health care law that she says benefits drug companies against consumers.

Thompson supports a harder line against Iran, but then no one is favorable to that dictatorship. Baldwin cites her support for Pres. Obama’s approach. Baldwin wants out of Afghanistan; Thompson questions our present policy as tepid and indecisive.

These a battle here over who’s the bigger spender, with Baldwin parrying attacks on her spending record with charges of insiders’ deals and corporate welfare. How undecided voters see these two tacks will determine the race: Thompson’s insistence that she’s an unreconstructed liberal, and Baldwin’s insistence that he’s a deal-making insider.

Whitewater-Area League of Women Voters October 2012 Newsletter

The Whitewater-Area League of Women Voters’ October 2012 Newsletter has arrived, featuring articles and a calendar of upcoming events.

This latest edition is available as a link on my blogroll, and is embedded below.

Upcoming events:

Date: October 13th (Saturday)
Event: LWVWI Issues Briefing
Where: Crown Plaza Hotel, Madison

Date: October 18th (Thursday)
Event: Public Program, Mike McCabe of Wisconsin Democracy Campaign, Money in Politics
Where: 7 PM, Timmerman Auditorium, Hyland Hall, UWW Campus

Fairhaven Lecture Series:

Mondays at 3 PM, Fellowship Hall, Fairhaven Retirement Center

Oct. 8 Money Talks: Citizens United and its impact on US elections
Jolly Emrey, Assoc. Professor, Economics

Oct. 15 Perspectives from Germany on the US election
Carol Scovotti, Assoc. Professor, Marketing

Oct. 22 Economists reflect on this election season
Jeffery Heinrich, Assoc. Professor, Economics
Stuart Glosser, Professor, Economics
Russell Kashian, Professor Economics

Oct. 29 The 2012 convention speeches compared Corey Davis, Assist. Professor, Communications

State Assembly District 43 Candidate Forum:

October 30th 7:30-9PM Timmerman Auditorium, Hyland Hall, UWW Campus

The League, in partnership with the Whitewater Student Government (WSG), is co-sponsoring a candidate forum for State Assembly District 43 candidates Evan Wynn and Andy Jorgensen on October 30th, 7:30-9PM, in Timmerman Auditorium, Hyland Hall.

Whitewater League Website

www.lwvwhitewater.org