Author Archive for JOHN ADAMS
Free Markets, Libertarians
Libertarian Party: Wisconsin Government Micro-Management Fails
by JOHN ADAMS •
The Libertarian Party of Wisconsin has issued a press release that highlights how Wisconsin has taken the wrong approach toward business growth —
11/12/2010
Contact: Ben Olson, Chair, 608-381-6572, chair@lpwi.org
Jim Maas, Vice Chair, 715-212-7007, vicechair@lpwi.org
[Rothschild] Harley-Davidson Inc. has rejected the state’s offer of up to $25 million in tax credits aimed at keeping manufacturing jobs in Wisconsin, preferring to make its own management decisions without the strings that came with the offer from the Wisconsin Department of Commerce.“Wisconsin is being taught the limits of political control over private industry,” observed Jim Maas, Vice Chair of the Libertarian Party of Wisconsin.
“Libertarians call for the Legislature to focus on governance and allow business owners to make business decisions. Wisconsin’s businesses are over taxed and over regulated,” said Maas. “The next session of the Legislature should focus on regaining Wisconsin’s advantages for employers; not just the large, influential ones, like Harley, but all of them. Our government should not be picking winners and losers in the economy.”
Libertarians believe that the only economic system compatible with the protection of individual human rights is the free market; therefore, the fundamental right of individuals to own property and to enjoy the rewards of their just earnings should not be compromised.
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Science/Nature
Baby Sea Lion Born In Australia’s Adelaide Zoo (Video)
by JOHN ADAMS •
Laws/Regulations, Liberty
National Opt-Out Day Called Against Invasive Body Scanners | Wired.com
by JOHN ADAMS •
Air travelers, mark your calendar. An activist opposed to the new invasive body scanners in use at airports around the country just designated Wednesday, Nov. 24 as a National Opt-Out Day. He’s encouraging airline passengers to decline the TSA’s technological strip searches en masse on that day as a protest against the scanners, and the new “enhanced pat-downs” inflicted on refuseniks….
“The goal of National Opt Out Day is to send a message to our lawmakers that we demand change,” reads the call-to-action at OptOutDay.com, set up by Brian Sodegren. “No naked body scanners, no government-approved groping…”
….The TSA has asserted that the machines cannot store pictures, but security personnel at a courthouse in Florida were found to not only have saved images but shared them among colleagues in order to humiliate one of their coworkers….
Scientists have also expressed concern that radiation from the devices could have long-term health effects on travelers.
Via National Opt-Out Day Called Against Invasive Body Scanners | Threat Level | Wired.com.
Planning, Walworth County
WCEDA Tabs Another Executive Director
by JOHN ADAMS •
Well, that didn’t last long — as the post headline from July needs updating already. They’ve made another change at the top, with Mike Van Den Bosch replacing Doug Wheaton.
Then: WCEDA tabs executive director.
There was much official boasting this summer about finding someone credentialed, but that wasn’t the problem. Planning like this, that’s the problem.
The Walworth County Economic Development Alliance has been a bad idea for a long time; the best development would be for it to stop wasting money and shut down.
Comment Forum
Friday Comment Forum: Are We More or Less Free?
by JOHN ADAMS •
Here’s the Friday open comments post.
Today’s suggested topic — are we more are less free today, as against a decade, or a generation, ago?
Are we freer today?
Here’s my take:
Yes, of course, if one looks at times when whole groups of people were denied liberty. From that vantage, we’re far better off today than 1810, 1910, or even 1960.
Yet, recently developing risks to freedom are considerable. Both government officials and major institutions often oppose the empowering technologies that allow common people to express themselves. It all seems so disorderly and chaotic — and challenging — to those who started their careers before these technologies existed. They expected a different world, one of deference (nearly to the point of servility), and it’s not the world in which they now work. They’re ill-suited for the new climate, but rather than recognize their own limitations, they work to limit speech and action to prevent discussion of those limitations.
There’s a pose in all this, that father knows best, and that ordinary Americans are simply unruly children. It’s nonsense, and just a conceit to which mediocre managers and officials cling to comfort themselves: It’s all so hard, people are so savage, and we’re misunderstood.
There’s a generational problem, but not only a generational problem. Some of these officials are men in their fifties, or older, who came of age believing in horse carts, only to find that Americans came to adopt automobiles, so to speak.
What do you think? Freer, less free, about the same?
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.
Have at it.
Liberty
Reason.tv: Are We Really Less Free Today? Sheldon Richman on the State of Liberty
by JOHN ADAMS •
Here’s the description accompanying the video:
Reason.tv sat down with Richman during the recent Libertopia festival in Hollywood, California to discuss the mixed bag that is the state of liberty today. The nanny state and regulatory state may be growing, but Richman points out that many people, from blacks to women, are freer than they used to be. Richman also highlights the liberating power of technology, which breaks down barriers to creative expression and information.
Approximately 6.30 minutes.
Shot by Hawk Jensen and Zach Weissmueller; edited by Alex Manning.
more >>
Cats
Friday Catblogging: How Cats Drink
by JOHN ADAMS •
For Friday’s catblogging, here are stories and videos about how cats drink. At Wired, Lisa Grossman writes that High-Speed Video Reveals Cats’ Secret Tongue Skills:
High-speed videos reveal the strange technique and delicate balance of physical forces cats use to lap milk from a bowl.
Unlike dogs, who use their tongues as ladles to scoop water into their jaws, cats pull columns of liquid up to their mouths using only the very tips of their tongues.
“Cats are just smarter than dogs from the point of view of fluid mechanics,” said civil engineer Roman Stocker of MIT.
At Ars Technica, in a post entitled Cats use gravity, inertia, gecko-like process to lap up cream, Casey Johnston elaborates on the technique:
….they get water into their mouths using an almost gecko-like process: their tongue tips shoot out, contact the water surface, adhere to it, and pull up to draw the water into a column that moves into their mouths thanks to sheer inertia. Cats then take advantage of their head orientation and gravity to hold that water in a cavity in their palate, just behind their front teeth. They swallow after somewhere between three and 17 laps.
According to the researchers, it’s the cats’ lack of cheeks, and the resulting inability to create suction, that restricts them to lapping. Still, cats have managed to adapt pretty admirably, and the authors note that further study of their tongues could be helpful in developing robots with flexible parts and biomechanical models for understanding the behavior of soft tissues.
See, also, How Cats Lap: Water Uptake by Felis catus.
Note that following the same principle, larger cats like cheetahs lap more slowly:
Daily Bread
Daily Bread for Whitewater, Wisconsin: 11-12-10
by JOHN ADAMS •
Good morning,
Whitewater’s forecast calls for a chance of showers and a high temperature of fifty-three degrees.
There are no municipal meetings in the city today. I’ll post on Whitewater’s municipal budget — a tepid, status quo effort if ever there were one — over the weekend.
The Wisconsin Historical Society recalls that on this day in 1836, Governor Dodge signed Wisconsin’s first bill into law. It was a particularly bad one, a mistaken regulation, ignorant and disrespectful of the political tradition of the country.
On this date territorial governor, Henry Dodge, signed the first law passed by the Wisconsin Territorial Legislature. The law prescribed how the legislators were to behave, and how other citizens were to behave towards them. For example, it authorized “the Assembly to punish by fine and imprisonment every person, not a member, who shall be guilty of disrespect, disorderly or contemptuous behavior, threats, in the legislature or interference with witnesses to the legislature; also to expel on a two thirds majority in either house a member of its own body…” This did not keep the members from vociferous arguments, fist fights, or even shooting one another (see Odd Wisconsin on the entry in This Day in Wisconsin History for February 11th)
Could a city, today, lawfully have a provision like this? No, not close to this, regarding citizens. That hasn’t stop some from trying versions of this effort. That’s a post, though, for another day.
Weird Tales
Deer In Bar Causes Damage and Panic in Ohio (Video)
by JOHN ADAMS •
CNN describes their video aptly: “A deer walks into a bar…”
Deer In Bar Causes Damage And Panic In Ohio VIDEO.
For more on crazy deer, see Flying Deer In Knoxville, Iowa: Animal Leaps Police Car (VIDEO). more >>
Film
Unstoppable — Film Reviews by Joe Morgenstern – WSJ.com
by JOHN ADAMS •
Sounds promising…Tony Scott directed Denzel Washington in the Taking of Pelham 123, and that was a fine, innovative remake, I thought. Film critic Morgenstern writes:
Who knew that Unstoppable would be sensational? Talk about well-kept— and welcome—surprises. Tony Scott’s latest thriller turns out to be pure cinema in the classic sense of the term. It’s a motion picture about motion, an action symphony that gives new meaning to the notion of a one-track mind.
Denzel Washington and Chris Pine race to stop a locomotive loaded with toxic cargo in this action movie directed by Tony Scott.
The premise is simple to the point of primal—a runaway freight train hurtling through Pennsylvania with a load of lethal chemicals and no one in the locomotive. On the same track, heading toward it, is another freight train pulled by a locomotive with the movie’s co-stars at the controls: Denzel Washington is the veteran engineer, and Chris Pine is the rookie conductor….
Via Unstoppable, Client 9, Morning Glory | Film Reviews by Joe Morgenstern – WSJ.com. more >>
Uncategorized
La Crosse Tribune: Home with Foot-Deep Piles of Rats to be Demolished
by JOHN ADAMS •
A lost cause even as a fixer-upper:
A western Pennsylvania home will be demolished because it is so overrun with rats that they measure about a foot deep in spots….Officials will erect a perimeter around the home to try to prevent any rats that survive [extermination] from going into neighboring hopes.
Best of luck – I’ve seen Willard, so I can guess how all this ends…
Crime, University
Wisconsin State Journal – On Campus: A third hate crime reported at UW-Whitewater
by JOHN ADAMS •
At the Wisconsin State Journal, reporter Deborah Ziff writes about reports of a third hate crime at UW-Whitewater:
Three cars owned by African-American students at UW-Whitewater were vandalized this week, in what university officials are describing as the third hate crime incident on campus this semester.
The owners of the vehicles notified police that the tires were slashed and “KKK” was written in spray paint on the doors and hoods. The cars were parked in residence hall lots and the incidents happened between 11 p.m. Monday and 10 a.m. Tuesday.
