FREE WHITEWATER

Author Archive for JOHN ADAMS

Daily Bread for 10.24.22: Nine, Nine, I Tell Ya

Good morning.

Monday in Whitewater will be mostly cloudy with a high of 78. Sunrise is 7:20 AM and sunset 5:57 PM for 10h 37m 29s of daytime. The moon is a waning crescent with 0.9% of its visible disk illuminated.

Updated: Whitewater’s Urban Forestry Commission meets at 4:30 PM, Downtown Whitewater’s Board of Directors meets at 6 PM, and Whitewater’s School Board goes into closed session shortly after 6 PM, and resumes open session at 7 PM

On this day in 2003, Concorde makes its last commercial flight.


Not everything in the world is serious… Brendan Rascius reports ‘At least 9 coyotes’ surround dog walker and refuse to back down, Massachusetts cops say

A dog walker in Massachusetts endured a close scrape with a pack of coyotes over the weekend, according to police.

A resident of Swampscott, a seaside town up the coast from Boston, was walking a dog on a suburban side street on the evening of Oct. 15 when confronted by the canines, according to a news release from the Swampscott Police Department.

The dog walker called police at 9:30 pm, saying a pack of coyotes had encircled them, adding that the animals were “not backing down,” the release says.

Upon arrival, police saw “at least nine coyotes.” The animals then withdrew from the area, potentially frightened by the police vehicles and their flashing lights, according to the release.

Afterward, the police escorted the dog walker back to their home.

There’s no reason that Whitewater has to wind up like Swampscott, Massachusetts, a town about the size of Whitewater that has now become a coyote-infested hellscape. 

If some communities didn’t have cats on patrol to deal with this threat, they would already have gone under. See Cat Defends Arizona Home Against Coyote and Cat Defeats Three Coyotes in Combat

If we work together, we, too, can forfend a canid invasion that has claimed, so very tragically, a New England town. 

See In Whitewater, People Won’t Feed Coyotes — Coyotes Will Feed on PeopleCoyotes abundant, troublesome in Rock County.


 Project Treasure: unlocking hidden wonders of the Aegean and Black seas

Daily Bread for 10.23.22: Reported Iowa Mountain Lion Was a… House Cat

Good morning.

Sunday in Whitewater will be mostly sunny with a high of 75. Sunrise is 7:18 AM and sunset 5:59 PM for 10h 40m 11s of daytime. The moon is a waning crescent with 4.3% of its visible disk illuminated.

On this day in 2001, Apple Computer releases the iPod.


Station KCCI in Des Moines reports [Iowa] DNR says “mountain lion sighting” in Des Moines was really house cat:

The Iowa Department of Natural Resources now says the “possible mountain lion” in Des Moines was really someone’s house cat.

Des Moines Police posted on Facebook Thursday, saying the sighting was reported in the Gray’s Woods neighborhood on the city’s east side. The DNR confirmed the video showed a mountain lion, but since corrected their statement.

When DNR experts first saw the video, they believed there was enough possibility that it was a mountain lion, they wanted to warn the public. Upon further inspection, the DNR revised their previous statement, saying it is in fact a house cat.

“Initially, we did think it may be a mountain lion, at least enough so that it would be good to notify the public,” said Vince Evelsizer, Furbearer and Wetland Biologist of the Iowa DNR.

Evelsizer says the video was grainy and small, so it was hard to tell. On behalf of the DNR, Evelsizer apologized for any confusion it may have caused.


World’s oldest Ottoman documents offer window into Empire’s early history:

 

Daily Bread for 10.22.22: Report Shows College Enrollment Down Across Wisconsin

Good morning.

Saturday in Whitewater will be mostly sunny with a high of 77. Sunrise is 7:17 AM and sunset 6:00 PM for 10h 42m 54s of daytime. The moon is a waning crescent with 9.4% of its visible disk illuminated.

 Today at 8 AM, the Whitewater Common Council meets in closed session to conduct interviews of city manager candidates. 

On this day in 1979, a bright flash, resembling the detonation of a nuclear weapon, is observed near the Prince Edward Islands. Its cause is never determined.


Rich Kremer reports College enrollment across Wisconsin down 3 percent, according to new report (‘National Student Clearinghouse Research Center data shows enrollment declines have slowed but not rebounded since start of pandemic): 

Overall enrollment across Wisconsin colleges and universities fell around 3 percent this fall, according to preliminary data from the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center. Researchers say national enrollment declines have slowed to pre-pandemic, but they were surprised by the lack of a rebound.

The “Stay Informed” report from the Clearinghouse found fall enrollment across all public and private colleges in Wisconsin as of Sept. 29 was down 3.1 percent from the same time last year. While still a negative, this year’s decline was less than the 4.1 percent drop in fall 2021.

Since 2020, college enrollment in the state has fallen by nearly 7.8 percent. 

National Student Clearinghouse Research Center Executive Research Director Doug Shapiro said colleges in the Midwestern and Northeastern saw larger drops than the rest of the nation. 

“That kind of suggests a return to pre-pandemic patterns of essentially demographic trends where we had been seeing some declines based on fewer high school graduates in the Midwest and the Northeast,” said Shapiro. 

See also 9.23.22: Preliminary Fall 2022 UW System Enrollment Figures.


Former Chinese president Hu Jintao unexpectedly led out of party congress:

The former Chinese president Hu Jintao was unexpectedly ushered out of the 20th Communist party congress during its closing ceremony. He appeared to be held tightly by his arm and urged to leave as he attempted to speak to his successor, Xi Jinping.

See also Xi Jinping Expands His Power, Elevating Loyalists, Forcing Out Moderates.

Daily Bread for 10.21.22: Whitewater’s Search for a New City Manager

Good morning.

Friday in Whitewater will be mostly sunny with a high of 73. Sunrise is 7:16 AM and sunset 6:02 PM for 10h 45m 38s of daytime. The moon is a waning crescent with 16.3% of its visible disk illuminated.

There will be a public reception for city manager candidates at 5 PM

On this day in 1897, the Yerkes Observatory is dedicated:

On this date the Yerkes Observatory was dedicated. Founded by astronomer George Hale and located in Williams Bay, the Yerkes Observatory houses the world’s largest refracting optical telescope, with a lens of diameter 102 cm/40 inches. It was built through the largess of the tycoon Charles Tyson Yerkes, who rebuilt important parts of the Chicago transportation system after the fire. Situated in a 77-acre park on the shore of Lake Geneva, this observatory was the center for world astronomy in the early 20th century and invited a number of astronomers from around the world, including Japan, for scientific exchange.


Whitewater has a council-manager form of government, her city manager resigned in August, and the city is looking for a full-time, permanent city manager. (Whitewater now has an interim city manager, John Weidl, who is one of three finalists for the permanent position) 

Public organizations typically publish a press release with finalists’s names, and schedule a community meeting for residents to meet the contending applicants. Whitewater has done both: the city sent out a press release, and has scheduled a community forum for Friday, 10.21.22 beginning at 5 PM in our council chambers.

Since that press release, Fort Atkinson Online has published an informative story with pertinent information about the candidates.  See Whitewater: Finalists respond to news stories, petition alleging employment concerns.  One can easily see the difference between journalism and something less (where all that’s published is a press release). 

What to make of all this?

Better to know than not to know. Whitewater, with many needs among its 14,889 residents, can scarcely afford to be surprised. What the community resolves to its satisfaction now avoids controversies later. 

This information about candidates’ professional work, their responses to other communities’ concerns about that work, along with our residents’ impressions during a community forum, are useful to the selection process. Residents will form their own judgments, and the Whitewater Common Council will (beginning as soon as this weekend) have a decision to make. 


The Robot Boot That Learns as You Walk:

Film: Tuesday, October 25th, 1:00 PM @ Seniors in the Park, A Ghost Story

Tuesday, October 25th at 1:00 PM, there will be a showing of A Ghost Story @ Seniors in the Park, in the Starin Community Building:

Drama/Fantasy/Romance

Rated R (language); 1 hour, 32 minutes (2017)

It’s almost Halloween, and spirts are in the air! In this unusual tale of love, loss, and legacy, a recently-deceased husband/father (Casey Affleck) returns to his suburban home… as a ghost, to observe his widow’s (Rooney Mara) life after his death. A pensive, thoughtful, haunting film.

One can find more information about A Ghost Story at the Internet Movie Database.

Friday Cat-Like Blogging: Rare Fossa Pups

Amethyst Tate reports ‘Elusive’ Cat-Like Fossa Triplets Born for the First Time at the Chester Zoo:

A trio of adorable and rare baby fossa pups made their first public appearance at the Chester Zoo.

Born on July 9, the triplets, now 12 weeks old, were spotted on Friday after spending weeks hiding away in their den with their mother, Shala.

The cat-like animals, distant relatives of the mongoose, can only be found in the forests of Madagascar in the wild. The creatures are also rare at the U.K. zoo. The triplets are the first fossas born at the Chester Zoo in the English facility’s 91-year history. The newborns include a male and two females who have yet to be named.

Daily Bread for 10.20.22: Something Transcendent, and in the Meantime

Good morning.

Thursday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 59. Sunrise is 7:15 AM and sunset 6:03 PM for 10h 48m 23s of daytime. The moon is a waning crescent with 24.7% of its visible disk illuminated.

The Whitewater School District’s Policy Review Committee meets at 9 AM, and Whitewater’s Community Development Authority meets at 5:30 PM

On this day in 1944, American general Douglas MacArthur fulfills his promise to return to the Philippines when he comes ashore during the Battle of Leyte.


There are many important roles within a community: most are private (countless jobs and pursuits), some are public (safety & emergency services most obviously). For libertarians, in particular, watching the role of government  — that it should be limited, responsible, and open — is an evergreen commitment.

Beyond a few defined and limited public tasks, beyond even the myriad of ordinary private tasks, some communities face a critical need for repair, reconciliation, and recovery. Most private communities are not in this condition, but others (as in the Midwest since the Great Recession) are afflicted in this way. 

Whitewater, beautiful but in difficulty, finds herself with a critical need for repair, reconciliation, and recovery. A small community, yet now divided in politics, troubled in socio-economics, and beset with tensions & controversies, needs a medicine effective for her maladies. 

Politicians, appointed officials, public employees, concerned private residents, journalists who occasionally notice the town, the libertarian blogger who writes here: all matter in their own ways, but neither one nor all is enough now.  

Whitewater needs someone else, someone who will pull this beautiful city together again in a unique way. That task will be neither easy nor quiet: occasionally breaking a few eggs, and egos, to make an omelette. (A role that would reunite the community would be both transcendent of others’ roles, yet responsive to individuals as individuals, residents as residents. One woman fulfilling a non-partisan, charitable role would be more helpful to our city than dozen silly men imagining themselves ‘Mr. Whitewater.’)

These are not new concerns at FREE WHITEWATER. See Waiting for Whitewater’s Dorothy Day and An Oasis Strategy

From that latter post:

This city’s not of one culture or one identity; we’re not a homogeneous place. We’re a diverse and multicultural community. Revanchism on behalf of some won’t make the city great for any. On the contrary, that path will prolong present difficulties, and delay significantly (although not prevent) this city’s more prosperous future.

In even the most difficult times, of economic and political trouble, Americans have still produced great works, committed to charitable undertakings, and carried on admirably (all the while addressing national issues separately).  This city can do the same, as well as others before us did in their challenging times.

A restorative cure for Whitewater would be the arrival of a transcendent, persistent, vocal, committed, private charitable worker. We may find ourselves with a long wait.

Until then, public policy, with whatever can be done after providing for basic public services, should be directed responsively to people in need. 


Humpback Whale Surprises Father-Son Fishing Duo

Daily Bread for 10.19.22: In Support of Whitewater’s Fire & EMS Referendum

Good morning.

Wednesday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 47. Sunrise is 7:14 AM and sunset 6:05 PM for 10h 51m 08s of daytime. The moon is a waning crescent with 33.5% of its visible disk illuminated.


On this day in 1781, Britain formally surrenders at the Battle of Yorktown:



Battle of Yorktown, the surrender at Yorktown, or the German battle (from the presence of Germans in all three armies), beginning on September 28, 1781, and ending on October 19, 1781, at Yorktown, Virginia, was a decisive victory by a combined force of the American Continental Army troops led by General George Washington and Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette, and French Army troops led by Comte de Rochambeau over British Army troops commanded by British peer and Lieutenant General Charles Cornwallis. The culmination of the Yorktown campaign, the siege proved to be the last major land battle of the American Revolutionary War in the North American region, as the surrender by Cornwallis, and the capture of both him and his army, prompted the British government to negotiate an end to the conflict.



Cornwallis refused to attend the surrender ceremony, citing illness. Instead, Brigadier General Charles O’Hara led the British army onto the field. O’Hara first attempted to surrender to Rochambeau, who shook his head and pointed to Washington. O’Hara then offered his sword to Washington, who also refused and motioned to Benjamin Lincoln, his second-in-command. The surrender finally took place when Lincoln accepted the sword of Cornwallis’ deputy.





For many years, Whitewater had a volunteer, paid-on-call fire and emergency services department. For Whitewater and other communities, that model no longer provides enough volunteers or speedy response times. What once worked no longer does.


This libertarian blogger would have preferred a private department, but preference does not decide good policy — response to human need decides good policy. While a private, libertarian perspective works best in most situations, it does not work exclusively of other, occasional options. Most of the time is not all of the time


A municipal department with a paid-on-premises model (where some fire and emergency workers are at the station and on the ready) is simply faster and more reliable for Whitewater.


Recognizing the importance of fire & emergency services, this libertarian supports the City of Whitewater’s Fire & EMS referendum.


We are a city of 14,889 people, with a distribution that skews both young and old. Emergency services are notably important for those age groups. 


One cannot emphasize enough: this Fire & EMS referendum is simply an effort to provide normal services to this town. It’s false and overwrought — if not mendacious — to contend that the Fire & EMS referendum represents something other than supporting a Fire & EMS department. There is no sinister ideological motivation behind this effort; it represents only an effort at normal services for a normal town. That’s all.


These men and women who defend Whitewater against fire, accident, and injury do not act from a partisan or ideological purpose. Claims (false and nutty, as it turns out) that some civilian officials have ideological motivations are both irrelevant and immaterial. What is relevant and material is that Whitewater should have a stable, speedy, reliable department. 


It is sensible — common sense, one might say — to rely on the experience and expertise of those who have served. Embedded immediately below are the testimonials of Fire Chief Kelly Freeman, Emergency Services Chief Ashley Vickers, and Advanced EMT Jason Dean. 



Reasonably, rationally, their experience and testimony should guide one’s judgment. There is no evident error or omission in their testimonies. If this libertarian blogger could discern even a word askew, I would say as much. There’s nothing whatever askew. Their ideological views (of whatever perspective), other city officials’ ideological views (real or imagined), or my own libertarian position changes nothing about the facts they’ve plainly described.  Freeman, Vickers, and Dean speak simply and honestly about Whitewater’s needs. A professional, on-premises fire and emergency services department will ably preserve life and property in Whitewater. 


RELIABLE. FASTER. SAFER.

My best wishes and appreciation to those who serve in these difficult roles. I would hope — and so I urge — my fellow residents to support Whitewater’s Fire & Emergency Services referendum.


 

 
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Daily Bread for 10.18.22: Hey Whitewater, That’s Not What a Big Bad Looks Like

Good morning.

Tuesday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 46. Sunrise is 7:12 AM and sunset 6:06 PM for 10h 53m 54s of daytime. The moon is a waning crescent with 42.6% of its visible disk illuminated.

The Whitewater Common Council meets at 6:30 PM

On this day in 1851, Herman Melville‘s Moby-Dick is first published as The Whale by Richard Bentley of London.


Someone needs a new pair of eyeglasses.

Not long from now, we may find that our national and state politics have grown darker. Nevertheless, should that be so, our obligations will be the same: to work for better in nation, state, and city. All three will be as important to us in November as they are to us now in October. These nine square miles of Whitewater are precious, and deserving of our full effort. 

Many in Whitewater use Facebook. It has been a useful social medium for many, no matter how much a few of us may dislike it. Connecting family and neighbors is a social good. 

That platform, however, has also been a fertile ground for trolling, inflicting on communities baseless claims, outright lies, and catty comments. Most are written as poorly as they are laid out. See Identifying Types and Spotting Issues. These users should be dealt with in blunt, declaratory statements of refutation. See Trolls and the Exclamatory, Interrogatory, or Declaratory Response

Whitewater now has a few like this, loathsome trolls such as they are. 

In the years since FREE WHITEWATER began publication in 2007, Whitewater has had six district administrators, seven university chancellors, three city managers, and four chiefs of police (including among them interim leaders). Dozens of other officials have come and gone.

During this time, our city has had more than her share of struggling public officials, with a few who were simply unsuitable for public office. After seeing so many come and go, a reasonable person should be able to discern which, among this lot, have been truly bad for the city.  Although we’ve had too many who were inadequate, we’ve only had a few who were both wrong and reprehensible. 

It is a false and risible contribution to public policy that classifies Whitewater’s interim city manager, her last permanent city manager, or her last common council president in the category of Big Bads. They’re not what Big Bads look like. (To think that Whitewater’s interim city manager, in particular,  is ‘aggressive’ or ‘divisive’ is prima facie evidence of poor judgment.) 

It is a false and risible contribution to public policy that contends this city might have produced a defund-the-police policy. That was never going to happen in Whitewater. It was more likely that there would be a defund-the-policy policy on the Moon (where there are no people) than in Whitewater (where there are 14,889).

There are challenges in this city, but we’ve no need to fabricate or delude ourselves into believing there are more than, in fact, there truly are. 

And yet, and yet — here we are, in a condition shared by many communities, in which Facebook trolls litter the web with their crackpottery. 


 Waterspout swirls off Cyprus coast

Daily Bread for 10.17.22: Always Time for Whitewater

Good morning.

Monday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a passing shower and a high of 42. Sunrise is 7:11 AM and sunset 6:08 PM for 10h 56m 40s of daytime. The moon is a waning gibbous with 51.3% of its visible disk illuminated.

Whitewater’s Library Board meets at 6:30 PM

On this day in 1777, British General John Burgoyne surrenders his army at Saratoga, New York; on this day in 1781, British General Charles, Earl Cornwallis offers to surrender at the Battle of Yorktown (the articles of capitulation were signed two days later on 10.19.1781). 


Consider the following question, posed to me over the weekend: Is it too late for Whitewater? 

There is one plain answer: No, and no again. It is not ‘too late,’ and the question itself is pessimistically phrased. A few lyrics from today’s FREE WHITEWATER music selection reflect Whitewater’s true and hopeful condition:

Maybe we’ve made mistakesMaybe we’re not the only onesMaybe it’s not too lateTo start over
 
All the shapes and patterns you’ll see in your mindSomewhere in the worldSomeone’s thinking of you

Of course there is time to remedy challenges in the community; it is certainly not too late. To think otherwise would be an abject and unfounded pessimism. 

The tragic optimist, as I am, is grounded in optimism modified with an awareness of the occasionally tragic. Optimism is the foundational outlook. (Difficult moments unsettle or paralyze those under the sway of boosterism or toxic positivity, as they assume that all presentations should shine positive or all conditions should be positive. The tragic optimist by inclination pushes past obstacles or losses with fortitude.) 

It was a generation ago, by invitation, that I first arrived in Whitewater, and several years thereafter passed before I became this city’s blogger. No one would have expected this of me. As the ninth generation from another American city, raised to be one link in a chain extending generations thereafter in that same place, Whitewater was unknown to me.

I did not discover Whitewater, find Whitewater, or even choose Whitewater (in the typical understanding of the term). It was offered to me, unexpectedly. My own choosing among alternatives could not, as it turns out, have found anything so beautiful and congenial to me as Whitewater. The city is, understandably, as beautiful and congenial to many others as it is to me.

Our social commitment, as individuals in this community, is first to do no harm, and then to do much good. We each have different talents and roles through which we may advance this commitment. 

Our best days are ahead, and there has never been a day, however melancholy it may have seemed at the time, when anyone should have thought otherwise. 


 The shape-shifting robo-turtle: 

 

Daily Bread for 10.16.22: Our Dairyland Needs Dairy Workers

Good morning.

Sunday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 51. Sunrise is 7:10 AM and sunset 6:09 PM for 10h 59m 28s of daytime. The moon is a waning gibbous with 60.9% of its visible disk illuminated.

On this day in 1923, The Walt Disney Company is founded.


Leah Treidler reports Wisconsin dairy leaders call on US Senate to fix labor shortages by changing immigration policy (‘Officials say the Farm Workforce Modernization Act would also curb inflation by letting dairy farmers hire workers on H-2A visas’):

Wisconsin and national dairy leaders are pushing the U.S. Senate to cut food prices and fix the agricultural labor shortage by reforming immigrant labor policies.

In a press conference Thursday, leaders said the Farm Workforce Modernization Act, a bill already passed by the U.S. House and pending in the Senate, would fix labor shortages by letting them hire H-2A visa workers.

The H-2A program allows employers to bring in immigrants for temporary or seasonal agricultural jobs. As of now, the dairy industry is excluded from the program. 

That fuels labor shortages because there aren’t enough U.S. citizens to staff the nation’s dairy farms, said Brody Stapel, the board president of Edge Dairy Farmer Cooperative and a Wisconsin dairy farmer.

“There are not either enough local workers or enough willing workers to fill these labor-heavy jobs. Farmers have tried everything, and these are typically living wage jobs,” Stapel said. “Wisconsin alone has a lot to lose if we don’t solve this serious problem.” 

There are over 6,000 dairy farms in the state, he said. According to a University of Wisconsin-Madison study, dairy generates nearly half of Wisconsin’s agricultural revenue each year. Over 150,000 people work in the industry, making up 4.2 percent of the state’s total workforce.

With Wisconsin’s working population dropping, Stapel said the labor shortage is on track to get worse. Because of that, he said the Senate needs to change immigration policies.

The WISGOP, now nativist to its core, complains about illegal immigration while dairy farms go without workers. Nativism imposes the fixed and stagnant (a bias based on the accident of birthplace) and rejects the dynamic and productive (all peoples in productive free labor).

Nativism operates on the disordered principle of negative equality: better that all should have less than most should have more. 

Our dairyland depends on dairy workers. 

Conservative populism, now vocal in cities and towns across America, brays for labor restrictions that impoverish those very communities. 

By contrast both moral and productive, there is no better economic arrangement for daily living than free markets in capital, labor, and goods. 


Why Olympic Curling Stones Are So Expensive:

 

Daily Bread for 10.15.22: For the Press, a Duty of Conduct as Though a Free Society Still Matters

Good morning.

Saturday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 53. Sunrise is 7:09 AM and sunset 6:11 PM for 11h 02m 15s of daytime. The moon is a waning gibbous with 70% of its visible disk illuminated.

There will be a Lakes Project Community Meeting at 10 AM

On this day in 1956, FORTRAN, the first modern computer language, is first shared with the coding community.


 An armed insurrection in a representative democracy is the violent effort of a horde claiming falsely to represent a majority to overthrow a constitutional order that does, in fact, represent the majority. That’s January 6th: a violent minority committed to preventing a constitutional process representing the majority. That’s Trump: the leader of a self-declared herrenvolk, inciting violence against the peaceful majority who rejected Trump at the polls.

This malevolent ilk would transform a free and prosperous continental republic into a stifling and stagnant European autocracy. 

The press in this free country will have to decide how to cover a third Trump campaign should there be one. (Those of us in other walks of life already know how to describe Trump: he aims to destroy this Republic and replace it with a herrenvolk state.) For her fellow journalists, Margaret Sullivan writes about how to cover Trump in If Trump Runs Again, Do Not Cover Him the Same Way [as Before]: A Journalist’s Manifesto

Now, six years later, we journalists know a lot more about covering Trump and his supporters. We’ve come a long way, but certainly made plenty of mistakes. Too many times, we acted as his stenographers or megaphones. Too often, we failed to refer to his many falsehoods as lies. It took too long to stop believing that, whenever he calmed down for a moment, he was becoming “presidential.” And it took too long to moderate our instinct to give equal weight to both sides, even when one side was using misinformation for political gain.

It’s been an education for all of us — a gradual realization that the instincts and conventions of traditional journalism weren’t good enough for this moment in our country’s history. As Trump prepares to run again in 2024, it’s worth reminding ourselves of the lessons we’ve learned — and committing to the principle that, when covering politicians who are essentially running against democracy, old-style journalism will no longer suffice.

….

From this new vantage point, it seemed self-evident that the mainstream press was too often going easy on Trump. Well into his presidency, journalists didn’t want to use the word “lie” for Trump’s constant barrage of falsehoods. To lie, editors reasoned, means to intend to be untruthful. Since journalists couldn’t be inside politicians’ heads, how were we supposed to know if — by this definition — they were really lying? The logic eventually became strained, given that Trump blithely repeated the same rank mistruths over and over.

Too many reporters and their editors didn’t seem to want to figure out how to cover Trump properly. From the moment he descended the golden escalator at Manhattan’s Trump Tower in June 2015 to announce his candidacy, the news media was in his thrall. Journalists couldn’t stop writing about him, showing him on TV and even broadcasting images of the empty stage waiting for him to arrive at a rally. Trump had described himself as “the ratings machine,” and for once he wasn’t exaggerating.

….

Those who deny the outcome of the 2020 election certainly don’t deserve a media megaphone for that enduring lie, one that is likely to reemerge in the presidential campaign ahead. But the media should go one step further: When covering such a politician in other contexts — for example, about abortion rights or gun control — journalists should remind audiences that this public figure is an election denier.

That’s exactly the model pursued by WITF, a public radio station in Harrisburg, Pa., which decided to remind its audience on a regular basis that some Republican state legislators and members of the Pennsylvania congressional delegation had opposed the transfer of power to Joe Biden, despite the lack of evidence to support their claims of election fraud. A story on the station’s website about a state legislator’s efforts to get Pennsylvanians vaccinated was accompanied by a sidebar of text about his behavior after the election. On-air stories have used a tagline to accomplish the same purpose. The decision wasn’t easy, one editor told me, “because this is not the normal thing.”

These are not normal times, and Trumpism is not a normal movement.

We who are rightly Never Trump, who have seen our much in own traditions of libertarianism (as mine) or principled conservatism infected by the lies and depredations of Trumpism, know how we are to write, speak, and conduct ourselves.

It would serve the press in this beleaguered free society to write and speak as though a free society still matters to them as much as it does to us.


Watch Martian moon Deimos pass in front of Jupiter & its moons: