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Monthly Archives: June 2025

Daily Bread for 6.17.25: Eleven Wisconsin Lawmakers Named in Killer’s Manifesto

Good morning.

Tuesday in Whitewater will be sunny with a high of 86. Sunrise is 5:16 and sunset is 8:36, for 15 hours, 20 minutes of daytime. The moon is a waning gibbous with 64.1 percent of its visible disk illuminated.

The Whitewater Common Council meets at 6 PM.

On this day in 1673, Marquette & Joliet reach the Mississippi: “”Here we are, then, on this so renowned river, all of whose peculiar features I have endeavored to note carefully.” 


Captured killer Vance Luther Boelter’s manifesto included the names of nearly a dozen Wisconsin lawmakers:

Eleven Wisconsin lawmakers are named in a manifesto written by a gunman suspected of killing a Democratic Minnesota lawmaker and her husband and shooting another lawmaker and his wife, according to Democratic sources.

Wisconsin Democrats gathered June 14 at their annual convention under increased security after the two Democratic lawmakers in neighboring Minnesota were gunned down in their homes overnight.

Authorities say Minnesota state Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband were killed and state Sen. John Hoffman and his wife were injured at their homes by 57-year-old Vance Luther Boelter, who was impersonating law enforcement in what Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz called a “politically motivated assassination.” Hoffman and Hortman are both members of the Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party.

Democratic sources told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel that 11 Wisconsin lawmakers’ names are on a manifesto police recovered in their search for Boelter, who was apprehended in Minnesota on June 15. In some cases, the Wisconsin lawmakers were relocated from their homes to keep them safe as the search for Boelter continued, according to the sources. The group of Wisconsin lawmakers included eight women and three men, according to one source. All are Democrats.

“I just learned that. And that’s just shocking, to be honest with you, that is just absolutely shocking,” Democratic state Sen. Brad Pfaff of Onalaska said. “I don’t understand the level of anger that would lead to such a violent outburst that took place today in the Twin Cities, and I don’t understand why state legislators here in Wisconsin would also be on such a list.”

He said his name was not among those on the list.

Pfaff said he’s concerned that intensifying political rhetoric has pushed the country to this point. 

See Molly Beck, Laura Schulte, and Daniel Bice, 11 Wisconsin lawmakers named in manifesto of Minnesota gunman, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, June 16, 2025.

While disturbing, there’s nothing surprising about this: pardoning violent insurrectionists, for example, shows support for political violence.

See also Brian Klaas, Understanding Trump’s incitements to violence, The Contrarian, June 16, 2025.


Verifying the authenticity of videos claiming to show Israeli and Iranian airstrikes:

Daily Bread for 6.16.25: Scott Walker Completes Transformation from Wisconsin Governor to Internet Troll

Good morning.

Monday in Whitewater will be partly cloudy with a high of 83. Sunrise is 5:15 and sunset is 8:35, for 15 hours, 20 minutes of daytime. The moon is a waning gibbous with 73.2 percent of its visible disk illuminated.

Whitewater’s Library Board meets at 6:30 PM.

On this day in 1911, IBM is founded as the Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company in Endicott, New York.


Scott Walker, former governor of Wisconsin, now spends his days as president of the Young America’s Foundation, but his nights and weekends as an Internet troll:

The claim Walker was making, repeated widely throughout conservative populist channels, is the false claim that the conservative populist who murdered two and wounded two in Minnesota was somehow liberal and the crime was a liberal plot.

Walker, of course, would have had no idea either way: he only repeated what he read uncritically on mendacious and moronic websites.

Walker’s now completed his transformation from failed governor of Wisconsin to Internet troll.


No Kings in Wisconsin:

Daily Bread for 6.15.25: American Kestrel Chicks Take Flight in Prairie du Chien

Good morning.

Father’s Day in Whitewater will be partly cloudy with a high of 80. Sunrise is 5:15 and sunset is 8:35, for 15 hours, 19 minutes of daytime. The moon is a waning gibbous with 82.3 percent of its visible disk illuminated.

On this day in 1846, the Oregon Treaty extends the border between the United States and British North America, established by the Treaty of 1818, westward to the Pacific Ocean.


Starting out:

The American Kestrel Cam saw all five of its female fledglings take flight between June 13 and 15—and we’ve compiled their first flights into one amazing supercut!

With the nest box behind them, the fledglings will still depend on their parents for food as they practice flying and learn how to hunt. For now, these siblings will stick close to one another, and they may gradually form small groups with other juveniles as they grow stronger and more independent. Soon, they’ll set off to claim their own territories!

….

Watch the cams live at https://www.allaboutbirds.org/kestrels

The American Kestrel cam is a collaboration between the Cornell Lab or Ornithology and the Raptor Resource Project.

This American Kestrel pair is nesting in a gravel-bottomed nest on private property near Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin. The nest box is located on the side of a traditional limestone-footed barn, overlooking a rolling grassland that slopes away into folded hills and forests. Our partners at the Raptor Resource Project have watched kestrels breed at this site for over 25 years, and the wonderful combination of grassland, forest, and water that surrounds the property is an excellent example of the habitat that kestrels need to survive and thrive. Watch cam.

The young birds begin to hatch out of their eggs after about a month of incubation. Over the following 3-4 weeks, the nestlings will transform from downy bobbleheads to sleek, dull versions of their parents on a diverse diet of invertebrates, small mammals, and birds (watch this highlight of the female feeding the young). After fledging, the young will continue to be cared for by their parents, remaining near the nest as they learn to hunt and master flight.


German zoo welcomes baby elephant:

Baby Kaja is exploring her enclosure and having fun with her parents. While the mother initially had some trouble feeding her baby, her 55-year-old aunt and animal keepers helped to solve the problem. Under the watchful eye of zookeepers, vets, the family of elephants seems to be thriving.

Daily Bread for 6.14.25: No Kings

Good morning.

Saturday in Whitewater will be sunny with a high of 78. Sunrise is 5:15 and sunset is 8:34, for 15 hours, 19 minutes of daytime. The moon is a waning gibbous with 89.7 percent of its visible disk illuminated.

On this day in 1777, the Second Continental Congress passes the Flag Act of 1777 adopting the Stars and Stripes as the flag of the United States.


Across Wisconsin, and across all America, ‘No Kings’ protests will take place today:

In April, Quita Sheehan helped organize a “Hands Off!” protest in Eagle River, a small community of around 1,600 in Wisconsin’s Northwoods. 

Organizers expected 20 people to attend. Instead, 200 people showed up to protest federal funding cuts and layoffs under President Donald Trump’s administration.

“So this time, we’re expecting 50 people. And hopefully 500 people do not show up, just because it’s a smaller space,” Sheehan joked. “But it would be nice just to have a space so that those people who are concerned about the changes going on in our government, with the current administration, don’t feel so alone.” 

More than 50 protests are planned in communities across Wisconsin as part of the national No Kings movement. The events were planned before immigration raids in California led to protests last Friday that have spread to other cities.

….

The No Kings demonstrations are scheduled for the same day Trump is holding a massive military parade in Washington D.C. The administration says the parade will honor the 250th anniversary of the founding of the U.S. Army, but it will also coincide with Trump’s 79th birthday Saturday. 

“President Trump wants tanks in the street and a made-for-TV display of dominance for his birthday,” the ‘No Kings’ website says. “A spectacle meant to look like strength. But real power isn’t staged in Washington. It rises up everywhere else.” 

See Evan Casey, ‘No Kings’ protests will be held in communities across Wisconsin Saturday (‘Millions expected to protest nationwide as part of movement’), Wisconsin Public Radio, June 12, 2025.

A locator map with protest sites and information is available online: https://www.nokings.org/#map


Daily Bread for 6.13.25: WISGOP Rejects Additional Court Security

Good morning.

Friday in Whitewater will be partly cloudy with a high of 76. Sunrise is 5:15 and sunset is 8:34, for 15 hours, 19 minutes of daytime. The moon is a waning gibbous with 94.7 percent of its visible disk illuminated.

Pioneer 10 in the final stages of construction (December 1971). By NASA Ames Research Center – http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/multimedia/display.cfm?IM_ID=1586, Public Domain, Link.

On this day in 1983, Pioneer 10 becomes the first man-made object to leave the central Solar System when it passes beyond the orbit of Neptune.


Yet again, WISGOP legislators reject funding additional court security:

Republican state lawmakers have rejected a plan that would have created a new security force for the Wisconsin Supreme Court, arguing other police who protect the state Capitol can handle the job on their own.

The decision marks the second session in a row the Republican-led Joint Finance Committee has declined the court’s request for added security, despite warnings that threats against judges are on the rise.

The latest request was endorsed by Democratic Gov. Tony Evers, whose budget would have spent around $1 million annually to create a security force known as the Office of the Marshals of the Supreme Court. The office would have been staffed by 10 people, including eight law enforcement officers with statewide jurisdiction.

….

The Wisconsin Supreme Court tracks “credible, identified threats” against judges, according to a summary of the issue by the Legislature’s nonpartisan budget office. There were 30 such incidents in 2022, 46 in 2023 and 29 in 2024.

But there were 22 such incidents in just the first three months of this year, according to the court — a period of time that coincided with judges nationwide coming under a spotlight as they blocked major executive orders by President Donald Trump.

See Shawn Johnson, Republicans reject funding for Wisconsin Supreme Court security (‘The court has been asking for extra security with threats against judges on the rise’), Wisconsin Public Radio, June 11, 2025.

The WISGOP knows precisely what it’s doing. A threatened Wisconsin judiciary is a vulnerable judiciary; judicial vulnerability serves right-wing interests.


Mission Impossible: Raccoon Edition:

Friday Catblogging: Bobcat Kitten Reunited with Mother After Becoming Lost in Storm

A bobcat kitten was recently reunited with its mother after getting lost during a severe thunderstorm in Lenexa, Kansas. A resident discovered the bobcat kitten inside their home during a severe thunderstorm, according to a Facebook post. Authorities kept the kitten safe overnight, and the next morning took it to the same place it was found. Its mother heard its cries and the pair were reunited.

Film: Wednesday, June 18th, 1:00 PM @ Seniors in the Park, All We Imagine as Light

Wednesday, June 18th at 1:00 PM, there will be a showing of All We Imagine as Light @ Seniors in the Park, in the Starin Community Building:

Psychological Drama/Romance

Not Rated; 1 hour, 58 minutes (2024)

The light, the lives and the textures of contemporary, working class, Mumbai (formerly Bombay). The New York Times says “a soulful study of the transformative power of friendship and sisterhood, in all its complexities and richness.” Grand prize winner, Cannes Film Festival, 2024. Shown with English subtitles..

One can find more information about All We Imagine as Light at the Internet Movie Database.


Daily Bread for 6.12.25: Musk Sued in Wisconsin Circuit Court

Good morning.

Thursday in Whitewater will be mostly cloudy with a high of 79. Sunrise is 5:15 and sunset is 8:34, for 15 hours, 18 minutes of daytime. The moon is a waning gibbous with 98.3 percent of its visible disk illuminated.

Whitewater’s Pedestrian and Bicycle Advisory Commission meets at 5:30 PM.

On this day in 1981, the first of the Indiana Jones film franchise, Raiders of the Lost Ark, is released in theaters.


It’s been a few bad weeks for Elon Musk (but then, he’s lived more than a few years of bad conduct). Musk is now a defendant in Wisconsin over his payment scheme during the recent Wisconsin Supreme Court election:

The Wisconsin Democracy Campaign is suing billionaire Elon Musk over allegations that he violated multiple state laws, including the election bribery statute, when he offered voters a potential $1 million award for signing a petition as part of his effort to sway the result of Wisconsin’s April Supreme Court election. 

Represented by Wisconsin’s Law Forward, Democracy Defenders Fund and New York-based law firm Hecker Fink, the lawsuit accuses the world’s richest man of implementing “a brazen scheme to bribe Wisconsin citizens to vote.” 

Musk and his political action committee, America PAC, played a major role in this spring’s election becoming the most expensive judicial campaign in American history. Musk’s involvement in the race, which came as he was leading President Donald Trump’s cost-cutting initiatives and firing thousands of federal employees through the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), was widely seen as causing a backlash and helping Dane County Judge Susan Crawford defeat Musk-backed Waukesha County Judge Brad Schimel. 

Musk and his PAC spent more than $20 million on the race. 

Prior to the election, America PAC offered voters $100 if they signed a petition “in opposition to activist judges,” and another $100 if they referred another voter to sign the petition. Later, at a pre-election rally in Green Bay, Musk handed out two $1 million checks to voters, which had been advertised as awards “in appreciation for you taking the time to vote.” 

The lawsuit, filed in Dane County court, notes it is against the law to offer anyone more than $1 to induce them to go to the polls, vote or vote for a particular candidate. 

See Henry Redman, Wisconsin Democracy Campaign sues over Musk election payments, Wisconsin Examiner, June 11, 2025.

See also Wisconsin Democrat Campaign v. Musk, No. _________ (Wis. Cir. Ct. Dane Cnty. Jun. 10, 2025) (Complaint):

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South Carolina police chase a suspect driving a tractor at 3 mph:

Police in South Carolina engaged in a slow pursuit as they followed an excavator down a main highway for more than an hour at the speed an average adult walks. Read more: https://bit.ly/4l3CnDH

more >>

Daily Bread for 6.11.25: School District Developments on a New Superintendent, School Resource Agreement

Good morning.

Wednesday in Whitewater will be mostly sunny with a high of 86. Sunrise is 5:16 and sunset is 8:33, for 15 hours, 18 minutes of daytime. The moon is full with 99.8 percent of its visible disk illuminated.

The Whitewater School Board meets at 5:30 PM.

On this day in 1776, the Continental Congress appoints Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Roger Sherman, and Robert R. Livingston to the Committee of Five to draft a declaration of independence.


A few remarks appear below on recent Whitewater Unified School District actions for a new superintendent and about a school resource officer (SRO) agreement.

Chronology. On 5.27.25, the Whitewater School Board voted 6-1 (Tortomasi dissenting) to offer a contract to Samuel Karns, currently employed in the Beloit School District. On 6.5.27, the board met in closed session, returning to open session, to consider both an employment contract for Karns and a school resource officer for the district.1

The Draft Minutes of the 6.5.25 Board Meeting. The draft minutes of the 6.5.25 WUSD meeting include the following key paragraphs:

  1. ADJOURN INTO CLOSED SESSION
    A. Adjourn into closed session – Hicks moved and Aranda seconded the motion to
    adjourn into closed session, pursuant to the provisions of §19.85(1)(c), Wis. Stats.,
    considering employment, promotion, compensation or performance evaluation data of
    any public employee over which the governmental body has jurisdiction or exercises
    responsibility, and pursuant to the provisions of § 19.85(1)(e), Wis. Stats., deliberating
    or negotiating the purchasing of public properties, the investing of public funds, or
    conducting other specified public business, whenever competitive or bargaining reasons
    require a closed session. Specifically, to discuss and take action on the terms of the
    employment contract to be offered to the new superintendent. Pursuant to the provisions
    of §19.85(1)(e), Wis. Stats., deliberating or negotiating the purchasing of public
    properties, the investing of public funds, or conducting other specified public business,
    whenever competitive or bargaining reasons require a closed session. Specifically, to
    discuss and take action on the proposals related to school resource officer services and
    the terms of contracting for such services. Motion carried 7-0. Also present was Brian
    Dorow, Sean O’Neal, and Tom Czarnecki from Secure Resources Unlimited. Jeff
    Tortomasi left at 6:46 p.m.
  1. OPEN SESSION
    A. Reconvene into open session – Hicks moved and Aranda seconded the motion to
    reconvene into open session at 7:36 p.m., pursuant to §19.85(2), Wis. Stats., for
    possible action on any matter discussed in closed session. Motion carried 6-0-1-0
    (Tortomasi – ABSENT). In the interest of transparency, the Board wishes to provide
    further information to the public regarding its closed session discussions concerning its
    efforts to contract for SRO services. The Board deliberated regarding its strategy for
    negotiating a new SRO contract with the entities that have shown interest, including
    those who responded to the District’s RFP and the City of Whitewater. We believe the
    strategies discussed will lead to the type of cooperative relationship with the eventual
    SRO provider that will best serve the safety and security needs of the school community.
    The Board intends to be open and transparent regarding this matter to the extent
    possible. In furtherance of that goal, the board will now entertain a motion in open
    session regarding the action to be taken on the Board’s efforts to contract with an SRO
    provider. Hicks moved and Aranda seconded the motion to extend the term of the First
    Amendment to the School Resource Agreement for a period of thirty days from the
    original date of June 30, 2025, making the new expiration date to July 30, 2025. Motion
    carried 6-0-1-0 (Tortomasi – ABSENT). Hicks moved and Aranda seconded the motion to
    accept Sam Karns’ Superintendent contract for the 2025-2026 contract period. Motion
    carried 6-0-1-0 (Tortomasi – ABSENT).

Actions of the Board on 6.5.25 on an SRO. The draft minutes (acknowledging that it’s a draft) are plain on the board’s decision to extended an existing school resource officer agreement with the Whitewater Police Department for an additional month (“Hicks moved and Aranda seconded the motion to extend the term of the First Amendment to the School Resource Agreement for a period of thirty days from the original date of June 30, 2025, making the new expiration date to July 30, 2025”). (It’s also plain from the minutes that the board did entertain in closed session representatives of a private security firm.)

Extending the existing contract, with the goal of approving a new contract with the Whitewater department, is the only sensible course for this district.

Ambiguities of the Draft Minutes on a New Superintendent. The 6.5.25 minutes leave key aspects of a new superintendent’s contract ambiguous. I don’t think that’s intentional; I think the language of the draft is imprecise. The minutes state that “Hicks moved and Aranda seconded the motion to accept Sam Karns’ Superintendent contract for the 2025-2026 contract period. Motion carried 6-0-1-0 (Tortomasi – ABSENT).” Accepting the contract would mean an offered contract (by the district) has been accepted (by Samuel Karns). The district is the offeror (unless, improbably, these minutes are a discussion of a counteroffer by Karns.) It’s possible the minutes mean that a draft to be presented to Karns was approved at the 6.5.25 meeting. Again, it’s imprecisely written, and does not follow conventional legal usage.

The “2025-2026 contract period” described in the minutes would be for only a single year (July 1, 2025 to June 30, 2026) but it’s likely the draft minutes mean to convey a two-year period (July 1, 2025 to June 30, 2027).

A further question comes from the language of the 6.11.25 (tonight’s) closed session agenda. The agenda for tonight includes the following sentence:

Specifically, to discuss and take action on the terms of the employment contract to be offered to the new superintendent.

This sentence suggests that there has been no final offer to the board’s preferred candidate before 6.11.25, and that the 6.5 minutes are not describing an accepted offer (but, instead, board approval and acceptance of something else, or no real acceptance at all). There are other possibilities that might come into play in back and forth discussions between the parties, but I will not speculate on these other possibilities now, as the draft minutes are of limited reliance in that regard.

Deficiencies of the 6.5.25 School Board Meeting. The 6.5.25 board agenda did not include an online live viewing option (in violation of WUSD Board Policy 822.12), does not have even at this date a recorded version, and the draft minutes for the 6.5.25 do not include a return-to-open-session explanation for the absence of a virtual viewing option or a recording of the open session. In the absence of a stated explanation, one cannot tell whether the violations of WUSD policies were negligent or intentional.

Note well: if this community had followed Yesteryear’s Familiar Tune, much about these public issues, about these public officials, and at public expense would have been confined to a dark corner among only a few people.

Whitewater would have known even less.

The best record of an open session is a recording, both live and for reference later, and the interests of transparency are best served in following good open government practices and the board’s own published policies.

_____

  1. On the school resource officer see from FREE WHITEWATER  Discussion of Whitewater’s School Resource Officer Merits a 120-Day Contract ExtensionMore on a Whitewater School Resource OfficerUpdate on School Resource Officer Discussions Between the Whitewater School District and the City of WhitewaterStatus of a School Resource Officer for Whitewater’s Schools, and City of Whitewater Renews Proposal and Encourages School District to Negotiate. ↩︎
  2. “Regular and Special School Board meetings will be broadcast live to community residents with the link posted on the agenda,” Whitewater Unified School District Board Policy 822.1 (revised March 20, 2023). ↩︎

Strange lasers in the sky captured by aurora and sky cams in the UK caused by train:

The culprit for the strange blue light show is a specialized train that records track condition information using lasers at speeds of up to 125 mph. It is officially known as the New Measurement Train (NMT) Captured on two nights – May 1 and May 29, 2025 from Oxfordshire, UK on an auroracam and all sky camera.

Daily Bread for 6.10.25: Responding to Federal Cuts in Food Aid

Good morning.

Tuesday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 76. Sunrise is 5:16 and sunset is 8:33, for 15 hours, 17 minutes of daytime. The moon is a waxing gibbous with 99.4 percent of its visible disk illuminated.

Whitewater’s Equal Opportunities Commission meets at 3 PM and the Public Works Committee meets at 5:15 PM.

On this day in 2003, the Spirit rover is launched, beginning NASA‘s Mars Exploration Rover mission.

Color panorama taken from “Larry’s Lookout”. On the far left is “Tennessee Valley” and on the right, rover tracks. Public Domain, Link.

Of all the federal budget cuts to make, cutting food aid is among the least necessary but most vindictive:

Every county in America experiences food insecurity, according to a new report from Feeding America. And recent cuts made by the Trump administration mean $1 billion will no longer fund farms, food banks and school programs.

As 600,000 people face food insecurity across Wisconsin, local food pantries now face increasing demand while having less food to distribute.

“The number of families that come through looking for support with food is staggering for the small number of people in our Waushara County,” Susan Herman, a volunteer with Waushara County Food Pantry, told WPR’s “Wisconsin Today.

The Waushara County Food Pantry in central Wisconsin supports about 1,100 people every month. Last year, the pantry distributed nearly 500,000 pounds of food to those in need, including 2,000 pounds of fresh produce donated by local gardeners and farmers.

To help meet the growing demand this year, the pantry is partnering with the Waushara Gardeners club to distribute more fruits and vegetables to those in need. It is one of many Wisconsin pantries looking to gardeners to help feed people in the community.

See Courtney Everett, Wisconsin Gardeners, Food Pantries Unite to Feed the Hungry (‘Amid federal food aid cuts, a call to ‘Plant A Row for the Hungry’), WPR, June 7, 2025.

Cutting food aid won’t make people work harder or longer; they’ll keep the less fortunate where some of the more fortunate want them to stay.


Preserving Wisconsin’s elusive prairie chicken, whose population has steeply declined:

In central Wisconsin, an elusive bird called the greater prairie chicken lives in the grasslands of Portage County.

They are generally only visible during the breeding season in spring, when people can watch the males compete over females. The birds will stomp their feet and inflate orange air sacs on the side of their neck that release a deep billowing call.

Conservationists have been trying to help the prairie chicken, going back to the 1920s. However, over the past 70 years the population has steeply declined. Today, it’s considered a threatened species, mainly due to fragmentation and loss of habitat.

Daily Bread for 6.9.25: Three Risks Facing the U.S. Economy This Summer

Good morning.

Monday in Whitewater will be partly cloudy with a high of 64. Sunrise is 5:16 and sunset is 8:32, for 15 hours, 16 minutes of daytime. The moon is a waxing gibbous with 96.9 percent of its visible disk illuminated.

Whitewater’s Plan & Architectural Review Commission meets at 6 PM.

On this day in 1954, Joseph N. Welch, special counsel for the United States Army, lashes out at Senator Joseph McCarthy during the Army–McCarthy hearings, giving McCarthy the famous rebuke, “You’ve done enough. Have you no sense of decency, sir, at long last? Have you left no sense of decency?”


In the Wall Street Journal, Nick Timiraos writes of the uncertain economic conditions ahead:

Three risks loom large.

First, the U.S. labor market has been in an uneasy equilibrium where companies aren’t hiring but are reluctant to fire workers that they hustled to find three or four years ago. Like a beach ball that shoots skyward after being held underwater, joblessness can quickly jump once companies decide demand is too soft to keep those workers.

“It starts with one large firm. Then competitors might say, ‘Well, listen, we have to do the same,’ ” said Gregory Daco, chief economist at consulting firm EY.

….

Second, consumers could finally push back against rising costs, forcing companies to tighten their belts.

Delinquency rates on consumer debt have been on the rise for a year, raising fears that deteriorating finances for low-income borrowers could lead to a more pronounced slowdown in consumer spending.

For the housing market, the spring sales season has been a bust. The U.S. market now has nearly 500,000 more sellers than buyers, according to real-estate brokerage Redfin. That is the largest gap since its tally began in 2013. Home prices could fall 1% this year, said Redfin economist Chen Zhao.

“The market has been at rock bottom for the last 2½ years and there was some hope that we’d get a little bit of a turnaround this year. And it’s just actually been worse than expected,” said Zhao.

….

Third, financial-market shocks or abrupt sentiment changes remain a wild card. The Fed reduced short-term interest rates by 1 percentage point last year, providing a measure of relief to borrowers with credit cards or variable-rate bank loans.

See Nick Timiraos, The U.S. Economy Is Headed Toward an Uncomfortable Summer (‘Companies are freezing hiring and investment to deal with shifting tariff policies. Even Trump doesn’t know what Trump will do next’), Wall Street Journal, June 7, 2025.


Escaped zebra airlifted back to its owner:

A runaway zebra was captured and airlifted back to its owner after a week on the loose in Tennessee, local officials said.

Daily Bread for 6.8.25: Tariffs Threaten Industry They’re Meant to Save

Good morning.

Sunday in Whitewater will be mostly sunny with scattered afternoon showers and a high of 73. Sunrise is 5:16 and sunset is 8:31, for 15 hours, 15 minutes of daytime. The moon is a waxing gibbous with 92.4 percent of its visible disk illuminated.

USS Barbero first day commemorative cover. The return address is the Postmaster General. By USPS, Public Domain, Link.

On this day in 1959, USS Barbero and the United States Postal Service attempt the delivery of mail via Missile Mail:

Upon witnessing the missile’s landing, [Postmaster General] Summerfield stated, “This peacetime employment of a guided missile for the important and practical purpose of carrying mail, is the first known official use of missiles by any Post Office Department of any nation.” Summerfield proclaimed the event to be “of historic significance to the peoples of the entire world,” and predicted that “before man reaches the moon, mail will be delivered within hours from New York to California, to Britain, to India or Australia by guided missiles. We stand on the threshold of rocket mail.”


Tariffs threaten an industry they’re meant to save:

“For a president who is intent on building U.S. manufacturing, the tariff strategy he’s laid out is remarkably short-sighted,” said Gordon Hanson, a Harvard Kennedy School professor whose groundbreaking 2016 research work, “The China Shock,” was among the first to sound the alarm about the threat to American industry. “It fails to recognize what modern supply chains look like.”

“Even if you’re intent on reshoring parts of manufacturing, you can’t do it all,” he said. “Steel and aluminum are part of that.”

If Trump’s tariffs fail to result in a manufacturing renaissance — a central focus of his presidential campaign — it could weaken the prospects of a GOP coalition that’s increasingly reliant on working-class voters who supported his protectionist trade policies. But as unanticipated tariffs continue to drive up input costs for companies that need steel and aluminum for production, the warning signs emanating from manufacturers are getting louder.

An index published this week by the Institute for Supply Management, which tracks manufacturing, slipped for the third straight month in May as companies made plans to scale back production. A quarterly survey conducted by the National Association of Manufacturers reported the steepest drop in optimism since the height of the Covid-19 pandemic, with trade uncertainty and raw material costs cited as top concerns. Federal Reserve data this month reported weaker manufacturing output.

See Sam Sutton, Trump wants a manufacturing boom. The industry is buckling, Politico, June 6, 2025.


US Veterans Mark 81 Years Since D-Day: