FREE WHITEWATER

Author Archive for JOHN ADAMS

Recent Tweets, 2.20 – 2.26

@ChrisRickertWSJ: Forget Koch, focus on voter ID bill http://dlvr.it/HhwTj It’s not Koch, but collective bargaining, freedom of association
26 Feb

Dog, Cat, and Rat? FREE WHITEWATER http://bit.ly/f1dWIL How brief clever video is example of libertarian hope of free expression, creativity
25 Feb

The Mind of a Police Dog – Reason Magazine http://bit.ly/e8h11G The importance of understanding dogs in order to help people
25 Feb

Poll presented as split of Walker supporters, opponents actually shows 56% support collective bargaining, 32% don’t http://bit.ly/fCPM12
24 Feb

MT @PolitiFactWisc: Testing Gov. Walker’s claim that “almost all” protesters are now from out of state. False. (http://tinyurl.com/46w4859)
23 Feb

Beat Sweetener Alert™ Walker in middle of perfect storm http://bit.ly/fFiuaP
23 Feb

PolitiFact Wisconsin: Gov. Walker falsely contends he campaigned on curtailing collective bargaining http://bit.ly/gUkJJV #wiunion
22 Feb

Someone In Egypt Ordered a Pizza For the Protesters in Wisconsin — http://bit.ly/fQBAm1
20 Feb

MT @MSpicuzzaWSJ: Charles Woodson of Packers honored 2 “stand tgthr w/ wrkn families of Wisconsin & organized labor” http://bit.ly/ifOq6z
20 Feb

Creating a Free State: Filmmaker Christina Heller on Building a Libertopia in New Hampshire

One day we’ll have one in Wisconsin, too.

Tired of waiting for a libertarian United States of America? Maybe the answer is to start small.

Enter Libertopia, a documentary by director Christina Heller and producer Craig Goodale that follows three guys’ attempt to make one state free. Heller sat down with Reason.tv’s Ted Balaker to discuss the Free State Project, why she admires libertarians, and how a persuasive band of Free Staters just might have transformed her from a liberal into a libertarian.

The Free State Project was proposed by a Yale PhD student in 2001, and the goal was to convince 20,000 pro-liberty activists to commit to moving to New Hampshire in hopes of returning the state to its “Live Free or Die” roots. So far, the project reports that there are more than 10,000 participants, and almost 900 “early movers” have already settled in the Granite State.

The documentary follows one man who is walking across the country to raise awareness about the Free State Project, another who already moved to New Hampshire and works as an advocate for medical marijuana patients, and a Ron Paul-inspired teenager who decides to leave his friends and family in California to live in New Hampshire.

Interview by Ted Balaker. Shot by Zach Weissmueller, Hawk Jensen, and Alex Manning. Edited by Weissmueller.

Approximately 9 minutes.

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The Mind of a Police Dog

Over at Reason Magazine, Radley Balko has a fine article entitled, The Mind of a Police Dog. The subtitle’s a verity: how misconceptions about dogs can lead to abuse of humans.

I’ve written before about use of police dogs. They require careful and consistent handling. Small departments, like one in Edgerton that briefly had a dog, are unsuited to them. In that case, the dog bit both an officer from another department and an office worker.

See, Update 3: On Edgerton, Wisconsin’s Police Dog (Doggone and Dog Gone!) and Small-town Bureaucratic Persistence in Edgerton, Wisconsin.

These dogs are meant to assist officers, and they’re working dogs, not pets, and not ornaments to an official’s pride.

Small departments don’t have the time to manage properly a working dog. Worse, as was true in Edgerton, local officials are often so ignorant and selfishly stubborn that they insist all is well when it manifestly isn’t.

Those with oversight responsibilities have a duty of diligence to review requests from officials. That means more than simply asking, “Do you want this?” and accepting “You betcha, I do” as an answer. Sadly, much citizen oversight involves thinking that supporting leaders is the same as supporting the field and community.

Not always – one could ask an officer and office worker, from Edgerton, who now know, all too well, the difference.

Friday Comment Forum: Dog, Cat, and Rat?

Here’s the Friday open comments post, and it’s something different. I’ve embedded a video of a man who has a pet dog, cat, and rat, each of whom is happy in the company of the other two. He has a message behind all this: the hope that different kinds of people can get along.

No elite, no guiding hand, no message from a high tower — all that’s unnecessary, and often destructive, to creativity in a free society. He didn’t need to fit in, echo a message, or fall in line — there’s no merit in any of that, anyway.

He came up with the idea on his own, and that’s the strength, beauty, and charm of liberty: a common man or woman with an idea, and the ability to express it. Along the way, he’s making other people happy.

Want to see the libertarian hope for America? Men and women like this are our hope (whatever their own politics may be — that doesn’t matter).

I’ve added a poll, as a new part of the comments post, based on a suggestion; readers can comment through the poll on the text box below.

Today’s suggested topic — Have you ever had a combination of pets like this — different ones that coexist happily?

I once had a hamster-cat combination that coexisted happily indeed.

The use of pseudonyms and anonymous postings is, of course, fine. Although the comments template has a space for a name, email address, and website, those who want to leave a field blank can do so. Comments will be moderated, against profanity or trolls.

Otherwise, have at it.

I’ll keep the post open through Sunday afternoon.






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Fox News War on Libertarianism?

Fox Business Channel is still significantly libertarian, but Fox News does seem to have turned.

No matter:

Fox News pretended to support true conservatism [libertarians] for a while. But when they discovered that libertarians and conservatives alike will never respect their [Fox’s] neo-conservative tendencies, they tried to convince everyone else libertarians probably didn’t taste too good anyway. I have bad news for you, Fox News. Everyone loves grapes.

Via Fox’s war on libertarianism | ASU News | The State Press | Arizona State University.

Daily Bread for 2.25.11

Good morning,

Here in the Whippet City, we’re in for a slight chance of snow with a high temperature of twenty-nine degrees.

There’s no school today. Play responsibly.

The Wisconsin Historical Society recalls that a famous newspaperman dies on this date, in 1969:

1969 – Dewey D. Dunn Dies
On this date Dewey D. Dunn died. Dunn served as managing editor of the Capital Times newspaper in Madison for nearly 40 years. He arrived in Madison in 1918 to study journalism at the University of Wisconsin. He also worked for the Madison Democrat and the Milwaukee Sentinel before joining the Capital Times in 1920. [Source: Bishops to Bootleggers: A Guide to Madison’s Resurrection Cemetery, pg. 228]

Unlike many bloggers, I don’t dislike the press. On the contrary, a strong press is a healthy press — I would prefer they kept a greater independence of, and scrutiny over, public officials. Many political problems grow worse — far worse, often — when they fail to do so.

Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism: Despite alternatives, Superior refinery using dangerous chemical

Reporter Lauren Hasler of the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism (WisconsinWatch.org) has a story this morning about Murphy Oil’s continued use of hydrofluoric acid, a dangerous chemical kinow to cause explosions and resulting injury, despite the availablity of alternative substances.

Hasler reports that

Federal safety inspectors at the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) in 2008 cited Murphy Oil for 35 violations – including 33 classified as “serious” and one as “willful,” which came with the largest proposed fine of $63,000, according to a Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism review of OSHA records. When the company agreed to pay a $179,100 penalty, the willful violation was relabeled as “unclassified.”

At least 10 of the violations dealt with the alkylation unit, where hydrofluoric acid is used as a catalyst to refine high-octane gasoline.

The full and well-documented report is available on the WisconsinWatch.org website.

Via Despite alternatives, Superior refinery using dangerous chemical.

Daily Bread for 2.24.11

Good morning,

Today’s forecast for the Whippet City calls for a cloudy day, with a high temperature of thirty-four degrees.

It’s Spirit Day at Whitewater Middle School, and Market Day at the high school.

Wired has a intriguing video posted about how animals like the sandfish lizard swim through sand.

The team found sine-wave-like movement allows the lizard, and their [model] robot, to push forward in sand, but creating computer models for the experiments proved problematic. Simulating all of the tiny sand grains required a lot of money to purchase time on powerful computers. So, the team performed the same experiments using 3-millimeter-wide glass beads instead of sand.

“We wanted something easy to simulate that had some predictive power. We got lucky, because it turned out [the lizard and robot] swim beautifully in the same way through larger glass beads,” [Georgia Tech’s Daniel] Goldman said.



Via Video: Secrets of Swimming in Sand Revealed | Wired Science | Wired.com. more >>

Lament of the Chicken Littles



There are lot of people who are very sure that protests in Madison are proof of a disordered society. They’re quick to wail and cry that the sky is falling, and that these protests are the end of Polite and Civilized Society as Understood by Polite and Civilized People.

They sky’s not falling; society’s doing just fine.

For all these tens of thousands of protesters at the Capitol building, it’s not been disorder, but a Hayekian spontaneous order. People are able to organize quickly, develop plans and arrangements, without any central planner. There’s no violence in any of this, either — Wisconsin’s residents are a peaceful people.

For a few tired reactionaries, watching a cherished, stultifying control slip away, this must be disturbing. To them, those who protest seem insincere, unreasonable, out of line, etc.

There’s irony in this – just two years ago, this is how the Tea Party seemed to the left. Now this is how these protesters seem to the right.

People are rational: there wouldn’t as many protests in society if long-term incumbents, career bureaucrats, and defenders of the status quo had done the jobs they keep insisting they’ve done.

They haven’t, and that’s one solid reason there are protests. Rather than admit how poorly they’ve done, town squires in places like Whitewater cry out: “Please behave, you inappropriate, rude, impertinent, unreasonable ruffians!”

Look around, and one sees an old order of self-important officials, and a lapdog press, passing away. That order’s fading– those who are part of it represent a faction in permanent decline. America returns to her past, one of robust expression and vigorous debate.

People are very sharp, and don’t need to rely on a few ‘people of influence’ to guide them.

On the way to political obscurity, though, these stodgy few will sound less like confident Americans, and more like a particularly nervous children’s character.

More about Atlas Shrugged, Part I

Here’s a broad description of the upcoming film Atlas Shrugged, hitting theaters in April:

“The whole theme of the movie is, really, human evil,” says Brian O’Toole, the screenwriter behind Atlas Shrugged Part I, the feature adaptation of Ayn Rand’s influential novel. “And human evil springs from good intentions.”

O’Toole and producer Harmon Kaslow tell Reason.tv what viewers can expect to see in the movie, which covers the first of three sections in Rand’s novel.

“This movie really comes across as a very empowering movie for women,” says Kaslow. “It’s about a woman who takes on a lot of forces working against her.”

The movie is set in a dystopian near-future, and the story follows Dagny Taggart, a railroad executive who faces a crisis when one of her trains is derailed. While Dagny tries to improve the railway by collaborating with Hank Rearden, an entrepreneur who’s developed a new kind of metal, her brother James Taggart conspires with government officials and crony capitalists who are bent on taking Rearden down.

“To me, this was the underdog story,” says O’Toole.

Behind the Scenes:



Adapting the Epic:



And, previously posted on FREE WHITEWATER, the trailer for Atlas Shrugged, Part I:



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