FREE WHITEWATER

Whitewater’s Tree Commission, Part 1

There’s a Japanese expression that says, “The nail that sticks up gets pounded down.”  Some in Whitewater don’t like dissent, and conflate the political and the personal, in ways detrimental to both. 

You may have heard, if you’ve bothered to look at a local headline (and who could blame you if you’ve not?), that Whitewater’s Common Council first considered abolishing, and now seeks to suspend, its Tree Commission.  Long discussions, at both the Common Council meetings of July 21st and August 4th, took place on whether to abolish or suspend the Tree Commission (TC). 

Video of the Meetings.  I watch and record my own videos of Common Council meetings, but I like to refer to a recording that others can see, too.  Our public access station posts video recordings of these meetings, and other public meetings, at www.blip.tv.  

Here are the recordings from the two sessions on the TC, about which I comment below.  

7/21/09 

 

8/4/09 

  

Citizen Commissions.  The TC’s members are citizen volunteers.  They deserve more, not less, deference than office holders (especially officer holders who are paid.)  Imagine being someone other than the few hundred who think they own this town, define its culture for everyone, and may not be questioned.  If you’re someone else, with a different point of view, why volunteer if you’ll be tarred with accusations that may have no immediate connection to you?  

Some of the complaints from city workers about the TC may be justified, but by the time of the Council meetings, many of these complaints concerned matters in the past.  That didn’t stop speakers from complaining as though these problems were continuing, often ignoring what the new chair of the TC had just said.     

(I’m not interested in being part of any of these boards or commissions; for those who are interested, watching these sessions with a prospective interest in service must be discouraging.  You want to be part of … that?) 

Really, though, the whole abolition effort serves as an early valentine to insiders, upset over how they had been treated.  Making an example of citizen volunteers, by abolishing their commission, really sends one message: you’re not one of us, and you can go to Hell.  

I cannot believe — truly cannot believe — that this would escape someone.  Perhaps it did.  For some, it may not matter; for others, it assures that those who serve will only be the ‘right’ people, familiar and thus similar.  

It’s true that Whitewater does not have to have a TC; other cities function differently.  So what?  We do have a TC, and the question for us now, is: since we have one, what will we do? 

Abolition or Suspension.  I was surprised, truly, with the discussion on July 21st, at which the Council considered a proposal to abolish the TC.  I’ve teased about trees, and the TC before, but it struck me among the most innocuous of citizen commissions.  Then, I’m not the Lorax, and I don’t speak for the trees.  I know that trees are important to many, and that they’re an important part of our ecosystem; then again, I once proposed planting cactus in Whitewater to reduce maintenance. 

Abolition was a precipitous proposal, even for someone who’d prefer fewer political bodies.  If I were to start with abolition, that start would begin elsewhere. 

It says nothing good about a majority on our Common Council that they voted to abolish a citizen commission so quickly. Two weeks later, Council settled on the more sensible (but still serious) step of suspending the TC.        

Next: Part 2 more >>

Feline Friday: Cat Blogging at FREE WHITEWATER

Here’s a third installment of cat blogging.

The Cat Fanciers’ Association of America recognizes about forty breeds of domestic cats, but all cats, single or mixed-breed, are admirable.

Cats have an independent spirit that’s a fine reminder of the individualism which Americans — at their best — so abundantly possess.

Today, I’ve posted a video about ABYSSINIANS, a recognized CFA breed. Enjoy!

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Daily Bread: August 14, 2009

Good morning, Whitewater

There are no municipal, public meetings scheduled for week’s end.

Today is an especially good day in world history, as on this day in 1945, the the Empire of Japan surrendered unconditionally to the Allied powers.

The New York Times website recounts the surrender, bringing an end to the the violence that Japan visited on Asia and the Pacific:

Washington, Aug. 14 — Japan today unconditionally surrendered the hemispheric empire taken by force and held almost intact for more than two years against the rising power of the United States and its Allies in the Pacific war.

The bloody dream of the Japanese military caste vanished in the text of a note to the Four Powers accepting the terms of the Potsdam Declaration of July 26, 1945, which amplified the Cairo Declaration of 1943….

Orders Given to the Japanese

The Department responded with a note to Tokyo through the same channel, ordering the immediate end of hostilities by the Japanese, requiring that the Supreme Allied Commander- who, the President announced, will be Gen. Douglas MacArthur- be notified of the date and hour of the order, and instructing that emissaries of Japan be sent to him at once- at the time and place selected by him- “with full information of the disposition of the Japanese forces and commanders.”

President Truman summoned a special press conference in the Executive offices at 7 P.M. He handed to the reporters three texts.

The first- the only one he read aloud- was that he had received the Japanese note and deemed it full acceptance of the Potsdam Declaration, containing no qualification whatsoever; that arrangements for the formal signing of the peace would be made for the “earliest possible moment;” that the Japanese surrender would be made to General MacArthur in his capacity as Supreme Allied Commander in Chief; that Allied military commanders had been instructed to cease hostilities, but that the formal proclamation of V. J. Day must await the formal signing.

The text ended with the Japanese note in which the Four Powers (the United States, Great Britain, China, and Russia) were officially informed that the Emperor of Japan had issued an imperial rescript of surrender, was prepared to guarantee the necessary signatures to the terms as prescribed by the Allies, and had instructed all his commanders to cease active operations to surrender all arms and to disband all forces under their control and within their reach.

The President’s second announcement was that he had instructed the Selective Service to reduce the monthly military draft from 80,000 to 50,000 men, permitting a constant flow of replacements for the occupation forces and other necessary military units, with the draft held to low-age groups and first discharges given on the basis of long, arduous and faithful war service. He said he hoped to release 5,000,000 to 5,500,000 men in the subsequent year or eighteen months, the ratio governed in some degree by transportation facilities and the world situation.

The President’s final announcement was to decree holidays tomorrow and Thursday for all Federal workers, who, he said, were the “hardest working and perhaps the least appreciated” by the public of all who had helped to wage the war.

Mr. Truman spoke calmly to the reporters, but when he had finished reading his face broke into a smile. Also present were Secretary of State James F. Byrnes and Admiral William D. Leahy, the President’s personal Chief of Staff, and two other members of the Cabinet- Henry A. Wallace, Secretary of Commerce, and James V. Forrestal, Secretary of the Navy- managed to respond to a hurry call in time to be there. The agreement to issue the statements simultaneously in all the Allied capitals, and the brief period between the call to the Cabinet and the announcement, were responsible. Later the chief war administrators and Cordell Hull, former Secretary of State, arrived to congratulate the President.

Here’s today’s almanac:

Almanac
Friday, August 14, 2009 Sunrise Sunset
Official Time 05:59 AM 07:58 PM
Civil Twilight 05:29 AM 08:29 PM
Tomorrow 06:57 AM 07:57 PM
Tomorrow will be: 2 minutes shorter
Amount of sunlight: 13h 59 m
Amount of daylight: 15h 0 m
Moon phase: Waning crescentr

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Reason.tv: “I Want your Clunk!”

Cash for Clunkers gained notoriety as a federal program that quickly ran out of money (new funding followed). Reason.tv recently satirized the program, pointing out problems with the program far beyond poor cost estimates.

Here’s a description accompanying the Reason.tv video:

Come on down to Uncle Sugar’s Auto Mall! It’s the CASH FOR CLUNKERS EXTRAVAGANZA and Uncle Sugar has gotta deal for you, courtesy of voiceless posterity (at the intersection of unsound policy and political expediency).

Because concentrated benefits and dispersed cost is the NEW AMERICAN WAY! YEE HAW!

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Reason.tv: Glenn “Instapundit” Reynolds on Blogging, Heinleinian Libertarianism, and why the Republicans are “Less Bad.”

One of the most popular bloggers in America is law professor and author Glenn Reynolds. He recently conducted an interview with Reason.tv.

Here’s a description of the Reason.tv video:

At Reason’s DC office, Reason.tv Editor in Chief Nick Gillespie recently sat down with super blogger Glenn Reynolds of Instapundit.com and PJTV .

Reynolds, who has described his politics as “libertarian,” has long been a champion of technological liberation, a supporter of the Iraq War, and an agitator for more social and fiscal libertarianism within the Republican Party.

In this interview with Reason.tv Editor Nick Gillespie, the Instapundit talks about his approach to blogging, his disappointment in President Obama’s social policies, and why he believes we are currently reliving “the politics of 1968.”

Approximately 9 minutes. Shot and edited by Dan Hayes.

“Rorschach Doesn’t Shrug”

Months ago, the film version of the Watchmen reached theaters.  The graphic novel on which the film was based was highly celebrated, but I thought the film only middling. 

One of the characters, though, caught the attention of libertarians: Rorschach, one of the costumed vigilantes who are protagonists of the novel and film.  

Over at Reason magazine, Brian Doherty wrote an essay entitled, “Rorschach Doesn’t Shrug”.  Doherty refers to Rorschach as an Objectivist hero. (Four quick remarks: (1) There are aspects of Rorschach that are disagreeable, (2) I know little about comics, (3) I don’t identify with comic book characters, and (4) I’m a libertarian, but not an Objectivist.)   Still, it’s not hard to see, as Doherty does, that are are aspects of Rorschach that are admirable: 

To be the kind of man whose highest value is to “have lived life free from compromise,” as Rorschach says, makes that man “unreasonable” in the colloquial sense—that is, you aren’t going to be able to talk them in or out of much. You are going to find them abrasive, aggravating, and in circumstances like those the characters in Watchmen find themselves in, mad, bad, and dangerous to know [note: here Doherty uses a description applied to Lord Byron]….

Yet he’s also the only man around who stands up for everyone’s right to be judged individually on the basis of their character and actions, their right not to be a means to someone else’s higher end—no matter what one might think of that end….

Rorschach judges as an individual mind, and judges individual minds. Rorschach is no handsome Rand hero as she imagined them; but he’s still probably the most vivid and well-thought-out Objectivist hero that Rand didn’t create.

Rorschach is a worthy character for another reason, too: he keeps going, despite public opposition or social contempt.  He sees individuals as individuals, eschewing group favoritism, surely.  Yet, he eschews group pressure, too.  That’s also praiseworthy — to carry on despite futile social pressures and social scheming.  An individualist in how he sees others, and how he lives his own life.  

Admirable.   

Jason DeSena Trennert: Remembering the Reagan Bull Market of August 1982 – WSJ.com

How to assure prosperity for years to come? The way Reagan did in beginning in 1982:

“The simple – yet difficult to achieve – strategy of getting government out of the way and turning the economy over to free enterprise set the stage for a period of tremendous economic growth and wealth creation.”

See, Remembering the Reagan Bull Market of August 1982

Daily Bread: August 14, 2009

Good morning, Whitewater

There are no municipal, public meetings scheduled for today. This, by the way, is the condition of civil society.

Here’s today’s almanac:

Almanac
Thursday, August 13, 2009 Sunrise Sunset
Official Time 05:50 AM 08:00 PM
Civil Twilight 05:27 AM 08:30 PM
Tomorrow 05:59AM 07:58 PM
Tomorrow will be: 3 minutes shorter
Amount of sunlight: 14h 2m
Amount of daylight: 15h 3m
Moon phase: Third quarter

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Austrian woman reports otter attack in Wisconsin – JS Online

Hey, Whitewater, how about a task force?

These flesh-eating aquatic mammals are probably making their way from Drummond to Whitewater even now. In about 20 or 25 years, they’ll have reached our city limits.

Coincidentally, that’s about the same amount of time that it would take one of our task forces to propose an effective solution to the looming otter menace.

Not a moment to lose….Come on city bureaucrats, you can do this….

Austrian woman reports otter attack in Wisconsin.

From Free Whitewater

UPDATE: 6:49 PM — I’ve included a picture of one of the marauding otters, helpfully supplied from the FREE WHITEWATER Bureau of Aquatic Mammals, Municipal Risks Division.

Courthouse News Service: Man Jailed for Six Months for Yawning in Court

An Illinois man was jailed for six months for a loud and boisterous yawn he uttered while attending his cousin’s sentencing.

One would hope that Whitewater neither begins to follow this example through fines to those attending municipal court, nor expands it to sleepy pedestrians.

Just in case – another cup of coffee might be a suitable precaution.

Man Jailed for Six Months for Yawning in Court.

Our Local Newspapers: Register, Gazette, and Daily Union

I’m not a journalist, and I lack the talent for the job.  I have an interest in newspapers, in the way many Americans do — as a common person with the ability to read, and a respect for a free press and free speech.  Over the years I’ve been posting at FREE WHITEWATER, I’ve written about our local newspapers, and how they’ve covered issues, politicians, and bureaucrats in Whitewater, Wisconsin. 

At Editor & Publisher, there’s a story entitled, “For Newspapers, Small Is (or Can Be) Beautiful,” from the Associated Press. The story contends that very large and very small papers may fare better in these hard times than mid-sized, regional newspapers.  I don’t know.  It’s clear that regional papers are troubled, but then many newspapers seem troubled.

A few quick remarks on our local papers.  

The Whitewater Register.  When I first starting posting, over two years ago, the Register was as close to a parody of bias and lapdog reporting as anything I have ever read.  (The former editor, who once referred to this website in a poorly reasoned, incoherent editorial, represented the Register‘s journalistic nadir.)  One can search my many posts from that time, about the Register, and you’ll see what I mean. 

I created a Register Watch™ feature, just to review the paper’s many egregious omissions and over-the-top cheerleading. I also created a Local-o-meter™ index to measure how many truly local advertisements, as against out-of-town ones, the Register (part of the Southern Lakes newspaper chain) ran.
I found it hypocritical that local politicians trumpeted localism and the supposed exceptionalism of Whitewater, Wisconsin while writing columns in a paper that ran so many out-of-town advertisements.  

I still follow the Register, but have not published a Register Watch™ post in a while, nor a Local-o-meter™.  The former editor’s slavish devotion to all things insider is no longer so apparent. 

The paper’s also had a precipitous circulation decline over recent years, one that I think owes much to her bad influence. 

Others must smell decline; the attention Whitewater politicians and bureaucrats once showered on the Regsiter has, I suppose, gone elsewhere.   A politician or bureaucrat, especially a single-minded cheerleader (who cares more for appearance than honest, open discussion of problems), will search for a newspaper to publish his view unquestioned and unchallenged.  There’s nothing surprising about this; it would be surprising if politicians and bureaucrats did not try.

What’s odd is how often reporters yield to the low and one-sided view of a few politicians. This relationship between politician and reporter is exploitative; enticed through attention and blandishments, weak-willed reporters fall victim to a bad bargain — access and the feeling of being an insider, in exchange for flacking the politician’s line (that is, an abandonment of journalistic integrity and independence.) 

No matter how often this happens to reporters, there’s always another pigeon, somewhere, for a politician to pluck.       

The Daily Jefferson County Union. Unsurprising.  

The Janesville Gazette and Walworth County Gazette. Bliss Communications publishes both the Janesville Gazette, and the Walworth County Gazette, among other media.  I’ve not always agreed with every story, or every reporter, but I do not doubt that the Gazettes have been true to journalism’s mission, as a layperson is able to understand it.  One can see that they will challenge a party line, or established way of thinking, in their home markets.  

They are, I think, also the only venture that has tried to expand (with the Walworth County Gazette trying to retake the space that The Week once occupied.) 

How all this will fare I cannot say; there’s a boldness in trying a new venture in troubled times.  

They have augmented their independence with the best Web design of any local newspaper, a design that’s a match for larger papers in the state.  (By comparison, the websites of the Daily Union and Whitewater Register look amateurish.) 

In Whitewater, though, all these papers face a challenge – a website that offers news, without the standards of journalism.

It’s as though Whitewater had two municipal websites — the official one, and a quasi-official one of the dominant faction in town.  A government publication, and one that feels like a ruling Party publication.

Both serve a purpose, but the presence of the latter makes Whitewater a tough town in which to gain circulation, if the format is either (1) simple announcements or (2) fawning praise for a small group of addled insiders. 

If a newspaper’s looking for an independent perspective, then a cheerleading website is no barrier.  

If a newspaper wants, instead, to tell a few hundred people in Whitewater (out of many thousands) what they want to hear, then a free website that does the same is an obstacle. A newspaper may batten on residual assumptions of independence, but once that veneer peels away, they’re no better off, and at greater cost, too.

Daily Bread: August 12, 2009

Good morning, Whitewater

There are no municipal, public meetings scheduled for today.

The Wisconsin Historical Society notes that on this day in our history, in 1939,

According to the fan site, thewizardofoz.info, “The first publicized showing of the final, edited film was at the Strand Theatre in Oconomowoc, Wisconsin on August 12, 1939. No one is sure exactly why a small town in the Midwest received that honor.” It showed the next day in Sheboygan, Appleton and Rhinelander, according to local newspapers. “The official premiere was at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre in Hollywood on August 15, attended by most of the cast and crew and a number of Hollywood celebrities.” [Source: thewizardofoz.info/

Here’s today’s almanac:

Almanac
Wednesday, August 12, 2009 Sunrise Sunset
Official Time 05:57 AM 08:01 PM
Civil Twilight 05:26 AM 08:32 PM
Tomorrow 05:58AM 08:00 PM
Tomorrow will be: 2 minutes shorter
Amount of sunlight: 14h 4m
Amount of daylight: 15h 6m
Moon phase: Waning gibbous

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Real Reporting, However Rare

I’m not a reporter, but like any common person, I can see how far journalism has fallen from fundamental standards.  Standards of ethics, and of diligence, seem almost the exception now.  On the left side of my website, one can find the the Associated Press Managing Editors’ Statement of Ethical Principles.  They’re just one set of standards that reporters and editors can adopt.   

Like many common people who read newspapers, I hope for, and expect, a serious examination of politicians, bureaucrats, lobbyists, etc.       

There have always been reporters who have disgraced themselves and their profession, but now one finds more and more reporters who don’t even seem to think of their work as a professional endeavor; they quickly ingratiate themselves with every small-town bureaucrat and blowhard politician. 

Not so long ago, young Americans dreamed of reporting on public affairs with curiosity, diligence, and zeal.  They didn’t just want to be reporters; they wanted to be intrepid reporters, investigative reporters, and tenacious reporters.  Many still admire, and seek to be, those reporters.        

Sadly, that’s not true for everyone: sycophants, ingratiating weasels, hacks, and ersatz reporters who simply flack happy news, ignoring even the most basic conflicts of interest along the way.  

(Imagine an officer holder, convinced of his own self-professed powers of objectivity and impartiality, covering news of his own actions. No one thinks that even the most skilled politicians could do so without bias.  One would be scornful if intelligent politicians like Bill Clinton or Barack Obama also served, while in office, as editors-in-chief of the Washington Post or New York Times.  If these intelligent men could not serve as editors fairly — and they could not — one should give no credence to claims that it can be done elsewhere. It can’t.  Insisting otherwise is unserious and self-deceiving.)   

There’s a solid story in the Janesville Gazette that shows how far other newspapers have fallen from simple standards of inquiry into public proposals and politicians’ schemes.  Lexie Clinton, in Questions remain as state pushes ahead with “shovel ready” rail line, describes well investigative reporting from the  Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism and UW-Madison journalism students, on whether Wisconsin’s truly ready for a light rail line.  

Governor Doyle contends that we are:

We’re maybe one of the only states in the country … if not the only one that’s actually planned for this moment,” Doyle declared July 17 in announcing a new partnership with the Spanish train company, Talgo, to provide sleek new rail cars. “This truly is the most shovel-ready rail project in the Midwest and, I think, the U.S.

Are we?  Ms. Clinton reports on direct, serious investigative reporting into a proposed rail line:

 ….– Wisconsin officials don’t know how many people currently commute along the route between Milwaukee and Madison. State transportation spokesman Christopher Klein countered that record ridership in Wisconsin on Amtrak, the nation’s passenger rail service, shows the state is ready for more. “Wisconsin doesn’t need to prove we want to ride trains,” Klein said. “We already have.” 

— Officials in four cities where stops are planned—Brookfield, Madison, Oconomowoc and Watertown—are enthusiastic supporters but remain unaware of many of the details. Klein said Wisconsin is ahead of most states in planning but cited a federal report that acknowledged some details aren’t worked out because “states have had little time to prepare for a … program for intercity passenger rail of this magnitude.” 

— Critics question the viability of the planned stop at the Madison airport, which is nearly 6 miles from the city’s major downtown destinations. Klein said bringing the train downtown would add at least half an hour to the trip, which would be “extremely undesirable” for passengers not stopping in Madison. 

— Other benefits of the project have been thrown into doubt by a recent U.S. Government Accountability Office report that concluded rail projects would have “little impact on the congestion, environmental, energy and other issues that face the U.S. transportation system.” 

— The description “high-speed” is a misnomer. State transportation officials say the train likely would average about 70 mph the first few years. The train is expected to travel up to 110 mph by 2015 once the state completes additional safety improvements. 

A weak reporter would merely present Governor Doyle’s press release.  A biased reporter would slant the story’s viewpoint toward a friend, acquaintance, or favored cause.  A legislator from the governor’s party in the State Assembly could declare impartial reporting, but only at the risk of credulity.     

The Gazette story on light rail did what Americans have always hoped and admired in our free press: it presented viewpoints, probed and questioned those viewpoints, without slavish devotion and servile deference to politicians and bureaucrats.  

Admirable, yet sadly rare. 

Daily Bread: August 11, 2009

Good morning, Whitewater

The Whitewater-University Tech Park Board meets today, at 4 p.m. The agenda’s available online. A review of the agenda indicates that the board is looking for a Vice President. Here’s my suggestion. He’s experienced, energetic, and familiar with the role. I’m sure he’d be available on loan.

The Wisconsin Historical Society notes that on this day in Wisconsin history, in 1919,

On this date the Green Bay Packers professional football team was founded during a meeting in the editorial rooms of Green Bay Press-Gazette. On this evening, a score or more of young athletes, called together by Curly Lambeau and George Calhoun, gathered in the editorial room on Cherry Street and organized a football the team.

Here’s today’s almanac:

Almanac
Tuesday, August 11, 2009 Sunrise Sunset
Official Time 05:56 AM 08:03 PM
Civil Twilight 05:25 AM 08:33 PM
Tomorrow 05:57AM 08:01 PM
Tomorrow will be: 3 minutes shorter
Amount of sunlight: 14h 7m
Amount of daylight: 15h 8m
Moon phase: Waning gibbous

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