FREE WHITEWATER

New Whitewater Archaeological Group: Friends of the Mounds

We have the great fortune in Whitewater of an archaeological site. A group has formed to help preserve that site.

Whitewater’s Landmarks Commission is

encouraging people to help maintain and preserve Whitewater’s only archaeological site, the Whitewater Indian Mounds Archaeological Park on Indian Mounds Parkway, by joining the Friends of the Mounds.

The first meeting is on Wednesday, January 20, at 7 PM in the Community Room at the Irvin L. Young Library. To learn more, we hope people will come to the meeting and bring their ideas and suggestion for events such as tours, speakers, fundraisers and work projects.

Reason: Luck and Virtue in America and Haiti

Over at Reason.com, Steve Chapman writes about the earthquake in Haiti, and about prosperity in America, in an article entitled, Luck and Virtue in America and Haiti: Understanding the impact of the Haitian earthquake. From his essay:

I look after the trees in my yard, making sure they get water, checking them periodically for signs of distress, and getting them treated as necessary. Such care may be virtuous on my part, but I can’t claim much credit for the trees around my house or my leafy suburban community. They owe their existence mostly to people who came before me.

There is no question that our society is superior to Haiti’s in almost everything that touches on human well-being. Americans need not feel bashful about acknowledging this fact. But we should resist the temptation to assume that because we on average are more productive, disciplined, future-oriented, and law-abiding than Haitians, we as individuals are somehow superior to them.

Our society achieves those qualities because it rewards them. If Haitian society did the same, Haitians would develop them as well. Placed in the appalling conditions that afflict most Haitians, we would not necessarily do better than they do, and we might well do worse.

Americans tend to regard themselves as masters of our own destiny, which is partly true and highly useful to believe. We often forget that most of what allows us to succeed was bequeathed by history: a stable, democratic government based on the rule of law; a dynamic economic system rooted in personal freedom and secure property rights; a tradition of self-reliance and individual responsibility; and a faith in our capacity for progress.

We can congratulate ourselves on preserving those assets. But it’s a lot harder to create such valuable commodities than to preserve them. It’s especially hard for people who come into this world with the cruel, overwhelming handicaps borne by the people of Haiti. While our past is a blessing, theirs is a burden.

Daily Bread for Whitewater, Wisconsin: 1-19-10

Good morning,

The weather forecast for today calls for areas of patchy fog, with a high of twenty-nine.

In the City of Whitewater today, there will be a meeting of the Whitewater University Tech Park Board at 3 PM at the municipal building.  Later, at 6:30 PM, there will be a meeting of the Common Council.

There will be a band concert at Lincoln (Elementary) School, home of the Leopards, at 2 PM and again at 6 PM.

The Wisconsin Historical Society notes that today is no ordinary day in Wisconsin, and surely not in nearby Fort Atkinson:

1939 – Chicken Plucking World Record

On January 19, 1939 Ernest Hausen (1877 – 1955) of Ft. Atkinson set the world’s record for chicken plucking. [Source: Guiness Book of World’s Records, 1992]

Daily Bread for Whitewater, Wisconsin: 1-18-10 (King Day)

Good morning,

It’s a foggy day for Whitewater, with a predicted high of thirty-one degrees.

At our high school, it’s the end of the quarter.  Tonight, there’s a music parents meeting scheduled at the high school for 6:30 PM.

All America knows it’s a federal holiday today, in honor of Martin Luther King, Jr.

From King’s The American Dream, delivered at Ebenezer Baptist Church, Atlanta, Georgia, on 4 July 1965:

….And so this morning I would like to use as a subject from which to preach: “The American Dream.” (Yes, sir)

It wouldn’t take us long to discover the substance of that dream. It is found in those majestic words of the Declaration of Independence, words lifted to cosmic proportions: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by God, Creator, with certain inalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.” This is a dream. It’s a great dream.

The first saying we notice in this dream is an amazing universalism. It doesn’t say “some men,” it says “all men.” It doesn’t say “all white men,” it says “all men,” which includes black men. It does not say “all Gentiles,” it says “all men,” which includes Jews. It doesn’t say “all Protestants,” it says “all men,” which includes Catholics. (Yes, sir) It doesn’t even say “all theists and believers,” it says “all men,” which includes humanists and agnostics.

Then that dream goes on to say another thing that ultimately distinguishes our nation and our form of government from any totalitarian system in the world. It says that each of us has certain basic rights that are neither derived from or conferred by the state. In order to discover where they came from, it is necessary to move back behind the dim mist of eternity. They are God-given, gifts from His hands. Never before in the history of the world has a sociopolitical document expressed in such profound, eloquent, and unequivocal language the dignity and the worth of human personality. The American dream reminds us, and we should think about it anew on this Independence Day, that every man is an heir of the legacy of dignity and worth….

You see, the founding fathers were really influenced by the Bible. The whole concept of the imago dei, as it is expressed in Latin, the “image of God,” is the idea that all men have something within them that God injected. Not that they have substantial unity with God, but that every man has a capacity to have fellowship with God. And this gives him a uniqueness, it gives him worth, it gives him dignity. And we must never forget this as a nation: there are no gradations in the image of God. Every man from a treble white to a bass black is significant on God’s keyboard, precisely because every man is made in the image of God. One day we will learn that. (Yes) We will know one day that God made us to live together as brothers and to respect the dignity and worth of every man….

And I tell you this morning, my friends, the reason we got to solve this problem here in America: Because God somehow called America to do a special job for mankind and the world. (Yes, sir, Make it plain) Never before in the history of the world have so many racial groups and so many national backgrounds assembled together in one nation. And somehow if we can’t solve the problem in America the world can’t solve the problem, because America is the world in miniature and the world is America writ large. And God set us out with all of the opportunities. (Make it plain) He set us between two great oceans; (Yes, sir) made it possible for us to live with some of the great natural resources of the world. And there he gave us through the minds of our forefathers a great creed: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men (Yes, sir) are created equal.”

The link above includes audio of the full sermon Dr. King delivered that day.

Press Release: John Adams to Run for Wisconsin’s 55th Congressional District

The federal government, in an effort to publicize the effects of pork stimulus spending, published a list of the spending projects by United States Congressional District. The publication was deeply embarrassing to the incumbent federal administration, as many of the listed Congressional districts were previously unknown to anyone in Wisconsin, or anyone else in America.

Most of the criticism involved the obvious charge that the federal government failed to track properly the billions of tax dollars likely wasted on federal projects.

Please — this isn’t a problem of new spending; it’s an opportunity for heretofore undiscovered congressional districts. I read that in Ohio, a citizen has decided to run for one of his state’s previously unknown districts, and no one from Ohio will blaze a trail that someone in Wisconsin cannot shamelessly follow.

Today, Friday, January 15th, 2010, I officially announce my candidacy for the 55th Congressional District of Wisconsin. As no one has previously been able to locate the 55th district, I might as well describe its boundaries for my prospective constituents. Could I suggest that the borders of the 55th district are identical with those of City of Whitewater, Wisconsin?

Admittedly, this makes the district smaller than others in Wisconsin, but I will not insult the United States Congress, the current Administration, or even the stodgy town fathers of Whitewater by suggesting that smaller is necessarily less effective.

I offer my imaginary district the same illusory and feeble promises that actual politicians offer — only in my case, you won’t have to suffer through the inevitable voter’s remorse.

MY TEN POINT PLATFORM

1. Abolish the Departments of Energy, Education, and Interior, right off the bat. I’d list more cabinet departments for abolition, but carting off so many thousands of whining and crying bureaucrats will take at least a year. The employees of these federal departments will have to be re-aquatinted with (if they ever knew of) normal life and productive employment. That’s no easy task.

2. I will propose a 90% reduction in pay for all representatives, senators, and cabinet officers. I’d keep the president’s salary where it is, but cut the vice presidential salary completely. (There’s just no way the vice president shouldn’t be paying America for the privilege of occupying that office.)

3. I will introduce a bill to restrict, to 5% of current levels, the funds for mailings from representatives and senators. It’s just federal campaign funding for incumbents, sending announcements that are transparent attempts to boost visibility for re-election campaigns.

4. I will urge the Attorney General, Eric Holder, to relocate the all trials of Islamic terrorists from New York to Whitewater, Wisconsin. I see several advantages for the people of the 55th Wisconsin Congressional District:

a. Money and Jobs! Having a trial in Whitewater will significantly boost construction and employment. Forget about some namby pamby Innovation Center — imagine a FEDERAL COURT HOUSE in Whitewater! That’s big money, my fellow citizens. No way a federal judge is going to work out of a conventional building — they have lifetime tenure, and live like royalty. Like kings, with robes, too. A federal court house costs a fortune, and it would be a fortune spent right here in River City Whitewater. No more begging for a few million, here or there– we’ll be rolling in dough when the federal government gets done building a court house.

b. Safety for America! Look, millions of New Yorkers are concerned about trying vile, mass-murdering foreigners in New York. I am sympathetic to their concerns. Who knows what attention and reprisal attacks a New York trial would invite on New Yorkers? They deserve better than that.

The 55th Congressional District of Wisconsin would not incur a similar risk — there’s no way murderous Islamic fanatics know where we are. We might as well be on Pluto, for all it matters. Last summer, during road construction, we even had signs up, trying to direct Americans to find our town! No foreigner who spent his life plotting revenge on America from a landscape that looks like a bombed-out sandbox is ever going to find us.

Everyone knows where New York is, and most know where Guantanamo Bay is. We don’t even know where we are.

5. PBS. It’s just got to go. NPR, too. NPR must be the third-biggest cause of traffic accidents, after drunks and deer. How can anyone stay awake to those soporific tones? The end of NPR would be like an espresso shot for the nation.

6. Speed limits no more! Let’s abolish any federal speed limits, and stop federal pressure on states to comply with a speed limit (lest the state lose federal funding). Millions of Germans are driving really fast, in a place that’s just a cramped, musty terrarium compared to America. Eisenhower spent lots of taxpayer money on an interstate road system, and he didn’t do it to make the snail America’s new national symbol. Go, Driver. Go!

7. NASA. They’re doing okay with robot probes to Mars, but spending so much money on travel in Earth orbit, with such mediocre ship designs, is just an embarrassment. It’s time to turn human exploration over to the American private sector, and get NASA out of the human exploration gig. If we’re trying to have cool-looking spaceships and female astronauts in skimpy uniforms — and we damn well should be — NASA’s a poor option.

8. Offsets of Federal Funding. Sometimes, the federal government spends money on a town, or on a state (for the benefit of a town), only to find that the town’s spending other money in ridiculous ways. Why spend federal tax dollars, in effect, to subsidize dumb local projects? I would propose a reduction — in the following amounts — of any federal government spending on a town, or of a state (for the benefit of a town), for these reasons —

a. A reduction in federal funding of $100,000 for each day a municipal official spends public time on so-called ‘comprehensive planning.’

b. A reduction in federal funding of $250,000 for each day a municipal official spends public time on a federally-funded project without completing a prior, funded project.

The official will also have to write on a chalkboard, a hundred times over, the sentence “I will only waste taxes on one silly idea at a time.”

c. A reduction in federal funding of $500,000 for each and every time a municipal official travels to another city and rides around instead of working in his actual jurisdiction.

If the municipality receives insufficient amounts to cover these offsets, the federal government should require each city politician and bureaucrat to work washing dishes in the nearest federal employee cafeteria. They should have to eat the cafeteria’s food, too.

9. Campaign Finance Laws — None! Speak as you want, spend as you want to support the speech of others. Insiders have been skirting unfairly enforced laws, while others have been hit with fines and lawsuits. There shouldn’t be financial limits on political speech.

10. The Second Amendment — I support it. It’s as much a lawful provision as any other part of the constitution.

Bonus Platform Position, because my prospective constituents are worth more than an ordinary ten-point plan:

TID Spending Illegal. Time to put an end to local officials who want to feel big by hawking wasteful projects through taxpayer money. If small-town bureaucrats want to act like Donald Trump, they should do it with their own money. I’d also suggest they move to New York, and take lessons from that developer himself.

Those who have wasted tax incremental district funds should be incarcerated.

I wouldn’t, however, ever, ever, ever be so cruel as to suggest that they should serve their sentences in ordinary federal prisons.

Other federal prisoners shouldn’t have to put up with self-promoting bureaucrats yakking day and night about their dedication to the community when their schemes are mostly a dedication to their own sense of importance on somebody else’s dime.

The federal administration need not close Guantanamo Bay, ever – we can fill its space with both fanatics and with foreign terrorists.

I promise my fellow citizens, above all else, a level of imaginary dedication modeled after the service of actual politicians and bureaucrats from Whitewater, Wisconsin.

Walworth County Genealogical Society’s Show & Share

There’s much charm in a small town, and a rural county, wholly free of politics, ideology, policy, and planning. Some things are wonderful all on their own, not because they’re grand, but because they’re simple, sincere, and enjoyable.

Here’s something just like that, from a press release of the Walworth County Genealogical Society:


WALWORTH CO. GENEALOGY SOCIETY SHOW & SHARE

The Walworth County Genealogical Society will have their popular “Show & Share” program on Tuesday, February 2 at 1:00 PM, at the Community Centre, 826 E. Geneva Street, Delavan.

The afternoon will begin with a brief business meeting. Then everyone will have the opportunity to share a story about their family history or to show an item that might be a family photo, Bible, scrapbook, newspaper article or an antique. You might want to try and stump the group with a “What is it?” object. The meetings and programs are open to the public.

The Walworth County Genealogical Society Library at the Matheson Memorial Library, Elkhorn will return to the regular schedule and be open on Tuesday, January 19 from 10:00 AM to 3:00 PM.

For additional information, please call the Society’s Vice President at 275-2426.

Top Maricopa officials testify in apparent Arpaio investigation

In Arizona, a federal grand jury has been hearing testimony about the conduct of Maricopa County sheriff Joe Arpaio, self-proclaimed ‘toughest sheriff in America.’

He’s been a disgrace to America’s centuries-long tradition of the rule of law. Some have celebrated Arpaio for his anti-immigrant stand, but he’s threatened the civil liberties of citizens and non-citizens alike. (That’s why county employees he’s allegedly harassed and threatened are testifying.)

Why blog about a grand-standing officer from far away, who thought he could build a reputation on the backs of immigrants, while abusing both immigrants and citizens?

Quite a few in our town can guess why, and it is an indelible disgrace that no number of excuses will wash away.

Perhaps one thinks: “I’ll be a hero, and this will be the great achievement of my career.” I don’t know.

I do know that officers of all ranks, including Arpaio, are not, and must not be, above the law.

Exercise of limited authority conferred under law is only a burden to the mediocre or mendacious.

One can’t say how the grand jury proceedings in Arizona will end; one hopes that a better, more just community is the result.

See, Top Maricopa officials testify in apparent Arpaio investigation.

For more on Arpaio, see Sheriff Joe’s New Low.

Daily Bread for Whitewater, Wisconsin: 1-14-10

Good morning,

It’s another warm day for Whitewater — partly cloudy skies, but a high of thirty-eight degrees.

The Wisconsin Historical Society’s ‘On This Day in Wisconsin History’ has an entry for today that just might be among its best:

1867 – Harry W. Newton Born

On this date war hero Harry W. Newton was born in Superior. The son of James and Matilda Newton, a pioneer family in Superior, Harry grew up on the city’s east side and attended public schools. He spent three years at Racine College. Prior to the outbreak of the Spanish-American War, he enlisted in Company I, 33rd Wisconsin Volunteers. After his enlistment, he actively recruited for the company and he became its captain.

After his experience in Puerto Rico during the Spanish-American War, Newton decided to pursue a military career. He enlisted in the 34th United States Volunteers which took him to the Philippines. In Luzon, in August 1900, he was promoted to captain. In February 1901 Newton was appointed Assistant Superintendent of Police in Manila.

Upon his return home, he was awarded a gold medal by the Wisconsin Legislature, in recognition of heroic conduct the Philippines. Harry W. Newton retired from military service in 1920 with the rank of lieutenant colonel. He lived in Coronado, California until his death in August of 1946.

I’d never heard of Harry Newton until reading this entry, and most Wisconsin residents probably hadn’t either. A cynic might contend that Newton’s entry appears only because this was an uneventful day in our history.

I disagree. Men like this made our history, far more than any number of supposedly important people, politicians, people of influence, and so-called dignitaries.

Wisconsin belongs to no single group, but if any could claim pre-eminence, it would be common (yet truly uncommon) people like Newton.

On Second Thought, Maybe We Do Need an Innovation Center in Town…

I have had doubts about a multi-million dollar Innovation Center and Tech Park for Whitewater, Wisconsin. The costs are certain and rising, the benefits uncertain, and the city’s planning shifts from one Big Thing to another, like a series of teenage fads.

Here’s what the Innovation Center is supposed to look like:

 

 

Impressive, isn’t it?

Perhaps I should reconsider my opposition. I saw a post at the website BoingBoing that really gave me pause, and made me re-think my doubts about an innovation center. Their post, entitled “Levitating Cat” persuaded me to reconsider.

Here’s a photo of the cat:

 

 

All these years in Whitewater, and I have never seen a cat that could levitate. I like cats, and have blogged about them, but I have not once seen a telekinetic feline.

Not once.

I’m stunned. Somewhere on earth, perhaps far from Whitewater, there are cats that can fly with the power of their minds.

In Whitewater, at the groundbreaking for our Innovation Center, nearly a dozen humans needed shovels just to move a little bit of dirt. More concerning: these were supposed to be Whitewater’s super-smart, visionary humans. Even they needed shovels.

Meanwhile, there’s a place somewhere where cats can levitate, and presumably move other objects, too. What if it’s a communist country? These cats could be Reds, from North Korea, perhaps.

North Korea is a brutal, oppressive hell, terrible to its own people, and a threat to its neighbors. It would be far more dangerous if that regime had a force of brainy, but evil, cats.

Whitewater may be facing an unfavorable feline levitation gap.

There is no time to lose – we need a bigger Innovation Center to help teach Whitewater’s cats to fly. If we were prepared to waste spend eleven million on a center before, we should be ready to commit at least twice as much now.

The existing proposal is probably too small. At least the entire first floor would need to be turned over to a litterbox, and there would need to be adequate space for cat toys and scratching posts. We’ll have to double the size from the current proposal, at a minimum.

He who hesitates is lost – time to plan and spend big, really big.

Whitewater’s Confusion of Private Credentials and Public Office

From enduring opinion, one often hears that small towns are places of folksy and humble people. Small-town America is meant to be unpretentious. We should be clear with ourselves: America is meant to be unpretentious, a rejection of the tyranny of status and title so much a part of the Old World.

And yet, and yet… one finds that even in a small town in south Wisconsin, one will sometimes encounter a proud, vain declaration of credentials and accomplishments. The website of my town, Whitewater, Wisconsin, is just such a place. On our town’s website, Whitewater’s city manager proudly lists his experience, academic credentials, and awards. (It seems many officials listed on the municipal website have this sort of bio; the city manager’s is an exemplar.)

Here’s a screenshot from the City of Whitewater website, along with the text below. (Two quick remarks — (1) I have a clear legal right to display the screenshot, and (2) the photo and text are both from the city bio.)

Screenshot:

Text:

Kevin Brunner has served as City Manager since 2004. Previous to joining the City of Whitewater, Kevin served as city administrator for the Wisconsin communities of De Pere, Monona and Saukville. Kevin has also served as Assistant to the Mayor in Appleton and Assistant to the County Administrator for Kenosha County.

In 2007 Kevin was Named Wisconsin City/County Manager of the Year by WCMA, and in 2008 he was recognized by ICMA (International City and County Management Association) for 25 years of service to local government. In addition to his duties as City Manager, Kevin serves on the Wisconsin Alliance of Cities Board of Directors, Walworth County Economic Development Alliance Board as Vice President, Downtown Whitewater Inc. Board of Directors, the Carthage College Advisory Committee and Alumni Council, and Treasurer of the Whitewater University Technology Park Board of Directors.

Kevin graduated Magna Cum Laude from Carthage College and received a Masters in Public Administration from Michigan State University. Kevin also attended the Senior Executive Institute at the University of Virginia.

If a screenshot should be worth a thousand words, then one now knows all about City Manager Brunner one might ever need know. One sees in this only the vanity of a bureaucrat.

It’s common for private websites to list academic credentials, etc.; it’s rare for governing officials to do so. You might want to know where your private doctor went to school. There’s a reason, though, that these displays are rare in public life, especially in small-town America: governance is not a matter of credentials and past accomplishments.

Holding the office of city manager, one needs no showy recommendation or credentials, only the lawful exercise of authority conferred from one’s fellow citizens.

Not only does this recitation of academic honors and awards (!) add nothing to one’s political authority, it’s shamefully vain and un-American in a public official.

Does Brunner expect particular deference for this? I don’t know; I’ll leave it to others to decide for themselves if that might be so. (I know that there’s a way of rationalizing all this by saying: “Well, it’s to show the quality of the officials Whitewater is able to land.” To which I would reply: “My point exactly, apart from any credentials, and none to the town’s credit.”)

Look around, at Whitewater, Wisconsin. Where does this gentleman think he holds office? This is not Versailles; we are better off that it’s not. Brunner is a public official in a small Wisconsin town. Dignity comes from the office, conferred and held humbly under law, not a showy and vain catalog of the officeholder’s academic credentials, etc.

How many people in this town are poor, illiterate, troubled, or desperate? Too many. They’re residents and citizens, just as much as Brunner. Are they expected to approach him on ‘little cat feet,’ grateful to be in the presence of the learned and accomplished man himself? He does not occupy a private role, but a public office, the authority of which is conferred from citizens as citizens. The accomplishments that matter don’t come from Brunner’s résumé, but from our forefathers, who built a great republic.

Some of the listed accomplishments are too funny — Brunner doesn’t simply tell you where he attended school, but that he graduated magna cum laude. If he had graduated cum laude, would he be less the city manager? If he graduated summa cum laude, would he be more so?

Other cities list biographies for their leading officials, but they usually emphasize public policy goals in the statements, with little or no emphasis on education, etc. Recitations of accomplishments aren’t personal to the official, but policy-oriented.

From Madison, see the bio for Mayor Dave Cieslewicz, ending with, “Born in 1959 and raised in West Allis, Wisconsin, Cieslewicz is a graduate of the University of Wisconsin in Madison. About once a month you can find him playing Sheepshead with friends at the Memorial Union. He lives in the Regent Neighborhood on Madison’s west side with his wife Dianne and their dog Calvin.”

From Milwaukee, see the bio for Mayor Tom Barrett, ending with, “Tom Barrett grew up on Milwaukee’s West side, graduated college and law school from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, was a member of both the Wisconsin State Assembly and State Senate, and was elected to five terms in the U.S. House of Representatives. Barrett and his wife, Kris, live in Milwaukee’s Washington Heights Neighborhood with their four children: Tommy, Annie, Erin and Kate.”

Short, simple, plain: What one hopes for in a public official.

There’s also no humor, warmth, or sense of the light-hearted in the written bios on the City of Whitewater website. It’s all oh-so-serious, dry, and self-important. (Perhaps the photo accompanying the screenshot is meant to be light-hearted; it seems, instead, incongruous and discordant when paired with the text.)

Credit where credit is due: I don’t think I could write a better parody of a city manager’s self-importance than the one on the City of Whitewater website.

Daily Bread for Whitewater, Wisconsin: 1-13-10

Good morning,

The forecast for Whitewater calls for a mostly sunny day, with a high of thirty-four degrees.

I know of no municipal, public meetings scheduled in the City of Whitewater today.

In our schools, there’s a continuing mitten drive at Washington (Elementary) School. At Whitewater High, there’s a student assembly, a cookie cafe, and the Booster Club meets at 7 PM tonight.

Wisconsin State Journal: Prosecutor used charges to leverage civil suit, complaint alleges

One of the supposed advantages of living in Wisconsin is that the small size of communities, and supposed open, forthright character of citizens, will prevent the kind of unfair pressure and influence that officials may exert in huge, crowded cities. Perhaps not.

From Dane County, the Wisconsin State Journal reports on allegations against a prosecutor for using his authority to drop criminal charges to influence a defendant to settle an unrelated civil case.

Prosecutor used charges to leverage civil suit, complaint alleges

Here’s a concise description of the situation:

The state agency that regulates lawyers is investigating whether a Dane County prosecutor improperly offered to drop criminal charges against a town of Oregon man in exchange for settling a civil lawsuit against his neighbors.

In a letter late last year, the Office of Lawyer Regulation said it was investigating a complaint by John Dohm against Dane County Assistant District Attorney Paul Humphrey. Dohm alleges that Humphrey improperly took Dohm’s neighbors’ side in the lawsuit, turning their legal dispute over water on their properties into two criminal cases.

The first case, a single charge of disorderly conduct that took three days to try, was dismissed in March when a jury acquitted Dohm after deliberating for less than an hour. The second case, alleging bail jumping, was dismissed a month later.

The prosecution file for the two cases grew to more than 700 pages, and Dohm, owner of several businesses including Start Renting magazine, said he spent $48,000 defending himself.

“What I experienced with Paul Humphrey should not be experienced by any other citizens of our county,” said Dohm, 55. “His abuse of power, his intimidating tactics and his willingness to throw the weight of the district attorney’s office behind an unrelated case is unconscionable.”

Is this the first time prosecutor Humphrey has been accused of misconduct? No, not at all — it’s the third:

Dohm’s complaint is at least the third allegation of misconduct investigated by the lawyer-regulation agency against Humphrey, who has been an assistant district attorney in Dane County for two decades. Humphrey’s controversial and aggressive tactics were the subject of a four-day Wisconsin State Journal series in 2007.

The Wisconsin Supreme Court is considering possible discipline against Humphrey in a vehicular homicide case in which he was found to have withheld evidence from a defense attorney and lied to a judge. The defendant in that case also was acquitted.

In rural Whitewater, Wisconsin, and across the state, one hears politicians, officials, and bureaucrats insist that they are public servants, community treasures, and tribunes of the people. They may describe themselves as they wish; the description neither alters their character nor convinces any save the gullible.

If there were a way to transform human nature and disposition so easily, we’d make saints of ordinary men simply by calling them councilmen or Congressmen.

The people most likely to believe in that magical transformation are the officeholders themselves. The rest of us have no reason to adopt that foolish view.