FREE WHITEWATER

Boo! Scariest Things in Whitewater, 2021

Here’s the fifteenth annual FREE WHITEWATER list of the scariest things in Whitewater. (The 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 20142015, 20162017, 20182019, and 2020 editions are available for comparison.)

The list runs in reverse order, from mildly scary to truly frightening.

10. Feedin’ Wildlife.  I didn’t know — but local officials claim to know — that there’s a problem with residents feeding wildlife. It’s so great a problem that they propose to pass an ordinance against the feeding of feral creatures. These officials must believe that, in a city of low-wage workers and high child poverty, there are residents who have so much time and money that they’re feedin’ WILD, WILD, WILD! animals all day.

Now I walk through our beautiful city daily, and not once have I seen the shocking feeding of wild animals by BAD, BAD, BAD! people.

I would offer that there needs to be a BIG, BIG, BIG! reason for Whitewater to spend even a moment on this proposal. If this city can show, for example, that the Beast of Bray Road or a Sasquatch is enjoying resident-provided meals, well, then perhaps it’s worth considering a few, narrowly-tailored restrictions…

Otherwise, we have enough ordinances — and real problems that no ordinances could address — to last a lifetime.

A first reading of the proposal will take place this November.

9. Climate. We are only one small city, and climate change is a global problem, but our weather (expressed over a long period as climate) does seem to have changed in Whitewater over the last generation. Even small efforts at mitigation are a worthy exercise.

8. Herbicide How ’bout, as a lakes restoration plan, the City of Whitewater dumps artificial herbicide into those very lakes that flow into a creek through the city and beyond, simply to speed that process up a bit?  The original plan  — part ludicrous and part lazy — has been abandoned. It never should have been a plan. See Reporting About Artificial Herbicides in Whitewater, Wisconsin.

7. Passivity. Officeholders running for re-election who let opponents beat the stuffing out of them without reply shouldn’t be officeholders. 

6. Cat’s Got Their Tongues. When there’s repeated institutional failure at UW-Whitewater or the UW System, the very men paid to talk suddenly turn mute. See From UW-Whitewater’s Administration, Too Many and Too Few Words (“There is a oft-asserted contention that during litigation an institutional defendant should prudently make ‘no comment.’ That’s false, although it’s often what non-lawyers speciously contend lawyers should do. On the contrary, there is a range of replies (in word and deed) that an institution, its spokesmen, and its lawyers can make when faced with serious claims of abusive and unethical behavior. ‘No comment’ is what those who are indolent or indifferent say.”)

5. Speech Restrictions. The populists want government to ban speech they don’t like, and to require private publishers to carry speech they do like. No.

4. Personal Responsibility. See Jane Jacobs with Useful Advice on Responsibility (for Whitewater, Richmond Township, Delavan, Etc.)(“In Whitewater and other small towns, bold and brash populists sometimes talk about private liberty only moments later to insist that public institutions owe them and their children the teaching of virtues and habits (hard work, personal responsibility, fortitude) these very parents have sadly left untaught.”) and The ‘Personal Responsibility’ Crowd Wants a Handout (“These WISGOP men talk about individual liberty, but they’re not prepared to accept the consequences of choice in a free society. Instead, these able-bodied, populist men want a government handout from others while exercising free choice.  That’s not liberty; it’s state-subsidized dependency. These populists, Trumpists one and all, talk about personal responsibility but will not accept the consequences of employers’ decisions on workplace protocols.”)

3. Toxic Positivity.  Worse than last year.  Hundreds of Facebook posts on how the district is doing AWESOME! WOW! but an annual state of the district presentation that discussed not a single major measure of academic performance.  

2. Gaslighting. An expression derived from the 1944 film Gaslight, about a man who tries to convince his wife that what she sees plainly isn’t really happening. While one may be a booster, and others may be toxically positive, it’s more brazen still to tell people that what they see and read isn’t, in fact, seen and read. As bad a boosterism is, and as bad as toxic positivity is, gaslighting — contending reality isn’t reality, so to speak — is worse.

When a school district, for example, tells you that what you read isn’t what you read, and what their district did isn’t what it did, they’ve issued a challenge against truth itself.  See Whitewater Schools Use Pandemic Funds for Artificial Turf.

If there’s a school board member or superintendent who’d like to deceive in this way, well, this isn’t the district, and this isn’t the city, in which to make those claims with impunity. Somewhere else, perhaps, but not here.

1. The Empty Chair. As was true last year, still true this year: “Sad more than scary, truly. Whitewater still awaits what she most needs:  ‘Whitewater needs her own version of Dorothy Day – someone committed to a lifetime of charitable work on behalf of this community without flinching or favoritism. Someone here, who will hold fast come what may, unyielding, beginning and ending each day in the place of her devoted efforts.’ See Waiting for Whitewater’s Dorothy Day

There’s talk about doing what one can, where one can. Few cities need those devoted efforts more than we do. All the elected officials, appointed officials, town notables, and libertarian bloggers together offer less than one charitable person who would devote her compassion to this city.

As always, best wishes for a Happy Halloween.

Daily Bread for 10.31.21: American Populists Hungarian Autocrat

Good morning.

Halloween in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 51.  Sunrise is 7:29 AM and sunset 5:47 PM for 10h 18m 24s of daytime.  The moon is a waning crescent with 22.9% of its visible disk illuminated.

 On this day in 1999,  Yachtsman Jesse Martin returns to Melbourne after 11 months of circumnavigating the world, solo, non-stop and unassisted.


Elisabeth Zerofsky reports How the American Right Fell in Love With Hungary (‘Some U.S. conservatives are taking a cue from Prime Minister Viktor Orban — how to use the power of the state to win the culture wars’):

For one week this summer, Fox News beamed the face of Prime Minister Viktor Orban of Hungary into the homes of Tucker Carlson’s 3.2 million viewers. In a two-tiered library adorned with dark wood and the Hungarian flag, Carlson sat across from the prime minister in Budapest with an expression of intense concentration, though he evinced little familiarity with the internal affairs of Hungary. The trip was hastily arranged after Orban agreed to the interview: Carlson dined at the prime minister’s office the evening before the broadcast, and earlier in the week, he was taken in a military helicopter to a tightly controlled area along the country’s southern border, generally off limits to journalists, in the presence of a Hungarian minister. There, Hungary became the idealized backdrop for Carlson’s habitual preoccupations: Thanks to a barbed-wire fence, Hungary’s border area was “perfectly clean and orderly,” free of the “trash” and “chaos” that mark other borders of the world. Consequently, “There weren’t scenes of human suffering.” He did not bring up the fact that civic groups have repeatedly taken the Hungarian government to court for denying food to families held in immigration detention centers.

Carlson’s trip to Hungary was prompted, in part, by a text message from Rod Dreher, a conservative writer. Dreher, who spent the spring and summer there on a fellowship and helped Carlson secure the interview with Orban, understands, as the activist Christopher F. Rufo recently observed, that Carlson doesn’t report the news for American conservatives; he creates it. Bringing Carlson to Budapest was meant to persuade Americans to pay attention to Orban’s Hungary. The effort appeared to be successful: The following week, several Republican senators told Insider, an online news publication, that Carlson’s broadcasts from Budapest had given them a favorable opinion of Orban. In September, Jeff Sessions, the former U.S. attorney general, went to Budapest for a panel discussion on immigration, and Mike Pence traveled there to address a meeting on family and demographic decline, with Orban in the audience. Next year, the Conservative Political Action Conference, an influential annual gathering of conservatives in America, will be held in Budapest.

America First is foreign Autocracy First.


How America’s Oldest Drum Factory Has Stayed In Business For Over 160 Years:

Seven generations of one family have been making drums at Noble & Cooley since 1854. The Massachusetts company started off manufacturing toys, but is now known for their high-end snare drums made from a single plank of wood.

Daily Bread for 10.30.21: Facebook Revelations Show a What a Dog-Crap Company It Is

Good morning.

Saturday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 58.  Sunrise is 7:27 AM and sunset 5:48 PM for 10h 20m 58s of daytime.  The moon is a waning crescent with 32.8% of its visible disk illuminated.

 On this day in 1938, Orson Welles broadcasts a radio adaptation of H. G. Wells’s The War of the Worlds, convincing some listeners that Martians were invading the planet.


 Joshua Benton writes In the ocean’s worth of new Facebook revelations out today [10.25.21], here are some of the most important drops:

It is, a Nieman Lab investigation can also confirm, a lot to take in. Protocol is doing its best to keep track of all the new stories that came off embargo today (though some began to dribble out Friday). At this typing, their list is up to 40 consortium pieces, including work from AP, Bloomberg, CNBC, CNN, NBC News, Politico, Reuters, The Atlantic, the FT, The New York Times, The Verge, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, and Wired. (For those keeping score at home, Politico leads with six stories, followed by Bloomberg with five and AP and CNN with four each.) And that doesn’t even count reporters tweeting things out directly from the leak. I read through ~all of them and here are some of the high(low?)lights — all emphases mine.

Facebook’s role in the January 6 Capitol riot was bigger than it’d like you to believe.

From The Washington Post:

Relief flowed through Facebook in the days after the 2020 presidential election. The company had cracked down on misinformation, foreign interference and hate speech — and employees believed they had largely succeeded in limiting problems that, four years earlier, had brought on perhaps the most serious crisis in Facebook’s scandal-plagued history.

“It was like we could take a victory lap,” said a former employee, one of many who spoke for this story on the condition of anonymity to describe sensitive matters. “There was a lot of the feeling of high-fiving in the office.”

Many who had worked on the election, exhausted from months of unrelenting toil, took leaves of absence or moved on to other jobs. Facebook rolled back many of the dozens of election-season measures that it had used to suppress hateful, deceptive content. A ban the company had imposed on the original Stop the Steal group stopped short of addressing dozens of look-alikes that popped up in what an internal Facebook after-action report called “coordinated” and “meteoric” growth. Meanwhile, the company’s Civic Integrity team was largely disbanded by a management that had grown weary of the team’s criticisms of the company, according to former employees.

….

If you think Facebook does a bad job moderating content here, it’s worse almost everywhere else.

This was a major theme in stories across outlets. The New York Times:

On Feb. 4, 2019, a Facebook researcher created a new user account to see what it was like to experience the social media site as a person living in Kerala, India.

For the next three weeks, the account operated by a simple rule: Follow all the recommendations generated by Facebook’s algorithms to join groups, watch videos and explore new pages on the site.

The result was an inundation of hate speech, misinformation and celebrations of violence, which were documented in an internal Facebook report published later that month.

“Following this test user’s News Feed, I’ve seen more images of dead people in the past three weeks than I’ve seen in my entire life total,” the Facebook researcher wrote.

“The test user’s News Feed has become a near constant barrage of polarizing nationalist content, misinformation, and violence and gore.”

….

The kids fled Facebook long ago, but now they’re fleeing Instagram too.

Also: “Most [young adults] perceive Facebook as place for people in their 40s or 50s…perceive content as boring, misleading, and negative…perceive Facebook as less relevant and spending time on it as unproductive…have a wide range of negative associations with Facebook including privacy concerns, impact to their wellbeing, along with low awareness of relevant services.” Otherwise, they love it.

….

Apple was close to banning Facebook and Instagram from the App Store because of how it was being used for human trafficking.

From CNN:

Facebook has for years struggled to crack down on content related to what it calls domestic servitude: “a form of trafficking of people for the purpose of working inside private homes through the use of force, fraud, coercion or deception,” according to internal Facebook documents reviewed by CNN.

The company has known about human traffickers using its platforms in this way since at least 2018, the documents show. It got so bad that in 2019, Apple threatened to pull Facebook and Instagram’s access to the App Store, a platform the social media giant relies on to reach hundreds of millions of users each year. Internally, Facebook employees rushed to take down problematic content and make emergency policy changes avoid what they described as a “potentially severe” consequence for the business.

But while Facebook managed to assuage Apple’s concerns at the time and avoid removal from the app store, issues persist. The stakes are significant: Facebook documents describe women trafficked in this way being subjected to physical and sexual abuse, being deprived of food and pay, and having their travel documents confiscated so they can’t escape. Earlier this year, an internal Facebook report noted that “gaps still exist in our detection of on-platform entities engaged in domestic servitude” and detailed how the company’s platforms are used to recruit, buy and sell what Facebook’s documents call “domestic servants.”

Last week, using search terms listed in Facebook’s internal research on the subject, CNN located active Instagram accounts purporting to offer domestic workers for sale, similar to accounts that Facebook researchers had flagged and removed. Facebook removed the accounts and posts after CNN asked about them, and spokesperson Andy Stone confirmed that they violated its policies.


War Of The Worlds – Complete 1938 Radio Broadcast:

Daily Bread for 10.29.21: Nichols with Seven Key Points about the Conservative Populists

Good morning.

Friday in Whitewater will be windy with occasional rain and drizzle and a high of 54.  Sunrise is 7:26 AM and sunset 5:50 PM for 10h 23m 34s of daytime.  The moon is a waning crescent with 43.3% of its visible disk illuminated.

 On this day in 1929, the New York Stock Exchange crashes in what will be called the Crash of ’29 or “Black Tuesday,” ending the Great Bull Market of the 1920s and beginning the Great Depression.


 In a Twitter thread, Tom Nichols offers seven observations about the conservative populists, each spot on:  

The people who talk about a “civil war” and independence from the USA have no real idea what it would mean and don’t really want it. They want their lives as they live them now, but with some sense that they’ve settled scores with people who look down on them. /1

They don’t really want to know what life would be like without the US infrastructure. They want everything they have now, but with some sort of authority figure who says “It’s okay to be terrible. We went and hurt those other folks. Oh, and here’s some cash for your pain.” /2

Now, I suppose there are people who are just too stupid to understand that “secession” means “You have to fix all the highways that have that blue shield on them,” and “you’ll have to use MAGA Bucks instead of the dollar,” but most of them really aren’t that stupid. /3

They mean “Civil War” as “I want approval to advocate terrorizing people I think are judging me.” These same people, of course, *relentlessly* judge their own fellow citizens and think of them as monsters. Their “equality” is limited to “equality for people like me.” /4

At some point, maybe there will be enough broken families and friendships that some of these folks will get off the ledge. Most won’t. They will, like their predecessors in 1865 and 1965, go to their graves thinking they were wronged. /6

There is nothing you can do about this except to lower the temperature by not engaging with the same rancor. Be calm, civil, and outvote them. I wish there were better answers. But this isn’t going to change via rational argument or appeals to conscience. /7x

The seventh point offers sound advice during this national conflict. One should — to be effective — carry on during this conflict methodically, calculating at each moment in support of one’s position. The conservative populists talk about common sense, but their demeanor is all umbrage and rampage. (See along these lines Who Rampaged Better?)


“Witchcraft” Jazz Standard Cover by Robyn Adele Anderson:

Friday Catblogging: Cats’ Spooky Eyes

Helen Czerski writes Behind the Spooky Eyes of Cats (‘Like scarier nighttime predators, cats have slit pupils that help them to judge distance and ambush their prey’):

Halloween is approaching, and a whiff of ghoulish menace is squatting casually in the darkness of London’s evenings. Ghostly figures, silhouettes of witches and jagged glowing teeth loom over me as I walk home, but it’s their eyes that I notice most: bright orbs watching me through a pupil that is often a dark vertical slit. That slit seems like a warning, a signal that whatever is behind it is out to get you. But owners of slit-shaped pupils aren’t rare in our world: Along with crocodiles and vipers, our cute fluffy pet cats all have them. So why are some eyes like this, and are they really the ones to be afraid of?

….

A cat—like its fellow nighttime predators—effectively has a narrow pupil in the horizontal direction but a wide pupil in the vertical direction. So anything along the horizontal plane is in beautiful sharp focus, and the image is more blurred in the vertical direction. But at the right focal length, the image will be perfectly in focus in both directions, and that gives the cat an extra way of judging distance. 

An ambush predator needs to be absolutely perfect at distance measurements, because it only has one chance to pounce. The slit gives the cat a second way of doing this (the other is the stereo images from both eyes, which is how humans judge distance); the two complement each other to produce pinpoint accuracy. 

Daily Bread for 10.28.21: Sen. Nass Whines to No Effect

Good morning.

Thursday in Whitewater will see occasional rain with a high of 54.  Sunrise is 7:25 AM and sunset 5:51 PM for 10h 26m 11s of daytime.  The moon is a waning gibbous with 53.5% of its visible disk illuminated.

 Whitewater’s Community Development Authority meets at 5:30 PM

 On this day in 1726, Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels is published.


 Kelly Meyerhofer reports UW System will follow federal COVID-19 vaccine mandate for employees:

The University of Wisconsin System announced Wednesday that it will comply with an executive order issued by President Joe Biden more than six weeks ago requiring federal contractors to be vaccinated against COVID-19.

“We cannot afford to jeopardize millions of dollars in federal contracts, which are integral to our academic and research missions,” interim System President Tommy Thompson said in a statement. “Therefore, we intend to be in compliance with the federal executive order on vaccine mandates.”

The System’s announcement that it would comply with the mandate comes on the last possible day for employees to get their first dose of the Moderna vaccine and be fully vaccinated by Dec. 8, the deadline Biden set in the order. Those receiving the Pfizer vaccine have until Nov. 3 to get their first shot and those getting the single-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine must do so by Nov. 24.

Biden’s Sept. 9 order has compelled colleges across the country to announce vaccine requirements, even in some conservative states where governors and legislators oppose vaccine mandates.

A large share of employees are already vaccinated at the System’s two research universities, with 95% having received the shot at UW-Madison and 82% at UW-Milwaukee. Unvaccinated employees are required to test weekly, an option that isn’t allowed under the federal order. Employees can request a medical or religious exemption under the order.

….

Sen. Steve Nass, R-Whitewater, blasted the UW System for announcing its intention to follow the federal order. The longtime and vocal UW critic said the System was “trying to hide details of this decision for as long as possible to avoid potential litigation.”

Nass has previously asked legislative leaders to sue the System over what he describes as “excessive” COVID-19 policies, which include mask mandates and mandatory testing for unvaccinated individuals. His calls have not resulted in a public response from Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, R-Rochester, and Senate Majority Leader Devin LeMahieu, R-Oostburg.

So Thompson follows Biden’s mandate, and Nass whines to no effect. Here’s an exclusive clip of Thompson reacting to Nass’s concerns:

See also Nass Digs In, Steve Nass: Troll-King in Autumn, Nass, Again, and Thompson Dares Nass in Front of 5.8 Million People.

(Nass, by the way, does not live in Whitewater proper, and his own proposals for the UW System would harm both UW-Whitewater and the city’s economy.)


Driver faces giant tornado in Texas:

Daily Bread for 10.27.21: Rebecca Kleefisch’s Republican ‘Mercenaries’

Good morning.

Wednesday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 58.  Sunrise is 7:24 AM and sunset 5:53 PM for 10h 28m 49s of daytime.  The moon is a waning gibbous with 63% of its visible disk illuminated.

The Technology Park Board meets at 8 AM.

 On this day in 1961, NASA tests the first Saturn I rocket in Mission Saturn-Apollo 1.


 Patrick Marley reports Rebecca Kleefisch says Republicans need to ‘hire mercenaries’ to win 2022 race for Wisconsin governor:

MADISON — Rebecca Kleefisch over the weekend told Republicans they needed to “hire mercenaries” and engage in “ballot harvesting” to help her win next year’s race for governor — a practice she has said she wants to ban.

In a Saturday speech to Republicans in Door County, Kleefisch said the methods she needs to use to win bother her so much she will need to wash herself with steel wool. If her campaign strategy works, she said she would quickly sign legislation overhauling how elections are conducted.

“We execute with excellence, we will beat them at their own game. And the next morning, we all wake up, take a shower with steel wool, and then, after swearing in in January … (the Legislature) is going to pass all these bills again, and then I’m going to sign them all. And we will never do elections like that again, but this is how we win,” Kleefisch said, according to audio of her speech obtained by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

Whitewater may see some of Kleefisch’s mercenaries next year.  While RebeccaPAC and other outside groups have been heavily involved in recall effort in the Mequon-Thiensville School District (election 11.2), Kleefisch’s PAC made endorsements for local races last April, including an endorsement for the superficially non-partisan Whitewater school board

That April contest was part of a statewide wave, and in any event, the incumbent did nothing to help himself (“One expects an incumbent to advance his record confidently and defend himself thoroughly against criticism. People aren’t inclined to do for a politician what he won’t do for himself. Advancing and defending are not assurances of re-election, but their absence makes defeat likely. It has been a tumultuous year; passivity is not a winning response to tumult”).

Elected candidates can (and often should) honestly take clear, ideological or partisan positions, but in doing so they cannot expect to be treated as non-partisan and without ideology. One can expect 2022 to be different — there are reasons to oppose candidates of similar ideology next year.


U.S. Consumers Are Feeling Confident:

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Daily Bread for 10.26.21: Wisconsin as a Testbed for Politically-Motivated Violence

Good morning.

Tuesday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 54.  Sunrise is 7:22 AM and sunset 5:54 PM for 10h 31m 29s of daytime.  The moon is a waning gibbous with 71.9% of its visible disk illuminated.

 Whitewater’s Common Council meets at 6:30 PM.

 On this day in 1944, the Battle of Leyte Gulf ends with an overwhelming American victory.


Wisconsin is beautiful, yet she has also been a testbed for ugliness: gerrymandering, false claims about the 2020 election, and populists’ efforts to dominate schools districts with PAC money and outside consultants.

There is, however, something worse than all these: Wisconsin as a testbed for politically-motivated violence.

 Charles Homans reports Kyle Rittenhouse and the New Era of Political Violence (‘What brought the teenager and so many others to the streets of Kenosha, Wisconsin equipped for war?’):

They called themselves citizens or patriots, and the demonstrators and media often called them militias, but it would have been most accurate to call them paramilitaries: young-to-middle-aged white men, mostly, armed with assault-style rifles and often clad in tactical gear, who appeared in town that evening arrayed purposefully around gas stations and used-car lots. Their numbers, based on video footage and firsthand accounts, may have run anywhere from the high dozens to the low hundreds, but no official estimates were made. Law-enforcement officers seemed to have broadly tolerated, and occasionally openly expressed support for, their activities, despite the fact that many of them were violating the same emergency curfew order under which dozens of demonstrators were arrested.

One of the most extensive records of their appearance was made by Kristan T. Harris, the Milwaukee-based host of a streamed talk show called “The Rundown Live” (“covering news and conspiracy that your local news won’t”), a sort of junior cousin of Alex Jones’s conspiracist Infowars media empire. Harris was also a prolific livestreamer, a frequent presence at protests and other happenings in the Upper Midwest. An advocate for armed citizens’ groups (though not actually a gun owner himself), Harris had been at plenty of assemblies where military-style hardware was ostentatiously carried. “It’s a penis-measuring contest — let’s call it what it is,” he told me. But it was immediately clear to him, in Kenosha, that something had shifted: “When people say, ‘Hey, take your positions, they’re coming our way’ — that, to me, sounds like war.”

A handful of figures, rifles in hand, were visible in silhouette on the roof of a car dealership. “We’ve got militia on the roof here, and it’s pretty neat,” Harris told his viewers. “They’re here to protect the local neighborhood and buildings, they said.” Out front, two young men stood sentry with rifles in front of a silver sedan. “Get my good angle,” one of them said, leaning nonchalantly against the driver’s side door. He smiled. “I’m Kyle, by the way.”

Kyle Rittenhouse, 17, who lived just across the state line in Illinois, arrived in Kenosha the night before. The next day, he joined several other young men in the defense of the dealership where Harris encountered him. Less than two hours later, he would shoot three men, killing two and wounding the third, and transforming himself, in an instant, into a Rorschach test.

….

Donald Trump had labored for several years to make a national boogeyman out of antifa, the left-wing anti-authoritarian movement, directing law-enforcement resources toward it that had been dedicated to investigating right-wing extremism and threatening to designate it a terrorist group, despite his F.B.I. director’s belief that it was really “more of an ideology than an organization.” In the antifa heartland of Portland, Ore., the upheavals following George Floyd’s death brought members of the movement together with Black Lives Matter activists in clashes with the police that would continue for months. In other cities, the streets were filled with white demonstrators who at least lookedlike antifa. These developments offered an end run around the messy racial optics of a law-and-order campaign that directly targeted Black protesters.


‘Bomb Cyclone’ Snuffs Out California’s Massive Dixie Wildfire:

Daily Bread for 10.25.21: Late in the Day Even for Sociability

Good morning.

Monday in Whitewater will be rainy with a high of 52.  Sunrise is 7:21 AM and sunset 5:55 PM for 10h 34m 08s of daytime.  The moon is a waning gibbous with 79.9% of its visible disk illuminated.

 Whitewater’s Urban Forestry Commission meets at 4:30 PM, the Community Development Authority Seed Capital Committee meets at 5:00 PM, and the Whitewater Unified School District’s board meets at 6 PM in closed session and 7 PM in open session.

 On this day in 1812, the American frigate, USS United States, commanded by Stephen Decatur, captures the British frigate HMS Macedonian.


In small-town Whitewater, most local officials advance either boosterism (excentuating the positive to spur development and promote officials’ own actions) or sheer positivity (insisting that conditions are amazing! awesome! wow!). Boosterism uses Sinclair Lewis’s Babbitt as an instruction manual, and positivity takes Voltaire’s Candide as a guidebook. Both approaches are objectionable, as they ignore actual human need in favor of diversionary happy talk. See Boosterism’s Cousin, Toxic Positivity and Tragic Optimism as an Alternative to Toxic Positivity.

(Much of FREE WHITEWATER is a critique of the boosterism — the accentuation of the positive without regard to real conditions — of some in Whitewater before, during, and after the Great Recession.)

There is, however, a different approach to the intense political turmoil of our time that hopes to rely on simple human sociability to overcome factional animosity. (It’s clear the approach is about overcoming political tension, not poverty or individual distress.)

 Writing in the New York Times, Episcopal priest Tish Harrison Warren writes We need to talk about the weather:

The nation is coming apart. The world is in turmoil. We need to chat about the weather.

I mean this sincerely.

A recent poll by the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics showed that 75 percent of Biden voters and 78 percent of Trump voters believe that their political opponents “have become a clear and present danger to the American way of life.” A majority of Trump voters (52 percent) and a large minority of Biden voters (41 percent) support splitting the country into two along blue/red lines.

David French points out in his newsletter that when you survey these same people on actual policies, the hard lines blur. A majority of Trump voters express support for the nuts and bolts of President Biden’s infrastructure and reconciliation plan, for example. French notes that our “mutual loathing is based more on emotion than policy.”

“We are dealing with a spiritual and moral sickness,” he writes. “Malice and disdain are conditions of the soul.”

To learn how to love our neighbors we need cultural habits that allow us to share in our common humanity. We need quiet, daily practices that rebuild social trust. And we need seemingly pointless conversation with those around us.

The great urban activist Jane Jacobs wrote about the social function of casual conversations and interactions: greeting your grocer, passing a pleasantry with a neighbor, playing peekaboo with a toddler at the crosswalk.

“Most of it is utterly trivial,” she wrote in 1961’s “The Death and Life of Great American Cities,” “but the sum is not trivial at all.”

“The sum of such casual, public contact at a local level,” she continued, “is a feeling for the public identity of a people, a web of public respect and trust.”

This advice is serious, and far removed from the superficial approaches of boosterism and positivity: it is grounded in natural human sociability. 

And yet, and yet, a difficult question presents itself: is our national conflict too far advanced to allow for an approach of natural sociability to reconcile political differences?

Any caring person would hope it is not too far advanced; some of them would hope yet feel this is a faint hope.

The most likely resolution of this national political conflict is for one side to settle the dispute lawfully but decisively.

We are, it seems, past the point of reconciliation even through natural sociability.


La Palma volcano — drone footage reveals massive river of lava:

Daily Bread for 10.24.21: The Otters of Singapore Offer a Lesson for Whitewater, Wisconsin

Good morning.

Sunday in Whitewater will be rainy with a high of 51.  Sunrise is 7:20 AM and sunset 5:57 PM for 10h 36m 49s of daytime.  The moon is a waning gibbous with 86.5% of its visible disk illuminated.

 On this day in 1946, a camera on board the V-2 No. 13 rocket [from White Sands Missile Range in White Sands, New Mexico] takes the first photograph of Earth from outer space.

The first photos taken from space were taken on October 24, 1946 on the sub-orbital U.S.-launched V-2 rocket (flight #13) at White Sands Missile Range. Photos were taken every second and a half. The highest altitude (65 miles, 105 km) was 5 times higher than any picture taken before.

Marina Lopes reports Otters are taking over Singapore:

SINGAPORE — Standing on a manhole ­cover in downtown Singapore, dodging double-decker buses and motorcycles, Marjorie Chong sniffs the air and listens for squeaks. “Do you hear that?” she asks.

Chong is searching for otters.

Pollution and deforestation drove away Singapore’s otter population in the 1970s. But as the country cleaned up its waters and reforested land in recent years, otters came back in full force, integrating into urban spaces and learning to navigate one of the world’s most cosmopolitan cities.

Today, to the annoyance of some and the joy of others, the island is home to more than 10 otter romps, or families.

In the Marina Bay area, known for architecturally audacious ­hotels and for one-bedroom apartments that sell for $1.8 million, otters bop in the water and the crunch of fish bones echoes along the boardwalk. Using drainpipes as highways, the carnivorous mammals traverse the city, sometimes popping up in rush-hour traffic, or racing through university campuses.

Otters pushed out of the local rivers and bays by rival families dig homes between buildings. They visit hospital lobbies and condominium pools, hunting for koi fish and drinking from fountains. New families fight for access to food and shelter, in battles that are covered by the local papers and dissected online.

….

Last year, after a string of otter attacks on koi ponds, one critic wrote a letter to the Straits Times newspaper to call for the animals to be shot with rubber bullets. The demand proved divisive, and even Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, who encountered a family of otters frolicking in the yard of the president’s official residence, took a stand. Singaporeans “must find ways to coexist and thrive with our local flora and fauna,” he wrote in a Facebook post.

For otter experts, the critics are missing the point. Higher fencing and sturdier gates are a small price to pay to keep the otters out of areas where they are not welcome.

Singapore’s otters are the envy of researchers around the world, who sometimes work for years without seeing an otter in the wild. They are also testament to Singapore’s reforestation and ­anti-pollution efforts.

While there have been rare otter attacks in Alaska (River otter attacks baffle authorities in Anchorage, Alaska), satirized here at FREE WHITEWATER (in Killer Otters and Toilet Rats), these animals are almost always harmless to humans. (A people that was truly afraid of otters would be among the most timid, and pathetic, of peoples on the planet. We Americans are, by contrast, a robust nation.)

Singapore is a place with fewer liberties than America, but even their leaders can see that they “must find ways to coexist and thrive with our local flora and fauna.”

Here in Whitewater, Wisconsin — a place of abundant natural beauty — one might have assumed her local government had a proper appreciation of flora, fauna, and residents.

Sadly not.  Dumping large amounts of artificial herbicide into lakes in the middle of town that feed into a creek through and beyond the town was a plan (1) ludicrous, (2) lazy, and (3) unnecessary to the restoration of Whitewater’s lakes.

And so, and so… it fell to others, in and outside the city, to address what local government ignored, to make clear what officials kept clouded.


 The True Cost Of Avocados:

Daily Bread for 10.23.21: Non-Partisan Audit Finds Wisconsin Elections ‘Safe and Secure’

Good morning.

Saturday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 51.  Sunrise is 7:19 AM and sunset 5:58 PM for 10h 39m 31s of daytime.  The moon is a waning gibbous with 92.4% of its visible disk illuminated.

 On this day in 1923, the Packers played their first NFL game. They defeated the Minneapolis Marines 7-6, for a crowd of 6,000 fans and completed their inaugural season with 3 wins, 2 losses, and 2 ties.


Scott Bauer reports Wisconsin audit finds elections are ‘safe and secure’:

MADISON, Wis. (AP) — A highly anticipated nonpartisan audit of the 2020 presidential election in Wisconsin released Friday did not identify any widespread fraud in the battleground state, which a key Republican legislative leader said shows its elections are “safe and secure.”

The report from the nonpartisan Legislative Audit Bureau did make dozens of recommendations on how the state might improve its elections. It also determined that dozens of voting machines it reviewed worked correctly. Some conservatives have called for reviews of all voting machines.

“Despite concerns with statewide elections procedures, this audit showed us that the election was largely safe and secure,” tweeted Republican state Sen. Robert Cowles, who co-chairs the Legislature’s Audit Committee, which assigned the audit bureau to conduct the review. “It’s my hope that we can now look at election law changes & agency accountability measures in a bipartisan manner based on these nonpartisan recommendations.”

The audit didn’t offer any evidence that the election won by President Joe Biden was “stolen” from Donald Trump, as Trump and some fellow conservatives have falsely claimed. Biden’s roughly 21,000-vote win over Trump in Wisconsin has withstood recounts and multiple court rulings.

Democrats hailed the audit as evidence that elections are safe, secure and accurate, but said they feared Republicans would cherry pick the findings to sow distrust.

The Audit Bureau report did identify inconsistent administration of election law based on surveys of ballots it reviewed across the state. It made 30 recommendations for the Wisconsin Elections Commission to consider and 18 possible legal changes for the Legislature to weigh.

Republican state Sen. Kathy Bernier, a former county elections clerk and current chair of Senate elections committee, said the audit “did not reveal any sizable or organized attempt at voter fraud.” But it did show “sloppy” and inconsistent election administration that must be addressed, she said.

Republican state Rep. Samantha Kerkman, the other Audit Committee co-chair, said the report will serve as a “blueprint” for the Legislature to address areas identified where current election law is not being followed.

See STATE OF WISCONSIN Legislative Audit Bureau, Report 21-19 October 2021.

Meanwhile, Michael Gableman’s partisan audit trudges along: Gableman Requests an Inquisition, Michael Gableman’s Candid, and Disqualifying, Ignorance, and Michael Gableman Brilliantly Reprises a 1940 Film Role.


When Vikings lived in North America:

Daily Bread for 10.22.21: Reporting About Artificial Herbicides in Whitewater, Wisconsin

Good morning.

Friday in Whitewater will be cloudy with a high of 51.  Sunrise is 7:18 AM and sunset 6:00 PM for 10h 42m 15s of daytime.  The moon is a waning gibbous with 96.7% of its visible disk illuminated.

 On this day in 1707, four British naval vessels run aground on the Isles of Scilly because of faulty navigation. In response, the first Longitude Act is enacted in 1714.


Whitewater has two beautiful lakes, Cravath and Trippe, and they have become overgrown with vegetation, so the local government has at last set about to drain those lakes, and dredge to remove invasive plants, in the hope of restoring those bodies of water to their proper condition. Restoring the lakes is to the benefit of the community.  What was the goal, here? Surely to improve the natural beauty of the city. That is generally (and in this case particularly) a worthy goal.

As part of this project, even before dredging, the City of Whitewater hit upon a plan to dump large amounts of artificial herbicides into Cravath & Trippe to kill plants that had grown there while the project dragged on.

It was, needless to say, a ludicrous plan: the lakes drain into a creek that runs through the city and toward nearby cities.

Here is a photo of the water pouring out of Cravath into Whitewater Creek:

As early as June 2021, in an unrecorded Parks & Recreation meeting, officials broached their plan to dump herbicide into the lakes. See Minutes of the 6.9.21 City of Whitewater Parks & Recreation Meeting (highlighting mine).

And yet, and yet, when city officials discussed the restoration plan on camera in August 2021, the only part of the plan mentioned was dredging — not the use of artificial herbicides:

A letter to a few residents was not — and could not be — adequate.  This was a matter for all the city, and for nearby communities, too.  One form of notice was, by the way, a legal notice in the Whitewater Register.  

(I saw that notice, but to expect most residents to look for information in the Register is something like expecting them to look for information at the bottom of a coal mine. That notice from 9.16.21, NOTICE FOR APPLICATION OF AQUATIC PLANT MANAGEMENT PERMIT, appeared in a tiny font, with nothing in the title about herbicides, and only promised a public meeting if “five or more individuals, organizations, special units of government, or local units of government request one.”  Many residents had no idea about possible herbicide application at that time. It’s hard even to find the notice on the full newspaper page — it’s at the very bottom, buried among other notices and stories.) 

Of course, there were those who knew better and more.

Fortunately, a nearby publication, Fort Atkinson Online, began solid and useful reporting on the city’s herbicide-dumping plan. 

Cravath, Trippe lakes restoration plans on schedule, city manager says

Cravath, Trippe herbicide application anticipated in October, public meeting to be scheduled

Trippe, Cravath lakes Chemical Aquatic Application public meeting set for Oct. 6

City government found itself in a position where a more candid and recorded public discussion (as a consequence of reporting on the planned use of herbicides and also expectations from state government) became necessary:

And so — now — the City of Whitewater has sensibly abandoned the large-scale dumping of herbicides into Cravath and Trippe (relevant discussion from the 10.19.21 meeting below, beginning at 3:30):

(Contending that this change had nothing to do with a wider awareness of the original herbicide plan is false, and preposterously so.)

Solid reporting on the original plan shows a positive example of cause and effect, from wider public awareness to a new plan. There are better ways to restore these lakes than dumping large amounts of herbicide.

What local government kept in the shadows, reporting brought to light.

For it all, Whitewater now has a better restoration plan.