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Daily Bread for 9.6.20

Good morning.

Sunday in Whitewater will be rainy with a high of seventy-nine.  Sunrise is 6:26 AM and sunset 7:18 PM, for 12h 52m 31s of daytime.  The moon is a waning gibbous with 83.9% of its visible disk illuminated.

 

 On this day in 1803, British scientist John Dalton begins using symbols to represent the atoms of different elements.

Recommended for reading in full — 

Holmes Lybrand, Tara Subramaniam, and Kevin Liptak report In denying disrespect of soldiers, Trump cites call to Melania. There’s just one problem:

President Donald Trump has vehemently denied reports that he skipped a 2018 visit to a World War I memorial in France because he was concerned about his hair and considered the cemetery “filled with losers,” as the Atlantic first reported.

Trump told reporters Thursday that he “called home” to Melania Trump at the time and told her how upset he was about not being able to visit the cemetery. At the time, the White House said he had to cancel the visit because of bad weather.

Trump said: “I called home, I spoke to my wife and I said, ‘I hate this. I came here to go to that ceremony.’ And to the one that was the following day, which I did go to. I said I feel terribly. And that was the end of it.”

But Melania Trump was not at “home” — she was on the trip with the president and was also scheduled to visit the cemetery.

A readout from the first lady’s office at the time said, “Due to inclement weather, the First Lady and President were unable to visit the Aisne-Marne American Cemetery and Memorial in Belleau, France.”

That evening, Trump and Melania went to a dinner hosted by French President Emmanuel Macron.

 Shane Harris and Ellen Nakashima report Russia is working to undermine confidence in voting by mail, DHS warns:

Russia is seeking “to undermine public trust in the electoral process” by spreading false claims that mail-in ballots are riddled with fraud and susceptible to manipulation, according to a new intelligence bulletin by the Department of Homeland Security.

Many of the claims made by Russian sources are identical to repeated, unsupported public statements aired by President Trump and Attorney General William P. Barr, who have said that mailed ballots aren’t trustworthy while warning of the potential for rampant fraud in November’s elections.

Homeland Security’s intelligence office has assessed that Russian actors “are likely to promote allegations of corruption, system failure, and foreign malign interference to sow distrust in Democratic institutions and election outcomes,” the bulletin states. Russia spreads these claims through a network of state-controlled media, proxy websites and social media trolls, it adds.

(Attorney General William Barr: translator of Russian propaganda into Trump talking points.)

Jacob Gursky and Samuel Woolley report How hate and misinformation go viral: A case study of a Trump retweet:

On Sunday night, President Donald Trump retweeted a video of a violent incident on a New York City subway platform. The video shows a Black man pushing a white woman into a train car and is captioned “Black Lives Matter / Antifa.” The problem? It is over a year old and has nothing to do with either Black Lives Matter or Antifa. It, in fact, shows the actions of a mentally ill man with no known ties to either group.

The NASA Engineer Making STEM Sing:

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Daily Bread for 9.5.20

Good morning.

Saturday in Whitewater will be sunny with a high of seventy-six.  Sunrise is 6:25 AM and sunset 7:20 PM, for 12h 55m 20s of daytime.  The moon is a waning gibbous with 90.1% of its visible disk illuminated.

 

 On this day in 1882, the first United States Labor Day parade takes place in New York City.

Recommended for reading in full — 

 Deneen Smith reports Militia members face gun charges, alleged to have come to Kenosha “to pick people off”:

Two Missouri men affiliated with a militia group that celebrates Kyle Rittenhouse as a hero on social media are facing federal charges after a witness told law enforcement the men came to Kenosha to loot and “pick people off.”

Michael M. Karmo, 40, and Cody E. Smith, 33, both of Hartville, Mo., are facing federal charges of illegal possession of firearms after being arrested Tuesday at a hotel in Pleasant Prairie.

Both Smith and Karmo are barred from possessing firearms because of past criminal convictions.

According to the criminal complaint, Kenosha Police informed the FBI that the department had received a tip that Karmo and an unidentified man were traveling from Missouri to Kenosha “to loot and possibly ‘pick people off.’”

The witness told investigators “Karmo told (him) he was going to Kenosha with the intention of possibly using the firearms on people. (The witness) feared that with Karmo’s increase in conspiracy theory talks and other ‘crazy’ political talk he was not in the right mindset to have a firearm.”

Smith and Karmo were taken into custody at the La Quinta Hotel, 7540 118th Ave. in Pleasant Prairie.

In the men’s vehicle and hotel room, FBI agents found body armor, tactical gear, an AR-15 rifle, a 12-gauge shotgun, a homemade silencer and two handguns, along with ammunition for the weapons.

Lauren Gambino reports Biden warns Trump ‘legitimizes dark side of human nature’ in Kenosha visit:

Joe Biden on Thursday warned that Donald Trump’s behavior “legitimizes the dark side of human nature”. He made the remarks during a visit to Wisconsin, where he spoke by phone to Jacob Blake, a Black man whose shooting by a white police officer renewed nationwide protests against systemic racism.

For nearly 90 minutes after landing in the state, Biden and his wife, Jill, met privately with Blake’s father, Jacob Blake Sr, his mother, Julia Jackson, his siblings, and some members of his legal team in a room at the Milwaukee airport.

Blake, who Biden said was released from the ICU, joined the conversation for nearly 15 minutes from the hospital. Blake’s family said he is paralyzed from the waist down after being struck seven times in the back by police as they tried to arrest him last month in Kenosha, Wisconsin.

“He talked about how nothing was going to defeat him – how whether he walked again or not, he was not going to give up,” Biden said of their conversation during a listening session with community leaders, and two members of law enforcement, at Grace Lutheran church in Kenosha.

Video from Space – Weekly Highlights for the Week of Aug. 30th: 

Videos featured: Asteroid 2011 ES4 gives Earth a close shave, a full-size Space Launch System rocket booster was test fired, a triple-star system is warping its planet-forming disk, Arianespace launched a Vega rocket, SpaceX launched 60 new Starlink satellites and their Starship SN6 prototype took a 150 meter hop.

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Friday Catblogging: Woman Accidentally Dyes Her Cat Yellow with Turmeric Treatment

Morgan Smith reports that Thammapa Supamas, a woman living in Thailand, accidentally dyed her cat yellow while treating a fungal infection on the pet’s limbs:

Supamas applied a turmeric scrub to heal a red, irritated patch of skin on the white cat’s leg, she shared on Facebook.

The plant extract has anti-inflammatory and antibacterial properties and is widely considered to be an effective antifungal treatment. Turmeric powder, however, is a strong natural dye yielding a vibrant gold color.

It’s no surprise, then, that Supamas’s white cat became a ball of bright yellow fur after getting coated in turmeric.

Supamas said on Sunday that the yellow hue had not faded quite yet but her cat’s infection was noticeably healing. “Thank you for your kindness and concern,” she added.

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Daily Bread for 9.4.20

Good morning.

Friday in Whitewater will be sunny with a high of seventy-four.  Sunrise is 6:23 AM and sunset 7:24 PM, for 13h 00m 59s of daytime.  The moon is a waning gibbous with 98.5% of its visible disk illuminated.

 

 On this day in 1886, after almost 30 years of fighting, Apache leader Geronimo, with his remaining warriors, surrenders to General Nelson Miles in Arizona.

Recommended for reading in full — 

 Jeffrey Goldberg reports Trump: Americans Who Died in War Are ‘Losers’ and ‘Suckers’ (‘The president has repeatedly disparaged the intelligence of service members, and asked that wounded veterans be kept out of military parades, multiple sources tell The Atlantic’):

When President Donald Trump canceled a visit to the Aisne-Marne American Cemetery near Paris in 2018, he blamed rain for the last-minute decision, saying that “the helicopter couldn’t fly” and that the Secret Service wouldn’t drive him there. Neither claim was true.

Trump rejected the idea of the visit because he feared his hair would become disheveled in the rain, and because he did not believe it important to honor American war dead, according to four people with firsthand knowledge of the discussion that day. In a conversation with senior staff members on the morning of the scheduled visit, Trump said, “Why should I go to that cemetery? It’s filled with losers.” In a separate conversation on the same trip, Trump referred to the more than 1,800 marines who lost their lives at Belleau Wood as “suckers” for getting killed.

Belleau Wood is a consequential battle in American history, and the ground on which it was fought is venerated by the Marine Corps. America and its allies stopped the German advance toward Paris there in the spring of 1918. But Trump, on that same trip, asked aides, “Who were the good guys in this war?” He also said that he didn’t understand why the United States would intervene on the side of the Allies.

Matt Zapotosky reports Barr claims a man collected 1,700 ballots and filled them out as he pleased. Prosecutors say that’s not what happened:

In his latest warning about the dangers of mass mail-in voting, Attorney General William P. Barr pointed to a case in Texas that he said highlighted the risk of fraud.

“Elections that have been held with mail have found substantial fraud and coercion,” Barr told CNN on Wednesday. “For example, we indicted someone in Texas, 1,700 ballots collected, he — from people who could vote, he made them out and voted for the person he wanted to. Okay?”

Federal prosecutors brought no such indictment. And while a Justice Department spokeswoman said Barr was referring to a local prosecution involving suspected mail-in voting fraud in a city council election, the assistant district attorney on that case said Barr’s description doesn’t match the facts.

“That’s not what happened at all,” said Andy Chatham, who is now in private practice.

“Unfortunately, it speaks volumes to the credibility of Attorney General Barr when he submits half-truths and alternative facts as clear evidence of voter fraud without having so much as even contacted me or the district attorney’s office for an understanding of the events that actually occurred,” he added later.

After being asked about Chatham’s account, Kerri Kupec, a Justice Department spokeswoman, said in a statement: “Prior to his interview, the Attorney General was provided a memo prepared within the Department that contained an inaccurate summary about the case which he relied upon when using the case as an example.”

 [Russian democratic activist] Navalny poisoning ‘requires an international response’, says NATO:

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UW-Whitewater’s Chancellor on Paid Administrative Leave

Update, afternoon of 9.3.20 — there is no chance – none whatever – that I will write in any detail about this matter without a careful review of published, substantial claims or documents. (I have never written about a matter like this without a review of published claims or documents, and never will.)

Original post from this morning, re-publishing a statement from the UW System, appears below — 

Earlier today, UW System Interim President Tommy Thompson announced that UW-Whitewater’s chancellor, Dwight Watson, has been placed on paid administrative leave pending the completion of a UW System investigation:

MADISON, Wis.—University of Wisconsin System President Tommy Thompson today issued this statement:

“Effective today, UW-Whitewater Chancellor Dwight Watson has been placed on paid administrative leave pending the outcome of an investigation into a complaint. We will have no further comment on this personnel matter at this time. UW-Whitewater Provost Greg Cook will serve as leader of the university until the complaint is resolved.”

Whitewater’s Local Government: Always Literally, Not as Often Seriously

It was the Trump apologist Salena Zito who, by way of defending Trump, suggested that his words should be taken ‘seriously, not literally.’ (She offered this defense in a deceitful effort to absolve Trump from the plain meaning of what he said, at any moment. Instead of considering his statements, one was supposed to take Trump’s words not as they were – lies or calumnies – but figuratively as vague policy goals.)

Her effort toward Trump’s absolution has proved a failure: Trump is responsible for his literal claims and should also be taken seriously for the destructive policies that derive from those stated claims. He’s unfit in both words and deeds.

Zito’s formula, however, has use beyond her fruitless defense of Trump. There is, of course, a difference between statements (the literal) and actions (what’s serious as a consequence of action or policy).

Applying this formula to Whitewater’s local government, one finds an application in reverse of its original usage: one should take Whitewater’s local government literally, but seldom seriously. 

Officials are responsible for their words and actions, but for Whitewater (and likely many other communities) the words alone are more tangible than policy results.

That’s a situation both ineffectual and absurd: words should lead to effective results, and an environment where policy goes no farther in effect than declarations and pronouncements reduces local government to a bad poetry reading.

That is, however, where Whitewater’s local government find itself. Following a long local custom of grandiose press releases and vainglorious claims, local government has little more by way of policy than more press releases and hollow declarations.

That approach is literal, but not serious.

Doubt not: officials are responsible, personally and often collectively, for acts of misconduct and injury to others. Those actions must always be taken seriously, and be met with redress.  

Beyond that, however, Whitewater’s officials should most often be taken literally for their statements, but not as often seriously (as most local pronouncements will achieve little or nothing).

There has been, and will be, for example, controversy over local regulations during the pandemic. The seriousness – the effectiveness – of those regulations rests on cultural compliance beyond the ability of Whitewater’s local government to assure.

A different local government might have had this kind of cultural influence; this one does not.

That’s truly regrettable, as we’ve a cultural problem with public health compliance. This local government is unlikely to be able to effect sufficient, needed change. I supported a mask ordinance for example, but an ordinance is a poor substitute for committed, responsible private conduct.

Those depending on city government or university officials to see Whitewater through this pandemic are relying on too few, and too little. 

Whitewater needs to develop means of persuasion apart from government officials, politicians, and others of the same-ten-people ilk. It’s hard to develop those means in the middle of a public health crisis, but the sooner they’re developed the sooner we’ll be ready for future challenges.

And so, and so – always literally, not as often seriously. 

Daily Bread for 9.3.20

Good morning.

Thursday in Whitewater will be sunny with a high of seventy-six.  Sunrise is 6:23 AM and sunset 7:24 PM, for 13h 00m 59s of daytime.  The moon is a waning gibbous with 98.5% of its visible disk illuminated.

 

 Whitewater’s CDA meets at 1:30 PM.

 On this day in 1783, the Revolutionary War ends with the signing of the Treaty of Paris.

Recommended for reading in full — 

Colby Itkowitz reports Trump suggests voters cast ballots twice, which if done intentionally is illegal:

President Trump, on Wednesday during a trip in battleground North Carolina, urged voters to vote twice, once by mail and once in person, to test the protections intended to guard against double voting.

Trump, who has claimed the 2020 election will be rife with fraud and rigged against him, was asked by a local television reporter whether he had confidence in the vote-by-mail system.

“Let them send it in and let them go vote, and if their system’s as good as they say it is, then obviously they won’t be able to vote. If it isn’t tabulated, they’ll be able to vote,” Trump said.

Intentionally voting twice is illegal, and in many states, including North Carolina, it is a felony.

The president also greeted supporters on the tarmac upon landing in Wilmington, N.C., and made nearly identical comments, encouraging them to send in their ballot “and then go in and vote.”

“So send it in early and then go and vote,” Trump said. “You can’t let them take your vote away; these people are playing dirty politics. So if you have an absentee ballot … you send it in, but I’d check it, follow it and go vote.”

 Mona Charen writes of The Broken Windows Presidency:

Whatever the problems of implementation may have been with broken windows policing, the insight on which it was based—that disorder begets more disorder—seemed sound, particularly to conservatives who are temperamentally more sensitive to disruptions of order than liberals. If drug dealers are able to ply their trade unmolested on street corners and drunks are sleeping in vestibules, it’s an invitation to more serious breakdowns of public order.

Oddly, conservatives seem not to have applied this insight to Donald Trump, who from the moment he entered the fray, has been hurling rocks through windows. He smashed the window that required candidates to provide their tax returns. He lobbed a brick through the norm that American public figures do not encourage vigilantism. He demolished the principle that American presidents don’t dangle pardons before former aides caught in criminal activity. Each and every time he has violated a law or a norm and received no pushback from his party, he has made further violations of law and custom more likely.

Kevin Collier and Ken Dilanian report Russian internet trolls hired U.S. journalists to push their news website, Facebook says:

The site, called Peace Data, launched this year with coverage focused largely on the environment and corporate and political corruption. Facebook learned through a tip from the FBI that people formerly associated with the Russian Internet Research Agency, which created a number of influential Twitter and Facebook personas to inflame political tensions in the 2016 election, ran Peace Data and has taken down its known affiliated accounts. It had yet to gain a serious following, said Nathaniel Gleicher, the company’s head of cybersecurity policy.

“It confirms what I think we’ve all thought: Russian actors are trying to target the 2020 elections and public debate in the U.S., and they’re trying to be creative about it,” Gleicher said.

How to Stop the Next Pandemic:

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Whitewater Common Council Meeting, 9.1.20: Culture & Prohibitions

At last night’s meeting of the Whitewater Common Council, the council discussed and gave direction to the city attorney to draft an ordinance regulating large gatherings of people on private property during the pandemic. (Updated with video. A revised agenda is available here.) The council plans to meet again on 9.9.20, where they will consider a draft ordinance; they are likely to pass a draft to take effect as quickly as possible thereafter.

A few remarks on the discussion —

 1. Ripeness.  One sometimes hears that a legal matter is not yet ripe – that is ready and suitable – for adjudication.

There’s no draft yet available, so much of the speculation about what a draft might look like, how it will survive Wisconsin Supreme Court precedent, etc., is yet speculative. There will be a draft presented, presumably, on 9.9.20.

 2. Prohibition’s a Strategy When You’ve Nothing Left.

And yet, a draft ordinance, an adopted ordinance, or a litigated ordinance will never matter more than a culture that doesn’t believe in the aims of the ordinance. I supported a mask ordinance, but throughout I have been clear that enforcement of restrictions is likely to be ineffective, no matter how hard one tries.

The city has too many people, and too few officials and employees, to manage a pandemic without widespread cultural cooperation. If enforcement of drinking restrictions is mostly an exercise in herding cats, then limiting the spread of a pandemic at this late stage is like herding cats where some of them are invisible (as asymptomatics).

The impulse toward safety – and preserving a marketplace of myriad daily transactions – is a worthy goal. It’s almost impossible to achieve that goal if residents, themselves, do not support the means to do so.

This is not simply a problem of college students standing too close together. Hundreds of non-student adults in this city have denied the dangers of the pandemic, derided the use of masks, and carried on as though there were no novel coronavirus at all. Federal and state officials have actively encouraged these residents – and millions like them across this continent – to be mask-free ‘warriors’ for ‘re-opening.’

They’ve not achieved a re-opening; they’ve exacerbated society’s ills.

 3. Disconnected. This common council no longer has the ability to persuade, and lacks the ability to enforce meaningfully, regulations against residents who’ve stopped caring about council’s authority. One shouldn’t welcome this – and I don’t – but it’s predicable in conditions of malaise.

It’s a problem that has preceded the pandemic, and will likely endure afterward. Past political mistakes and persisting stagnation have greatly limited the range of future government action.

Officials are performing for each other as much as governing the city. That’s why one can say that writing about Whitewater’s politics has significantly shifted from commentary-as-advocacy to commentary-as-narrative.

 4. Social Covenant. UW-Whitwater has, and this chancellor has touted, a social covenant directed toward good public health practices. It’s unrealistic to expect – however timely that covenant may be – that it will take hold quickly. Chancellor Dwight Watson, or anyone in his role, would take years to establish a meaningful bond of that kind on campus. His predecessors (Telfer, Kopper) did not shape a university culture that would be receptive to a meaningful social compact of any kind.

A social covenant is more than a few hashtags and purple signs, but there’s no evidence that Watson’s recent predecessors would have grasped as much, and so, even if Watson should one day succeed in establishing a social covenant of any type, that day is years away.

Daily Bread for 9.2.20

Good morning.

Wednesday in Whitewater will be partly cloudy with a high of seventy-eight.  Sunrise is 6:22 AM and sunset 7:25 PM, for 13h 03m 48s of daytime.  The moon is full with 99.9% of its visible disk illuminated.

 

 On this day in 1945, Japanese officials sign the Japanese Instrument of Surrender aboard the battleship USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay.

Recommended for reading in full — 

David Leonhardt writes of Trump, Unbound:

• President Trump breaks so many of the normal rules of politics that it can sometimes be hard to know when his tweets and comments are truly newsworthy. Even by his standards, though, the past several days have stood out. Consider:

• Trump said on Monday that a plane “almost completely loaded with thugs” wearing “dark uniforms” had been headed to the Republican National Convention to do “big damage.” The claim is similar to a baseless conspiracy theory that spread online over the summer, well before the convention.

• He has declined to condemn the killings of two protesters in Kenosha, Wis. He instead defended the 17-year-old charged in the shootings — a Trump supporter named Kyle Rittenhouse — saying he was acting in self-defense. Trump also promoted a Twitter post that called Rittenhouse “a good example of why I decided to vote for Trump.”

• He defended violence committed by his supporters in Portland, Ore., who fired paintballs and pepper spray at Black Lives Matter protesters.

• He compared the police shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha to missing “a three-foot putt” in a golf tournament.

• He claimed that “people that you’ve never heard of” and “people that are in the dark shadows” are controlling Joe Biden.

• He claimed Democrats were trying to “destroy” suburbs with “low-income housing, and with that comes a lot of other problems, including crime.” He added that Cory Booker — one of the highest-profile Black Democrats — would be “in charge of it.”

• He predicted that the stock market would crash if Biden won.

He said that Biden, at the Democratic National Convention, “didn’t even discuss law enforcement, the police. Those words weren’t mentioned.” In fact, Biden held a discussion at the convention on policing, with a police chief.

• Trump claimed that he “took control of” the situation in Kenosha by sending in the National Guard. In fact, Wisconsin’s governor, not the president, sent the National Guard.

• He retweeted messages asserting that the pandemic’s death toll was overstated. Evidence indicates the opposite is true.

• He said that protests against police brutality were actually a secret “coup attempt” by anarchists “trying to take down the President.”

 Ben Collins reports Trump’s ‘plane loaded with thugs’ conspiracy theory matches months-old [Facebook!] rumor:

The conspiracy theory that President Donald Trump pushed Monday that a plane “almost completely loaded with thugs” had been set to disrupt the Republican National Convention was almost identical to a rumor that went viral on Facebook three months ago.

….

The claim about the flight matches a viral Facebook post from June 1 that falsely claimed, “At least a dozen males got off the plane in Boise from Seattle, dressed head to toe in black.” The post, by an Emmett, Idaho, man, warned residents to “Be ready for attacks downtown and residential areas,” and claimed one passenger had “a tattoo that said Antifa America on his arm.”

That post was shared over 3,000 times on Facebook, and other pages from Idaho quickly added their own spin to it, like the Idaho branch of the far-right militia group 3 Percenters.

Apple Is Making It Harder To Track iPhone Users, Which Could Hurt Facebook:

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