FREE WHITEWATER

Author Archive for JOHN ADAMS

Daily Bread for 3.1.23: Demand High at Food Pantries

Good morning.

Wednesday in Whitewater will see scattered morning showers with a high of 52. Sunrise is 6:31 AM and sunset 5:44 PM. The moon is a waxing gibbous with 72% of its visible disk illuminated.

 On this day in 1893, electrical engineer Nikola Tesla gives the first public demonstration of radio in St. Louis, Missouri.


There will be various proposals of state government (for capital spending) or taxation (a flat tax is probably out), but the WisDems and WISGOP proposals come in a context of hunger even during low unemployment. The state treasury may be flush, but many Wisconsinites are not.

Rob Mentzer reports A central Wisconsin food pantry grew fivefold during the pandemic. Leaders expect it to keep growing (‘Led by a Catholic priest in a majority-Hispanic area, the food pantry is a lifeline to hundreds of families each week’):

One of the confessionals at St. Bernard Catholic Church in Abbotsford is filled nearly to the ceiling with boxes of dried beans, rice and sriracha sauce. There are several flats of cereal boxes in the confessional next door.

“Right now, the deal is, you come to confession, you get a box of cereal,” jokes the Rev. Tim Oudenhoven.

St. Bernard’s started hosting a weekly food pantry in 2020, and parts of the church have become overflow storage for dry goods. What started as a pandemic response serving 30 or 40 families has “mushroomed,” Oudenhoven said, to an operation serving 230 families per week and growing. 

Abbotsford, a city of about 2,300 people in central Wisconsin, has become a center for Latino immigration. By official U.S. Census data, the city is now about 40 percent Hispanic. But most residents believe that count doesn’t capture hundreds more who have immigrated illegally or who’ve overstayed their visas. According to state data, the Abbotsford School District is about 62 percent Latino.

And recently, Oudenhoven said, the area has seen an increase in new arrivals from Central and South America, including Nicaragua and Venezuela, as people flee humanitarian crises there.

Note well: This libertarian blogger does not write — and never has — from personal deprivation. (The deserved indictment of the boosters, for example, is that they accentuate supposed gains while obscuring others’ needs.) 

We are usually taught that people require food, clothing, and shelter for survival. Whitewater is far from Abbotsford, yet Whitewater also has residents, long-term and newcomers both, who lack food (or clothing, or shelter).

So, which direction for Whitewater? Will Whitewater’s community address the fundamental needs of her residents, or will they embrace a culture war diverting and distracting us from our fellow residents’ basic needs? A culture war will bring less, not more, to this city and school district. The first six months of cultural fury will recede to reveal years of socio-economic hardship. 

These are not new themes at FREE WHITEWATERSee Waiting for Whitewater’s Dorothy Day, Something Transcendent, and in the MeantimeAn Oasis Strategyand The Community Space

A moral and practical priority: to feed, to clothe, to shelter. 


 ‘Time-traveling’ James Webb Space Telescope sees galaxy 3 times in same observation

Daily Bread for 2.28.23: Wisconsin Print Newspapers Are Now a Niche Medium

Good morning.

Tuesday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 46. Sunrise is 6:30 AM and sunset 5:43 PM for 11h 12m 50s of daytime. The moon is a waxing gibbous with 61.2% of its visible disk illuminated.

There will be a primary election canvass for the Whitewater Unified School District at 8:30 AM

 On this day in 1991, the first Gulf War ends.


Bruce Murphy writes Journal Sentinel Circulation a Disaster

The latest circulation numbers for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel are jaw dropping.

Its parent company Gannett shows plummeting readership for the many papers it owns, including the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, one of the national chain’s biggest daily newspapers. The latest Form 10-K report required by the federal SEC and published by Gannett shows the Journal Sentinel now has a “combined” (print and digital) Sunday circulation of 75,061 and a combined daily circulation of 48,158 as of September 2022.

That’s down from a Sunday circulation of 115,026 in the previous year (September 2021), as the prior year’s report by Gannett shows, which is a decrease of nearly 35%, with a loss of nearly 40,000 subscribers

And that’s down from a daily circulation of 75,676 in the previous year, a decline of 36%, with a loss of 27,518 subscribers.

The newspaper has seen its Sunday circulation plummet in 10 years from 299,000 in 2012 to 170,791 in 2018 to 129,887 in 2020 to 75,016 as of last fall. In 10 years the JS has lost 75% of its Sunday readers.

Meanwhile, the paper has seen its daily print circulation drop from 175,600 in 2012 to 111,251 in 2018, 83,628 in 2020 and 48,158 in 2022. In 10 years the JS has lost 74% of its daily paper readers.

And here we are: In Wisconsin, print newspapers are now a niche medium. 


 Boeing Engineers Break World Record for Farthest Paper Aircraft Flight

Daily Bread for 2.27.23: Fox’s Viewers Wanted Those Lies

Good morning.

Monday in Whitewater will be mostly sunny with a high of 44. Sunrise is 6:34 AM and sunset 5:41 PM for 11h 07m 06s of daytime. The moon is a waxing crescent with 41.8% of its visible disk illuminated.

Whitewater’s Urban Forestry Commission meets at 4:30 PM, and the Whitewater Unified School Board goes into closed session shortly after 6 PM, to resume open session at 7 PM

 On this day in 1951, the Twenty-second Amendment to the United States Constitution, limiting presidents to two terms, is ratified.


David French explains Why Fox News Lied to the Viewers It ‘Respects’

There are some stories that are important enough to pause the news cycle and linger on them, to explore not just what happened, but why. And so it is with Fox News’s role in the events leading up to Jan. 6, 2021. Thanks to a recent filing by Dominion Voting Systems in its defamation lawsuit against Fox, there is now compelling evidence that America’s most-watched cable news network presented information it knew to be false as part of an effort to placate an angry audience. It knowingly sacrificed its integrity to maintain its market share.

Why? There are the obvious reasons: Money. Power. Fame. These are universal human temptations. But the answer goes deeper. Fox News became a juggernaut not simply by being “Republican,” or “conservative,” but by offering its audience something it craved even more deeply: representation. And journalism centered on representation ultimately isn’t journalism at all.

….

Fox isn’t just the news hub of right-wing America, it’s a cultural cornerstone, and its business model is so successful that it’s more accurate to think of the rest of the right-wing media universe not as a collection of competitors to Fox, but rather as imitators. From television channels to news sites, right-wing personalities aren’t so much competing with Fox as auditioning for it.

Take, for example, the online space. Fox News is so dominant that, according to data from December, you could take the total traffic of the next 19 conservative websites combined, and still not reach half of Fox’s audience.

But that kind of loyalty is built around a social compact, the profound and powerful sense in Red America that Fox is for us. It’s our megaphone to the culture. Yet when Fox created this compact, it placed the audience in charge of its content.

The paradox of the conservative populists: self-described strong types who take offense easily, and shift uncomfortably, at mere words they don’t like. They complain about safe spaces, but it is they who crave the safest space in all America. It takes little to rattle them, little to cause them to act out and act up. Fox is the place where the conservative populists go to be told it’s not them, but rather the rest of the world, that’s a problem. Fox’s audience wanted lies because the truth was too hard for them; Fox gave its audience the soothing mendacity they craved.

The cure for the insecurities of the populists won’t come from placing them in positions of power. They’ll not become more judicious with a seat at the table. On the contrary, they will inflict injuries on others in a futile attempt to redress their own personal grievances. Personality (in the sense of self and being) brings them to politics, but politics will not improve that state of personality. 

A struggling community in the grip of the populists will find that it has farther down to sink. 


 Rare snowfall envelopes southern California, swirling around Hollywood sign:

Daily Bread for 2.26.23: The Farmer’s Dog — Forever

Good morning.

Sunday in Whitewater will be mostly sunny with a high of 44. Sunrise is 6:34 AM and sunset 5:41 PM for 11h 07m 06s of daytime. The moon is a waxing crescent with 41.8% of its visible disk illuminated.

 On this day in 1980, Egypt and Israel establish full diplomatic relations.


The Farmer’s Dog — Forever (a commercial that aired during the Super Bowl): 

 Why spy balloons never went out of style:

Daily Bread for 2.25.23: Supporting Ukraine

Good morning.

Saturday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 38. Sunrise is 6:35 AM and sunset 5:39 PM for 11h 04m 15s of daytime. The moon is a waxing crescent with 32.1% of its visible disk illuminated.

 On this day in 1948, in a coup d’état led by Klement Gottwald, the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia takes control of government in Prague to end the Third Czechoslovak Republic.


All libertarians would prefer a world of free trade with friendly nations. We are the descendants of the Enlightenment, and rightly understand the power of free trade to uplift both buyers and sellers. We are cosmopolitan: welcoming of, and open to, other people and places. 

Much to our regret, violent threats to the liberty of nations and trade between them occasionally arise, and so we must decide: will we support free peoples abroad & their hopes for peaceful commence with us and others?

I am from a movement family (that is, an old libertarian family, long before the term libertarian was coined), and for us this was always clear. We are to support free peoples against autocracy abroad, and autocratic impulses at home. Many campaigns during the Cold War were misguided, but the war was not. The Soviets were, in every principal respect, the enemies of liberty. There never was a good Soviet (as a supporter of that dictatorship) and there never will be a good Putinist. Thousands of years of moral teaching condemn them. 

Now comes a modern-day czar, with his militant imperialism, twisted teachings, and criminal army, to oppress the free people of Ukraine. In the family and teachings of which I am a grateful descendent and inheritor, one is called to oppose Russian imperialism. 

There are some exceptions to this view among libertarians: some who are pacifists (there is a small group of Quaker libertarians) and others who are inveterate isolationists. The former (Quakers) are principled and consistent (if mistaken). The latter (isolationist) group professes a contradiction. The isolationists want free trade, and would defend liberty at home, but not so much that they would fight to defend liberty and trade abroad. Convenient of them: unlike the Society of Friends that advocates pacifism everywhere, the isolationists place liberty underneath their personal convenience. They are a millstone around libertarianism’s neck. 

Ukraine acts in her self defense; defense of self and others is a right, natural to Ukraine (and to America on her behalf, as a defense of others).  

Evan Casey reports On the anniversary of the Russian invasion into Ukraine, Wisconsin-Ukrainians continue to help their country

After putting his son to bed, Valentyn Potapenko flipped on the TV to find what moments before was a typical day had now turned into a nightmare. It was Feb. 24, 2022, and from his home in Wauwatosa, he watched as Russia launched a war by bombing his hometown in Ukraine. 

He almost couldn’t comprehend what he was seeing. 

“Right away, I didn’t believe that it was happening,” Potapenko said. 

In the days after Russia invaded his home country, Potapenko, who moved to America in 1995, said he felt hopeless. He had many family members and friends who were still living in Ukraine. 

But he and his wife decided to take action, starting a website to collect donations for his people. After collecting nearly $50,000 in a few days, the couple then partnered with Wisconsin Ukrainians, which has collected over $500,000 in donations in the last year. 

“People here in the United States jumped on board and helped in any way possible,” he said.

Christiana Trapani, a second generation Ukrainian-American, has a similar story. She owns Door County Candle Co., and has raised over $800,000 to support humanitarian efforts by selling the popular Ukraine candle.

These Wisconsinites are among the best of this state, and of America. Slava UkrainiHeroiam slava. 

Daily Bread for 2.24.23 More Convenient than a Cat’s Meows from the Rafters

Good morning.

Friday in Whitewater will be cloudy with a high of 23. Sunrise is 6:37 AM and sunset 5:38 PM for 11h 01m 24s of daytime. The moon is a waxing crescent with 22.8% of its visible disk illuminated.

 On this day in 1803, in Marbury v. Madison, the Supreme Court of the United States establishes the principle of judicial review.


 So, a cat shows up at another city’s council meeting, and meows during the proceedings. A simple lesson would be that people, in Whitewater and elsewhere, should be afforded opportunities more convenient than a cat’s meows from the rafters.

And so, and so, everyone has a chance to speak, for the same amount of time, in public meetings that remain public proceedings (rather than façades for backroom dealing). 

If it’s a public body, it must remain a public proceeding. If it’s a private body, then it can and should remain a private proceeding. Private men do not own, and so they are not to control, public bodies and proceedings. Hybrid proceedings, where government and business are mixed, become special interest business meetings. 

Consider: Few in Whitewater are more opposed to the populists, that anti-individualism horde, than this libertarian blogger. And yet, and yet, they must be allowed to speak regardless of their anti-speech cravings. (It is they, not others, who whine about being insulted, and so seek to ban speech they don’t like. Tant pis: their skins are too thin and their tempers too short. We do not have their inclinations and will not adopt their practices.)

The same is true for the entitled, special-interest business lobby. On their tongues: Don’t you know who we are? In reply: Yes, no better than any, but worse in policy than most. 

God did not choose the political factions in this city; they formed of their own accord, for their own, all-too-human ends. (If God had chosen one of these groups, one could expect that He would have given them instruction in better policies and humbler demeanor.) 

Slowly, and fitfully, Whitewater moves toward a more egalitarian politics, in fulfillment of the American standard of equal treatment under law. This small and beautiful city deserves no less. 

Film: Tuesday, February 28th, 1:00 PM @ Seniors in the Park, Armageddon Time

Tuesday, February 28th at 1:00 PM, there will be a showing of Armageddon Time @ Seniors in the Park, in the Starin Community Building:

Drama

Rated R (language); 1 hour, 54 minutes (2022)

A deeply personal comingofage story about the strength of family and the generational pursuit of The American Dream. Starring Anne Hathaway, Anthony Hopkins, Jeremy Strong and Banks Repeta.

2023 AARP Movies for Grownups. Best Intergenerational Film Nominee.

One can find more information about Armageddon Time at the Internet Movie Database.

Daily Bread for 2.23.23: The Businessmen Who Won’t Let Go (with Whitewater Versions)

Good morning.

 

Thursday in Whitewater will be cloudy with a high of 37. Sunrise is 6:38 AM and sunset 5:37 PM for 10h 58m 34s of daytime. The moon is a waxing crescent with 14.1% of its visible disk illuminated.

The Whitewater Common Council meets at 6:30 PM. (At four o’clock, the City of Whitewater will host an immigration attorney’s presentation that may have a quorum of council members in attendance, but at which no Common Council action will be taken.) 

 On this day in 1778, Baron von Steuben arrives at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, to help to train the Continental Army.


 There’s a hope — one deserving of fulfillment  — that in a small town, at least, people would treat each other without self-importance or entitlement. No one higher, no one lower: all being equal and none exhibiting pretense. 

It’s not that way, of course: as in big cities, small towns, too, are afflicted with a few self-important men and women who are convinced they, and they alone, are deserving of public positions for life. What is it about being a small-town landlord, banker, or public relations man that leads these men to think that out of thousands they’re deserving of lifetime public positions? They’d tell you it’s talent, but… looking around one sees that anyone pulled from a phone directory would have done as well as they have

We have in this small city middling versions of national business types who won’t let go. Of those national types, Rob Copeland and Maureen Farrell report Hedge Fund Billionaire Extracts Billions More to Retire:

In the end, Mr. Dalio, with an estimated net worth of $19 billion, agreed to surrender his control over all key decisions at Bridgewater only if the firm agreed to give him what could amount to billions of dollars in regular payouts over the coming years through a special class of stock.

Mr. Dalio did not respond to requests for comment.

Bridgewater, which manages roughly $125 billion on behalf of public pensions and sovereign wealth funds, is dealing with a situation that’s becoming increasingly common across corporate America. Builders of companies big and small appear unwilling to let go, or are asked to step back in when there is turbulence.

Recently, Marc Benioff, of the technology giant Salesforce, returned to solo leadership of the company he co-founded in 1999 and cut around 8,000 jobs. Howard Schultz, now on his third go-round as the chief executive of Starbucks, has appeared intent on crushing efforts across the company to unionize store workers.

Google’s founders, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, have stepped in and out of their company several times. And over the summer, Bill Conway, one of the founders of the investing behemoth Carlyle, took the reins after the chief executive left abruptly, and helped choose a new one this month.

At least these national figures once achieved privately for the nation; they are private men clinging to their own private companies, however repulsively needy they seem.

Worse by far are our own local versions who insist on manipulating public councils and authorities forever with only self-promotion to justify their efforts. What an empty conceit it is that they’re somehow sharper or somehow more talented than others.

Aside: In what normal appraisal of industry and talent would anyone place landlords, bankers, or public relations men at the height of achievement? No worse than others, perhaps, but certainly no better. And yet, these men advance themselves as experts. This libertarian blogger has never touted himself as an expert; these men falsely say as much about themselves at every opportunity.

Sadder, still, of course, would be those deluded few who repeat the dull talking points of that entitled lot. (Better never to hold office than to sit on the Whitewater Common Council or Community Development Authority and be known as a landlord’s parrot.)

Somehow, the city is expected to believe these few rather than evidence all around. Quite sad, really.

Daily Bread for 2.22.23: Will Candidates in Whitewater Ever Speak Candidly?

Good morning.

Wednesday in Whitewater will see a wintry mix with a high of 32. Sunrise is 6:40 AM and sunset 5:36 PM for 10h 55m 45s of daytime. The moon is a waxing crescent with 7.1% of its visible disk illuminated.

Whitewater’s Parks & Recreation Board is scheduled to meet at 5:30 PM. (canceled). 

 On this day in 1980, in a Miracle on Ice during the Winter Olympics, the United States hockey team defeats the Soviet Union hockey team 4–3.


 Whitewater has a public school board, that public school board has board members, those board members are popularly elected, and so those board members have to campaign for the offices they seek. There were twelve candidates on the ballot, and six will go forward to a general election for three board seats.

Whitewater’s February 21st primary now concluded, a question: Will candidates in Whitewater ever speak candidly? They have about six weeks to do so. 

There’s no surprise about those who are moving forward (Hicks, Linse, Coburn, Kromholz, Huempfner, Mills). These were the predictable primary victors in a crowded field. Unofficial results are available online from Walworth, Jefferson, and Rock counties. 

Honest to goodness, this election isn’t about whether there is a mix of men and women, who’s most photogenic, or whether the candidates eat balanced breakfasts that start their days off right. 

No and no again.

There are different ideological positions between these candidates, substantive differences that cannot be papered over with banal campaign flyers about wanting every child to read and do well in mathematics. One presumes all the candidates want that. If they don’t, then they’re unworthy of running. Few school board candidates run on a platform of keeping children ignorant and unwashed. (In Alabama, perhaps, but not in the rest of the country.) 

For those who want change, what change do they want, spelled out plainly? If they have a plan to boost scores, for example, how will they do so? (Note well: saying that one will try really hard, etc., is not a plan. It’s a lazy evasion.) 

For those who support the district’s current direction, why do they support that direction? How do they describe that direction?

One imagines that everyone on the board, and everyone running for the board, knows how to read and write. If they don’t, then they don’t belong on the board — they belong back in our schools. Explaining to the community where they stand in detail isn’t hard, but it’s more than a vague campaign flyer. It’s paper, pen, then ink on paper. 

Americans are an educated people, and America is a world leader in science, technology, and the humanities. Whitewater is a college town (no matter how many in this town deprecate a college education). Board members in Whitewater should be able to express and explain themselves as well as the best at our high school and college. A good high school education easily equips a person to do so. 

All these candidates want to win. Of course they do. Winning by speaking only banalities while whispering of other plans once in office isn’t a sign of sophistication. It’s evidence of inadequacy and duplicity. 

They should say what they mean, plainly and directly. 

Daily Bread for 2.21.23: Will Wisconsin Find a Shared Revenue Resolution?

Good morning.

Tuesday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 32. Sunrise is 6:41 AM and sunset 5:34 PM for 10h 52m 56s of daytime. The moon is a waxing crescent with 2.3% of its visible disk illuminated.

 On this day in 1947, in New York City, Edwin Land demonstrates the first “instant camera,” the Polaroid Land Camera, to a meeting of the Optical Society of America.


Can Wisconsin’s popularly-elected governor and the gerrymandered legislature reach an agreement on shared revenue? Rich Kremer reports Local government advocates confident a fix to ‘broken’ shared revenue program will happen this year (‘Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers and GOP leaders in Legislature honing in on directing portion of state sales tax to cities, towns, counties’): 

Leaders of Wisconsin’s two largest local government associations say they expect changes are coming for the state’s “broken” shared revenue system, they’re just not sure what that will look like.

Still, they say bipartisan discussions about the need to address the system that funnels state funds to Wisconsin’s counties and municipalities are a big deal because communities around the state, from the smallest towns to the largest cities, are struggling to pay for basic government services. 

During his state budget address Jan. 24, Democratic Gov. Tony Evers pledged to send 20 percent of state sales tax revenues back to local governments. Evers’ budget proposal also calls for allowing Milwaukee County to impose an additional 1 percent sales tax, with half of those proceeds going to the City of Milwaukee.

The governor’s call for dedicating a portion of sales tax income toward shared revenue is similar to one discussed by Republican leaders in the Legislature since December. The Legislature’s plan calls for dedicating 1 cent of every 5 cents the state collects in sales tax to local communities. 

“The soup hasn’t been cooked, but we at least have agreed on the pot that the soup is going to go in,” Wisconsin Towns Association Executive Director Mike Koles told Wisconsin Eye’s Newsmakers on Monday. “That’s tremendous. We haven’t been there in a long time.”

The pot is the least of it. Best to wait for the full recipe; there is no recipe without ingredients. 


See the eye of tropical cyclone Freddy in amazing view from space station:

Daily Bread for 2.20.23: The End of the Dark Store Loophole in Wisconsin

Good morning.

Monday in Whitewater will see afternoon showers with a high of 44. Sunrise is 6:43 AM and sunset 5:33 PM for 10h 50m 08s of daytime. The moon is a waxing crescent with 0.2% of its visible disk illuminated.

Several local officials will be part of a tour of the Whitewater Aquatic & Fitness Center at 5 PM

 On this day in 1905, the U.S. Supreme Court upholds the constitutionality of Massachusetts’s mandatory smallpox vaccination program in Jacobson v. Massachusetts.


Henry Leonard reports Wisconsin Supreme Court Rules Against “Dark Store Loophole” (‘With no dissent, court rules against big-box retailers’ tax reduction strategy’): 

The decision strikes a blow to the use of so-called “dark store” tax theory that has become common in Wisconsin and across the country. The method involves comparing the value of an operating big box retail store to long vacant, or “dark,” stores nearby. Pushed by big box retailers such as Lowe’s, Menards and Walmart — with the support of Wisconsin Manufacturers and Commerce, the state’s largest business lobby — dark store theory has been criticized by local officials and the public because it can take revenue away from municipalities and cause the property taxes on residents’ homes to increase.

….

In Lowe’s v. Delavan, the hardware store was challenging city assessments of its property in 2016 and 2017. The store, located in a “thriving retail area,” according to the city, was assessed at $8,922,300 in both years by Delavan’s assessor. The outside assessor Lowe’s hired valued the property at $4,600,000, nearly 50% less than the city’s value. An outside assessor hired by the city valued the property even higher than the city’s original assessment at $9,200,000.

The store appealed the assessment at the local board of review and then filed a lawsuit in Walworth County Circuit Court. The circuit court sided with the city, so Lowe’s appealed the decision. The appeals court also sided with the city, so Lowe’s appealed to the Wisconsin Supreme Court.

At issue in the lawsuit were the stores used by each assessor to come up with the market value. When a store hasn’t been sold recently, which in this case hadn’t happened because the property had operated as a Lowe’s since it was constructed in 2005, assessors find comparable stores in the area to come up with a value.

The assessor hired by Lowe’s had almost entirely used stores that were “dark,” vacant or considered distressed.