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Author Archive for JOHN ADAMS

Wisconsin State Journal: Whitewater custom bike builder will debut new line at national bike show

The Wisconsin State Journal has a fine story today, about the success of a local venture, exhibiting admirable creativity, industry, and individuality:

John Sotherland [of Bicyclewise] has been building his own custom, light-weight steel bicycles since 2006 with little marketing push.

That will change next week when the Whitewater bike shop owner officially launches his Sotherland Custom Bicycles line at the National Handbuilt Bicycle Show in Austin, Texas. Last year, the show drew 150 exhibitors and 6,000 attendees.

Via Whitewater custom bike builder will debut new line at national bike show.

State Aid to Cites, Schools Sure to Dry Up

Walker did offer a fuller rationale for his insistence on stripping public employees of their collective bargaining rights. “You’re going to see major cuts in local government,” he said of his upcoming budget, now set to be unveiled March 1. He argued that the only way he can ensure these cuts do not lead to “massive layoffs” is to give local governments and school boards the ability to make unilateral adjustments to pensions and other benefits.

Via Scott Walker stays the course at Day 5 press conference – Isthmus | The Daily Page.

Anti-Union Buffoonery in Whitewater, Wisconsin

I saw an odd ‘news item’ today, about a protest in Whitewater, that supposedly involved monitoring by the police. It was said to be a ‘heavy’ police presence, by the account that I saw. If the account’s true, then that presence is both foolish and wrong. If the account’s false, and there wasn’t really a heavy presence, then someone needs a dictionary, or a scale.

Imagine someone so hidebound, so reactionary, that he remarks uncritically that a simple union demonstration in Whitewater, Wisconsin, involving fewer than a dozen people, was met by a “a heavy police presence of Whitewater Police Department and Sheriff deputies.”

Ordinary and simple protests are — and typically stay — peaceful. Wisconsin is not a violent place; tens of thousands have protested at the Captiol building this week with nary a problem.

I would have nothing but contempt for the use of a ‘heavy’ police presence in this situation. It’s wholly disproportionate to the occasion. It’s a misuse of the police power, more suited to a backward southern community of generations ago than a modern Wisconsin town.

Protests and counter-protests like this do not require a heavy police presence.

Anyone who can’t see, or won’t say, as much is part risible, part reactionary, and all wrong.

Friday Comment Forum: Do you support Gov. Walker’s restrictions on public employee unions?

Here’s the Friday open comments post.

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 — Do you support Gov. Walker’s restrictions on public employee unions?

My answer’s no: government can be smaller — much smaller — without changes to Wisconsin’s long-established collective bargaining laws.

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.




Daily Bread for 2.18.11

Good morning,

Whitewater’s forecast calls for a sunny and windy day, with a high temperature of forty-five degrees.

In our schools, Lakeview School will hold a PTA rummage sale tomorrow, Saturday. It’s Coffee with the Principal at Lincoln School, proud home of the Leopards. At Washington School, it’s Soup-er Family Art Night.

It’s Whitewater’s Freeze Fest tomorrow, Saturday, February 19th at the Cravath Lakefront. Freeze Fest benefits the Special Olympics, and offers a fundraising Polar Plunge:

Cravath Lakefront Park – Map
341 S. Freemont St., Whitewater, WI 53190

Opening Ceremony & Plunging: Noon
Day of registration: 10 a.m. – 2 p.m.

Early Registration and Check-in
Friday, February 18 from 1 p.m. – 5 p.m. at UW-Whitewater University Center Concourse

Register Online

Avoid waiting in line, turn in pledges, get prime plunge times & pick up incentives EARLY!

Those who’d like to support the Special Olympics, but don’t want to take the plunge, can register as chickens:

Too chicken to Plunge? No problem! Register as a chicken, raise pledges, get your chicken shirt & incentives (and a special prize), then enjoy preferred plunge viewing in the “chicken coop!”

Polar Jam ’11 will be going on, too:

POLAR JAM-SKI AND SNOWBOARD COMPETITION

Saturday, February 19th, 2011

1:00pm Registration and Check-in Begins

Cravath Lakefront Parking Lot

341 S. Fremont Street Whitewater, WI 53190

262-581-5844

cbairdcoulter@hotmail.com

FACEBOOK: tinyurl.com/polarjam

There will also be a Chili Cook off with proceeds of the $5.00 registration fee split between the Special Olympics and Downtown Whitewater.

Why Scott Walker’s Not a Libertarian

This post’s title is a bit of a joke: it should be obvious that Gov. Walker’s not a libertarian. (He’s certainly not a Libertarian; he’s a career, and careerist, Republican.)

Libertarians advocate liberty, individual rights, limited government, and peaceful international relations.

Libertarians place liberty first. Walker talks little about individual rights, about freedom of the individual. He’s much for ‘budget repair,’ but little for individual liberty. Libertarians do not oppose the rights of workers to organize in unions. We may think unions ask too much, but it’s not a libertarian view that workers — including public employees — shouldn’t be able to form robust, collective bargaining units. Opposition to collective bargaining is a conservative, not libertarian, idea.

Limited government’s not the same as ‘budget repair.’ A libertarian would start with a plan for the proper size of government, and make necessary cuts — including layoffs — accordingly. Walker starts with so-called budget repair, and works to close a budget gap. That’s a status-quo goal.

‘Budget-repair’ is not really budget repair. Gutting bargaining rights, or adding additional political appointees in the place of civil service managers, isn’t about reduction of state government. It’s simply punitive, or the swapping of one kind of leader for another.

Budget cuts should fall first on those most privileged, and start at the top. Walker takes away collective rights from low-income workers as much as from well-compensated ones. That’s a moral mistake — to whom much is given, much is expected: leaders should take the first and greatest hits from any changes.

I’ve contended for cuts to Whitewater, Wisconsin’s budget, and I have argued that those cuts should come first at the top. (See, On Whitewater, Wisconsin’s 2011 Municipal Budget.)

Predictably, a striving, career bureaucrat will try to preserve projects important to people like himself, and ignore ordinary workers and the poor. A lot of empty slogans, dodgy claims, wrapped in a superficial, middle-brow presumption of enlightenment, do not serve our city well.

They won’t serve Wisconsin well, either.

Rushed legislation is bad legislation. Steamrolling federal health care — and here I refer mostly to the individual mandate — was a bad idea. (The individual mandate was worse than a bad idea — I think it is unconstitutional. The health care bill should not have had such a provision.)

Steamrolling the end of public-employees’ collective bargaining rights is, similarly, a bad idea.

Bad bills are rushed so that politicians can avoid public awareness (and mounting opposition) to ill-considered provisions.

Libertarians want fewer bills, with more time to consider them.

Libertarians take a long view, recalling the past. Walker’s proposals sweep aside much of settled employment law that need not be swept away. He has no long view: it’s all very short term. As it turns out, Walker’s no less willing to waste a crisis than Rahm Emanuel. He’s no less willing to exaggerate one, either.

A few years ago, commentators said libertarians were finished, that markets were the past, etc., etc. We were nonplussed. We’ve advocated the same sound policies through the years, and we come from a tradition that even predates the term ‘libertarian.’ We are a great and proud movement, and we’ll outlast a few empty bureaucrats and striving hangers-on.

We’re patient. We’re patient from the strength of good ideas, confidence in them, and a willingness to contend with opposing notions. We can take a long view.

Walker, by contrast, is a careerist in a hurry.

In Wisconsin or in Whitewater, ‘careerist in a hurry’ is sure to be a bad combination.

“Hey, You’re a Poop Head. Just Kidding.”

Children sometimes fall into the habit of saying something insulting, thereafter quickly disclaiming the remark by declaring that they were only teasing. It’s not an attractive habit, but it’s easily corrected.

It’s a habit less attractive, and even less credible, in adults. One assumes that an adult’s critical assessment, especially a serious and considered one, will not be one he blithely disclaims, or tries to counterbalance, without serious and considered reasons.

When the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel published a detailed, thorough, and comprehensive series on mental health abuses in Milwaukee County’s Behavioral Health Division, one would have assumed that their disturbing findings meant something to that paper’s editors. Patients in Peril was that well-documented series. One could be proud, for all one’s life, of a series like that. Justifiably, more than one publisher would have visions of an award or two from Patients in Peril.

I read each story in it, still ongoing, and posted on some of those stories. The chronicle of abuses, misconduct, negligence, lies, and injuries was both heart-breaking and infuriating. One could not escape the reasonable conclusion that then-County Executive Scott Walker simply didn’t care about those patients, and offered cover for the administrator on whose watch the abuses occurred. Walker acted slowly and timidly, lest bold action reflect negatively on his campaign for governor.

Those patients had lives and rights; Walker had a campaign.

Then again, one feels this way from reading and understanding the Journal Sentinel‘s Patients in Peril series. One wonders if the JS editorial board understood –even now understands — the series half so well as a common man.

That wonderment arises because on October 24, 2010 (months after the series began), the Journal Sentinel endorsed walker for governor. They endorsed not simply any man named Walker, but the one who stood by while so much suffering took place, and then worked so hard to ignore or weather the critical attention. Endorsing Walker required ignoring or deprecating the painful truths the paper’s reporters revealed.

A compromise, I’d guess, simply to preserve influence with the new governor.

That sort of influence is fleeting; enduring influence depends on principled independence, not expedient servility.

It does no good for a paper to reveal misconduct, lies, and bad policy, only to vitiate the significance of those revelations through an editorial that says, ‘pick him anyway’ or ‘we hope he ignores the controversy our story engendered.’

Having published a story, a newspaper has two principled choices: stand by it or retract it.

‘We said it, but we really didn’t mean it,’ isn’t among those principled alternatives.

Daily Bread for 2.17.11

Good morning,

Today’s forecast calls for a rainy but mild day, with a high temperature of fifty-one degrees.

In Whitewater today, the Common Council will meet at 6:30 p.m. The session agenda is available online.

Over at Daily Wisconsin, I’ve been posting on Gov. Walker’s over-reaching sincere proposal for union busting settling scores punishing perceived enemies budget repair .  He’s having quite the political honeymoon.

Wired reports on a Giant Solar Blast Headed for Earth:

The biggest solar blast in four years erupted late Monday, and it’s sending jets of charged particles right at Earth. The spray will spark bright auroras when it hits the magnetosphere in the next 24 to 48 hours.

A cluster of sunspots called Active Region 1158 unleashed the flare at 8:50 p.m. EST, Feb. 14 [1:50 a.m. UT, Feb. 15]. It was categorized as class X2.2, meaning it’s the most powerful flare since December 2006. The sunspots have continued to let loose smaller flares and may still be active now.

Odd, as it seems to have reached the governor’s office already.