Monday in Whitewater will be cloudy with a high of 41. Sunrise is 7:24 AM and sunset 4:28 PM for 9h 03m 23s of daytime. The moon is a waning crescent with 44.9% of its visible disk illuminated.
Here in Whitewater, we’ve a small Mexican grocery, La Preferida, and other Wisconsin cities have bodegas (literally, cellars, but understood in this context as small grocereries). (In many bodgeas, by the way, there’s a cat to keep away pests. SeeBodgea Cats, from Brooklyn, on Twitter.)
Many communities depend on a bodega for simple needs like milk, butter, vegetables, or coffee, but a proper bodega will have a wide selection of items packed into a narrow space.
Customers of Kwik Trip are often enthusiastic in support of these stores, so much so that Kwik Trip has a fan base. SeeCult brands: How companies build a fanatical fan base. Competitors simply don’t have the same number of fans (it’s not even close).
This enthusiasm likely puzzles, if not annoys, those who are indifferent to the convenience chain.
There’s an easy way to understand how Kwik Trip has become so popular: it has the same intensity of support in rural Wisconsin communities as does a bodega in Brooklyn. Arguing against Kwik Trip is like arguing against an urban bodega — a futile exercise. There are several key differences between those shops, but one key similarity: ardent customer support.
Sunday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 39. Sunrise is 7:24 AM and sunset 4:27 PM for 9h 02m 55s of daytime. The moon is a waning gibbous with 55.3% of its visible disk illuminated.
On this day in 1776, at the Battle of Trenton, the Continental Army attacks and successfully defeats a garrison of Hessian forces.
On January 6, 2021, William J. Walker was head of the D.C. National Guard. He had buses full of guardsmen in riot gear ready to deploy in case Donald Trump’s “Stop the Steal” rally turned dangerous. But when rioters violently stormed the Capitol building, the Guard was nowhere to be found. Walker says he was forced to wait for three hours before his superiors allowed him to send in his troops. “My soldiers were asking me, ‘Sir, what the hell is going on?’” Walker says. “‘Are they watching the news? Are they watching what’s going on at the Capitol?’ And I had no answer. I don’t recall ever being in that position, where I did not have an answer for my soldiers.” Now, almost one year later, Walker is the sergeant-at-arms of the U.S. House of Representatives—the first Black man to ever hold that office. The Experiment’s correspondent Tracie Hunte and producer Peter Bresnan visit Walker in his new office at the Capitol to ask him about what happened on January 6, and what he’s doing to make sure it never happens again.
Christmas in Whitewater will be partly cloudy with a high of 42. Sunrise is 7:24 AM and sunset 4:26 PM for 9h 02m 32s of daytime. The moon is a waning gibbous with 65.9% of its visible disk illuminated.
The modern image of Santa Claus first appeared during the Civil War. Santa sided with the North.
He made his debut on the cover of Harper’s Weekly for Christmas 1862. A drawing shows a white-bearded Santa Claus, wearing a fur coat with stars and stripes. But he’s not filling stockings for the kids. Instead, he’s handing out presents at a Union army camp — and dangling a puppet with a rope around its neck. The puppet resembles Confederate President Jefferson Davis.
The drawing was by 22-year-old Thomas Nast, who was born in Germany and came to New York with his family at age 6. Nast said he based his Santa on a German version of Saint Nicholas, Pelze-Nicol. The artist later became famous for his cartoons lampooning William “Boss” Tweed of New York City’s corrupt Tammany Hall political machine.
But he initially gained attention for his drawings championing the Union cause, including the one that introduced Santa as we know him. President Abraham Lincoln called Nast the Union’s “best recruiting sergeant,” adding, “His emblematic cartoons have never failed to arouse enthusiasm and patriotism and have always seemed to come just when these articles were getting scarce.”
Tuesday, December 28th at 1 PM, there will be a showing of About Time @ Seniors in the Park, in the Starin Community Building:
Comedy/Drama/Romance/Fantasy
2 hours, 3 minutes
Rated R (language/mild sex) (2013)
On his 21st birthday, a young man learns from his father that he has an unusual gift: the ability to travel back in time and relive moments in his life. This has pitfalls as well as benefits, which he can only learn from experience as he meets, woos and attempts to win his soulmate. A superb British cast stars Bill Nighy, Rachel McAdams, Tom Hollander and Margot Robbie. Written and directed by Richard Curtis (“4 Weddings and a Funeral” and “Love Actually”).
Friday in Whitewater will be cloudy with a high of 48. Sunrise is 7:23 AM and sunset 4:26 PM for 9h 02m 12s of daytime. The moon is a waning gibbous with 75% of its visible disk illuminated.
On this day in 1814, representatives of the United Kingdom and the United States sign the Treaty of Ghent, ending the War of 1812.
The University of Wisconsin Board of Regents has approved increasing salary ranges for top university positions in order to match ranges at peer institutions. The vote Monday came after UW System interim President Tommy Thompson said he favors smaller, successive increases for top executive pay ranges.
Regents voted unanimously to raise the salary ranges for chancellors, provosts and UW System leaders. The range for the UW-Madison chancellor increased 21.67 percent, which sets a minimum of $600,126 and a maximum pay of $900,190. The range for the UW-Milwaukee chancellor position increased by 32 percent, setting a minimum pay of $451,440 and a maximum of $677,160.
Before the vote, Regent President Edmund Manydeeds said changing the salary ranges “doesn’t address or guarantee salary rates for any of the senior executives.” Instead, he said the intent was to align salary ranges with market data provided during a Dec. 9 board meeting.
….
At the start of Monday’s meeting, Manydeeds told members he received a phone call from Thompson reiterating his opposition to matching market rates for top executive positions all at once.
“He thinks that we should not go to the high end of these ranges, as you know,” Manydeeds said. “He had a recommendation. He thinks it’s prudent to do that in successive increases, not do it all at once.”
Thompson is right, in almost any circumstances, but notably in these times of stress for frontline workers inside and outside of the UW System. Weak leaders (in this case, the Regents) often favor the level close to their own (in this case, specific chancellors). They want to placate those with whom they deal, or with whom they more closely identify, while ignoring ordinary employees.
Indeed, this is an easy marker of a weak board (whether public or private): it foremost confers raises and benefits to those who are closest by hierarchy to the board.
Thursday in Whitewater will be mostly cloudy with a high of 42. Sunrise is 7:23 AM and sunset 4:25 PM for 9h 01m 57s of daytime. The moon is a waning gibbous with 83.5% of its visible disk illuminated.
Voting is the beating heart of democracy, the way we claim control of this government of the people. But in Wisconsin, an infection in the bloodstream of the body politic is threatening our ability to be self-governing.
Donald Trump’s repeated lies about the 2020 election over the past year have put our democracy at grave risk, but he has not done this alone. His enablers, from U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson to Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, have refused to stand up to a dangerous man.
If they won’t do their duty, then citizens must: Tell Johnson, Vos and the rest to stop undermining confidence in Wisconsin elections.
Here are the facts. Donald Trump lost the popular vote in Wisconsin by about 20,600 votes; he lost nationally by 7 million. Recounts in Milwaukee and Dane counties last year confirmed that he lost. Courts repeatedly threw out ludicrous challenges by Trump backers.
And an Associated Press review of every potential case of voter fraud in six battleground states that the former president complained about found fewer than 475 votes in dispute. Biden won Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin; the disputed ballots represent just 0.15% of his margin in those states.
In other words, there was no steal and nothing to investigate. Just lies.
But the Republican sycophants in Wisconsin insist on appeasing Trump.
After Trump hectored him last summer for not doing enough to investigate and spread the former president’s lies, Vos launched a partisan review with former state Supreme Court Justice Michael Gableman at the helm. Gableman bungled it, choosing to talk to more conspiracy theorists than election experts. His work has been an embarrassment to the state, even to many Republicans.
In November, Johnson literally called for the takeover of federal elections by the partisans in the Wisconsin Legislature. In other words, his own party. Johnson said local officials should ignore the bipartisan Elections Commission that his own party set up six years ago.
The stench of racism permeates much of this, especially efforts by Republicans to clamp down on access to voting. People of color are likely to be most affected.
But the lying also corrodes trust in the most basic act of democracy.
The WISGOP can stop this, but it won’t. We are late in the day, and a faction that has become addicted to lies shows no sign of seeking detoxification.
Wednesday in Whitewater will be mostly sunny with a high of 29. Sunrise is 7:23 AM and sunset 4:24 PM for 9h 01m 47s of daytime. The moon is a waning gibbous with 90% of its visible disk illuminated.
On this day in 1944, German troops at the Battle of the Bulge demand the surrender of United States troops at Bastogne, Belgium, prompting the famous one word reply by General Anthony McAuliffe: “Nuts!”
The project director hired to oversee the struggling Foxconn development in the Village of Mount Pleasant is consistently billing taxpayers for 40 hours per week, but records are unable to account for how all his time is being spent.
Claude Lois is a contracted consultant with engineering firm Kapur and Associates,and he works in Mount Pleasant’s Village Hall. His role as project director has no official job description, and records obtained by Wisconsin Public Radio of Lois’ time card and village-owned calendar do not match.
Lois does not provide public updates to the village on how his time is spent or have a direct boss overseeing his work. Village Administrator Maureen Murphy authorizes his $28,000 per month salary without further documentation. When pressed for further information, Murphy provided WPR with Lois’ 2017 contract.
Murphy said Lois is in the office early in the morning and “working all the time” on new investment projects for Mount Pleasant. She said despite what Lois’ calendars show, there are no discrepancies between what he is billing for and the time he is working on behalf of the village.
“Every month, Claude presents the progress of the Foxconn development to the public, village and state officials, special interest groups, and stakeholders,” according to Kapur’s website.
The site says Lois also represents all local and national press inquiries. But the Village of Mount Pleasant contracts with a Milwaukee-based public relations firm to handle its media requests.
Lois, who bills $175 per hour, is scheduled to get a raise to $200 an hour starting Aug. 21. Lois declined to comment.
As of Dec. 13, Kapur and Associates billed Mount Pleasant approximately $362,000 for 2021, which was largely for Lois’ salary. By comparison, Murphy is paid $108,000 annually, according to the village budget.
Since 2017, Kapur has billed the village about $1.23 million.
On Nov. 1, Lois’ calendar indicates one 90-minute meeting with Foxconn from 1:30 to 3 p.m. The calendar indicates the rest of his day was free, but his time card shows he billed for nine hours of work.
The next day, Lois had one director meeting on his calendar from 2:30 to 3:30 p.m., with the rest of the day free. His time card said he worked 10 hours that day.
Some days Lois’ calendar is filled with meetings, and he bills up to 13 hours. Other days, like Oct. 28, Lois has nothing on his calendar and bills for eight hours, according to the records obtained by WPR.
….
After serving as the mayor of Burlington in Racine County for four terms and managing the state’s shared revenue program during former Gov. Scott Walker’s administration, Lois began working for Kapur and Associates in 2017. He was named project manager for Foxconn without the village conducting a national search.
When Lois was hired by Mount Pleasant, the Foxconn project still had some promise for the village and the state. But since 2017, Foxconn has fallen short on its hiring and building goals.
Lois, a former politician, now finds himself at the trough of a project that offers nothing to the communities he once ‘served.’ Both Lois and Mount Pleasant Village Administrator Murphy should, of course, be ashamed. They won’t be — having come this far shamelessly, contrition will not move them to step away from that trough.
Winter in Whitewater begins on a mostly cloudy day with a high of 35. Sunrise is 7:22 AM and sunset 4:24 PM for 9h 01m 41s of daytime. The moon is a waning gibbous with 95.1% of its visible disk illuminated.
When the state Supreme Court ruled last month that Wisconsin’s new legislative lines would have to look a lot like the old lines, it all but ensured Republican control of the Legislature for another decade.
The only partisan question that remains — and it’s an important one — is how big that GOP advantage will be.
The court now has before it a GOP plan passed by the Legislature under which 62 or 63 of 99 Assembly seats would lean Republican in their makeup.
And it has before it a handful of plans offered by Democrats, progressives and others under which 55 to 60 Assembly seats would lean Republican.
In other words, even the Democratic plans before the court are very, very favorable to Republican control of the Legislature over the next 10 years.
But those plans are not quite as tilted toward the GOP and feature a higher number of competitive districts, which are scarce under the Republican plan.
Here are some takeaways about where things stand in a very consequential redistricting fight in Wisconsin, presented here in a question-and-answer format:
Wisconsin is a 50-50 state politically. So why do even the Democrats’ plans give Republicans a large edge in the struggle for control of the Legislature?
There are two reason for this. The first involves geography. Democratic voters are more concentrated in urban areas, meaning their voting power is more concentrated in fewer districts. Republicans are more efficiently distributed across the state. This means that under any Wisconsin plan that follows traditional redistricting standards such as compactness, more than half the legislative districts are going to lean Republican in their makeup. The urban-rural partisan divide gives the GOP a “natural” edge in the state’s legislative and congressional maps.
The second reason is that the state Supreme Court’s conservative majority ruled 4-3 last month that it would only accept a redistricting plan that minimized changes to the current districts (which do have to be changed to make sure that after 10 years of population shifts, they have equal numbers of people). The court’s liberal minority dissented from that view.
The political effect of the ruling was to make the current map the template and baseline for the new lines. And that map was adopted in 2011 by a Republican governor and Legislature to maximize the number of GOP seats. The current lines drawn 10 years ago go beyond the “natural” Republican advantage discussed above to achieve an even bigger partisan tilt, guaranteeing one-sided GOP control of both chambers under almost all election scenarios.
How big will the advantage in the WISGOP gerrymandered maps be? Real big.
Monday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 38. Sunrise is 7:22 AM and sunset 4:23 PM for 9h 01m 40s of daytime. The moon is a waning gibbous with 98.3% of its visible disk illuminated.
Whitewater’s Library Board meets at 6:30 PM, and the Whitewater Unified School Board meets in open session at 7 PM.
Wisconsin’s conspiratorial U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson has spouted plenty of garbage in recent months — that mouthwash has been proven to kill COVID-19, that unvaccinated people are being put “basically into internment camps,” that climate change is “bullsh-t.”
Republicans who control the Legislature have already gerrymandered voting districts in Wisconsin to give conservative candidates an unfair advantage in elections. Johnson isn’t satisfied with that because the rigged maps won’t help him. He has to run statewide for his U.S. Senate seat.
So Johnson wants his colleagues to go further. He called on Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, R-Rochester, and other GOP leaders to all but count the votes following elections so Republican candidates are more assured of victory.
Republicans in other states are similarly trying to seize control of election administration. They hope to decide close races in their favor by manipulating voting rules before and after Election Day. If a Democrat narrowly wins, for example, just throw out some of the Democrat’s votes on a subjective technicality.
Wisconsin should reject and prevent such devious attempts to undermine our democracy.
It’s hard to rank Johnson’s ideas, as so many are destructive in different ways. Unlike Johnson’s other errors, conspiracy theories, and lies, his proposal on elections has an obvious practical advantage: WISGOP control of elections would help him capture a third term.
Sunday in Whitewater will be partly cloudy with a high of 33. Sunrise is 7:21 AM and sunset 4:23 PM for 9h 01m 43s of daytime. The moon is full with 99.8% of its visible disk illuminated (the moon’s peak visible illumination was at 11:35 PM last night).
On this day in 1776, Thomas Paine publishes one of a series of pamphlets in The Pennsylvania Journal entitled “The American Crisis.”