FREE WHITEWATER

Daily Bread: January 16, 2009

Good morning, Whitewater

It’s chilly cold again today, in Whitewater, in Wisconsin, and much of America.

There’s no school again today.

There are no municipal public meetings scheduled for the City of Whitewater today.

Today’s the anniversary of a bad, bad day in American history, when a great, free republic — ours — thought that a comprehensive ban was a way to make Americans better: Prohibition first took effect today, in 1919. Here’s that blight on the Constitution:

Amendment XVIII

Section 1. After one year from the ratification of this article the manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors within, the importation thereof into, or the exportation thereof from the United States and all territory subject to the jurisdiction thereof for beverage purposes is hereby prohibited.

Section 2. The Congress and the several states shall have concurrent power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.

Section 3. This article shall be inoperative unless it shall have been ratified as an amendment to the Constitution by the legislatures of the several states, as provided in the Constitution, within seven years from the date of the submission hereof to the states by the Congress.

Was America really less raucous during Prohibition? Oh, yes, of course: we were all Ivory Soap pure back then.

Common sense, and confidence in individual judgment, returned, not so long after, really —

Amendment XXI

Section 1. The eighteenth article of amendment to the Constitution of the United States is hereby repealed.

Section 2. The transportation or importation into any state, territory, or possession of the United States for delivery or use therein of intoxicating liquors, in violation of the laws thereof, is hereby prohibited.

Section 3. This article shall be inoperative unless it shall have been ratified as an amendment to the Constitution by conventions in the several states, as provided in the Constitution, within seven years from the date of the submission hereof to the states by the Congress.

Daily Bread: January 15, 2009

Good morning, Whitewater

It’s chilly today, in Whitewater, but it was much warmer in Los Angeles in 1967. More on that contrast, below.

In Whitewater, it’s so chilly, that there’s no school. Play, play, play — responsibly. Juveniles may be a matter of concern somewhere in the city, but go ahead — enjoy a day off.

There are no municipal public meetings scheduled for the City of Whitewater today, either.

Today’s an historic day in Wisconsin, and beyond, too: the Wisconsin Historical Society recounts that today was the day in 1967 that the Green Bay Packers Won the First Superbowl:

On this date the Green Bay Packers defeated the Kansas City Chiefs in the first Superbowl championship. The game was held at Memorial Coliseum in Los Angeles, with 61,946 sports fans in attendance. The final score was 35 to 10. For their victory, the Packers collected $15,000 per player and the Chiefs $7,500 per player – the largest single-game shares in the history of team sports at that time.

Super Bowl I
Green Bay 35, Kansas City 10
Memorial Coliseum
Los Angeles, Calif.
Jan. 15, 1967

On a Study of Public Transportation for Our Area

I was rightly chided for not offering commentary on a press release that I posted from Rep. Kim Hixson’s office, in a post from early January.  (See, Rep. Hixson Helps Secure Transportation Funding for District, https://freewhitewater.com/?p=2515 .)
 
The full release is posted there, but the essence is a study of commuter bus service in our area, transit within Milton, and taxi service in Whitewater. 
 
Three points that I should have made:
 
First, it’s a study.  I understand that one produces a study before one acts, but the ratio of studies without subsequent action to action itself must favor the former.
 
Two word rebuttal to those in Whitewater who would hang much hope on another study: Retail Coach.  Why not throw in countless task force recommendations for good measure?  It’s all professional, I see, but it only makes other professionally-produced ideas easier to discount as just another…well, Retail Coach study.  
 
The scattered proliferation of studies and task forces only fortifies Whitewater’s sad local bias against effective outside practices.  (The ‘all-quality-is-local view,’ which sometimes morphs into ‘all-local-is-quality.’)
 
Second, public transportation is often an inefficient and costly solution.  There is a whole host of serious, if politically incorrect, and seemingly not-so-green – objections, at the Anti-Planner.com, http://ti.org/antiplanner .  How does the Anti-Planner describe himself?  (“The Antiplanner is an active cyclist and avid railfan who nonetheless recognizes that the automobile as the greatest invention of the last 200 years.”  Heartwarming.) 
 
More from Cato Institute Senior Fellow Randal O’Toole can be found at http://www.cato.org/people/randal-otoole.  
 
Third, how many local media would run the press release on the study without probing journalism, of any kind?  More than one, I wouldn’t wonder.  No reason a blogger should make the same mistake. 

Daily Bread: January 14, 2009

Good morning, Whitewater

There are no municipal public meetings scheduled for the City of Whitewater today.

In our school district today, focus groups will meet to assist the school board in the search for a District Administrator to replace Dr. Steinhaus.

Later, at 7 p.m., the Athletic Booster Club meets at the high school.

The Libertarian Party Writes

In December, I received and posted a cheery dour Christmas email from Libertarian Party presidential candidate Bob Barr. (See, from December 22nd, a post entitled, Libertarian Bob Barr Says Hello.)

Well, I saw that the LP’s Director of Communications, Andrew Davis, must really care about me, too, because yesterday I received his email (and he’s surely writing only to me!). In his message, Davis takes a few last licks at George W. Bush, by responding to an essay in the Weekly Standard praising Bush. Fred Barnes wrote that essay in defense of Bush, and Davis replies.

Everyone and his brother seems to dislike Bush these days, but libertarians came to see Bush as a big-government Republican (that is, a mess) sooner than many others. Progessives may have disliked Bush’s win over Gore, but it was libertarians, more than any, who put aside electoral disappointment for a critique of a Nixon-like administration favoring government spending and regulation.

Here’s Libertarian Davis in reply to Bush Supporter Barnes. It’s a bit overwrought, but that’s the LP. Statements from Barnes in support of Bush are highlighted in this post for easy reference.

The following are a handful of assertions made by Barnes [from this essay] as achievements of the Bush administration in the last eight years, and my responses to these statements:

Second, enhanced interrogation of terrorists. Along with use of secret prisons and wireless eavesdropping, this saved American lives. How many thousands of lives? We’ll never know.

The idea that Bush has saved lives in the so-called “War on Terror” isn’t exactly logical, and it isn’t exactly true. Data compiled by the RAND Corporation actually shows dramatic increases in deaths caused by global terrorism following the election of George Bush to office.

But, that’s the thing with things you don’t know—you don’t know them. Unfortunately, many neoconservatives struggling to find some redeeming value of the last eight years have taken the unknown to mean something they can posture as justifications for many of Bush’s mistakes.

Not only do I have to question the moral fiber of those who champion torture, the denial of habeas corpus and spying on American citizens, I also question their intellectual integrity in saying that these anti-American practices have saved lives. Barnes says thousands of lives have been saved, but why not millions, or for that matter, billions? One might even say that although we don’t know for sure if these practices have saved lives despite their obvious moral and legal failings, Bush probably saved mankind as we know it. After all, it follows the same “logic.”

Bush’s third achievement was the rebuilding of presidential authority, badly degraded in the era of Vietnam, Watergate, and Bill Clinton. He didn’t hesitate to conduct wireless surveillance of terrorists without getting a federal judge’s okay. He decided on his own how to treat terrorists and where they should be imprisoned. Those were legitimate decisions for which the president, as commander in chief, should feel no need to apologize.

This follows along the same lines Barnes’ second “Bush Achievement.” One can hardly consider the further undermining of the U.S. Constitution to be an achievement, unless that is one’s goal all along. By the sounds of it, this may be Barnes’ objective.

Ignoring the obvious (and aforementioned) moral hazards of such programs and initiatives headed by the Bush administration, which run contrary to the idea of freedom, Barnes takes no issue with apparent Constitutional violations of the presidential decisions of which he calls “achievements.”

There are decisions the president has the authority to make, either by Constitutional or assumed duties. However, so long as there is a rule of law in the United States, the president should be held to that standard.

Presidential authority, federal authority and state authority are all powers of control that citizens of a free society need to both question and suspect, as that these are all potential agents of tyranny. Barnes’ praise of Bush’s power-grabs seems to indicate he’d be perfectly content in a society where those like Hillary Clinton, Ted Kennedy or Barack Obama could rule without worry of opposition. However, I suspect in the next few years we shall be hearing a different tune being sung by Barnes as the presidential authority of Bush is used by Obama to further his own agenda.

His fifth success was No Child Left Behind (NCLB), the education reform bill cosponsored by America’s most prominent liberal Democratic senator Edward Kennedy. The teachers’ unions, school boards, the education establishment, conservatives adamant about local control of schools–they all loathed the measure and still do. It requires two things they ardently oppose, mandatory testing and accountability.

I have not met a liberal, conservative or libertarian who is happy with No Child Left Behind. Not only is it a gross expansion of federal power over our schools, it has lowered the standards of education in schools across the country. Mandatory, standardized testing is a perfect “one-size-fits-all” solution fit for a Soviet society; however, it has had disastrous consequences for American schools.

Because schools are constantly required to meet and increase standards, schools instead lower standards in order to meet them without facing cuts in funding. Additionally, great schools are in danger of being labeled “failing schools” when they find it difficult to beat previous test scores.

This is accountability? Not only was No Child Left Behind not adequately funded for its purposes, it was a poorly crafted program that undermined its own intiatives while increasing federal control of schools.

This is why teachers, students, conservatives and liberals all hate it, and why statists love it.

Sixth, Bush declared in his second inaugural address in 2005 that American foreign policy (at least his) would henceforth focus on promoting democracy around the world.

There is nothing like democracy from the barrel of a gun. For conservatives so adamantly opposed to social welfare, they are quick to jump on the humanitarian train when it comes to global welfare. Unfortunately, this is much more expensive, both in dollars and American lives.

Not only is an interventionist foreign policy based on humanitarian motives expensive in life and blood, it is also largely ineffective when begun in nations not ready for democracy. Take a look at Palestine, who had free elections and voted-in Hamas, a terrorist organization.

Democracy is much better than any State authority (though Barnes largely argues for more State authority in his article); however, in order for democracy to work, it must be manifested domestically. It is not the responsibility of the American taxpayer to subsidize a World Task Force on Democracy.

The seventh achievement is the Medicare prescription drug benefit, enacted in 2003.

The Medicare prescription drug plan added trillions of dollars to an already struggling government program, further pushing these programs into financial ruin. Then-Comptroller General for the United States David Walker called the program “probably the most fiscally irresponsible piece of legislation since the 1960s.”

How is this an achievement?

Conclusion….

There are many different types of conservatives, but I don’t think Fred Barnes is one of them. If so, he represents a disgusting mutation of conservatism that has, somewhere in its philosophical evolution, replaced federalism with a high-octane breed of statism….

There is no place for Barnes’ politics in a free society, and his cheerleading of some of the most egregious offenses of the Bush administration clearly shows Barnes to be an enemy of the Constitution and freedom. His “big-government conservatism,” or more accurately, “neostatism conservatism” is a plague on our society and truly represents the ultimate bastardization of the movement once lead by Barry Goldwater.

This type of moral and intellectual depravity is a cancer on the Republican Party, and is the reason John McCain was defeated in the last election.

Americans don’t want a king. They want a leader that inspires hope, not fear. Americans want a leader who fights for more freedom, not for more laws. If Republicans and the conservative movement that drives that party wish to survive much longer, they will return to their libertarian roots and reject the creeping influence of fascism into their ideology.

How will history judge Bush? Nobody knows right now and as far as I’m concerned, this question is wholly irrelevant.

I’m an American who lived during the Bush administration and I can truly say my life has been negatively impacted as a result of his policies. Not only am I facing the responsibility to pay for trillions and trillions of dollars spent during his administration, the civil liberties that protected me from government surveillance and abuse have been undermined or altogether destroyed.

Bush has so far raised the ceiling of executive power that I fear I will never see the day when government is more restrained than when he first began office.

I don’t know if I can blame the Bush administration for the philosophical poison spewed by Fred Barnes and others like him, or whether Bush simply fell into their philosophical trap; however, it is imperative that we reject this philosophy of State authority and big government if we expect to remain a nation of free people.

Liberty is a lamp that guides a nation to prosperity and happiness, and the day it goes out is the day that nation is lost. While the Bush administration, through malice or ignorance, sullied the glass that protects this light of liberty, there is still time to wipe it clean and begin anew.

However, that time is dwindling.

My only hope is that this article never becomes an obituary for freedom, and simply remains a remonstrance of the injuries suffered in the last eight years….

Daily Bread: January 13, 2009

Good morning, Whitewater

No municipal public meetings are scheduled today.

It’s snowy, but there’s still school. There is a scheduled (but perhaps not to be held this evening) PATT meeting at Washington School.

Weather? Some have written asking why there’s no weather forecast comparison between the National Weather Service and the Farmers’ Almanac. Well, it was never about the weather, it was a way to jab at longer range planning or forecasting of complicated events. Weather’s complicated, so much so that there’s still a gap, often, between explanation and prediction. I’ll post more on what the dueling forecasts were meant to show, but it wasn’t much of a duel. The NWS was an easy winner, day after day, week after week.

Press Releases? A sharp reader writes, with a valid complaint:

I was disappointed at your posting of the Hixson DOT press release with no commentary. I was looking for your insight on it but couldn’t find it. What’s the point of putting up a press release without speaking to it?

It’s a point well-taken — when I started adding press releases, I did so because I wanted to (1) add them to the site, on occasion, but (2) emphasize that a press release should always be treated as a press release, not an ersatz news story.

(Local press – this means you! Whitewater is a world of sham news standards, more often than not. Just about every reasonable principle of journalism has been violated here, typically on the theory that there are no violations if one does not intend violations. Children across America think this way all the time; in Whitewater, it passes as an adult’s fundamental creed. For good standards, that would produce real journalism, see my post entitled Press Ethics, with standards from the Associated Press.)

More importantly, one can add post a press release — properly identified as one — and comment thereafter, in a separate, immediately-following post. That’s where I’ve not followed through on my intention.

I’ll make good tomorrow morning.

In Wisconsin history on this date, from the Wisconsin Historical Society, an historical first for Wisconsin — the oldest radio station in America:

On this date [in 1922] the call letters of experimental station 9XM in Madison were replaced by WHA. This station dates back to 1917, making it “The oldest station in the nation.” [Source: History Just Ahead: A Guide to Wisconsin’s Historical Markers, edited by Sarah Davis McBride]

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Daily Bread: January 12, 2009

Good morning, Whitewater

The week begins with three scheduled public meetings: the CDA Business Park Marketing Committee meets at 4:30 p.m. at the City Manager’s Conference Room. The agenda for the meeting is available online.

City Manager’s Conference Room — sounds very posh, doesn’t it? Not exactly the Situation Room, but still, it must be a heady experience. For humility and service above entitlement, in a struggling town: Conference Room Number 1, first door on the left.

At 5:30 p.m., there is a meeting of the Park and Recreation Board at the Cravath Lakefront Room. The agenda for that meeting is also on line.

Finally, at 6:30 p.m., the best public meeting of the day, I’d think, in one of the finest public spaces any town could have — a meeting of the Young Memorial Library Board, at the Young Memorial Library. Here’s that agenda. Best wishes.

Results: Pop Quiz – Local Electoral Contest

Thanks, very much, Whitewater, for your entries in this Pop Quiz of the Week. It’s a first-time feature, and I’m happily surprised — very much so — at the number of entries I’ve received. I’ll offer the question, then the results, along with a few remarks on some of the more unusual guesses.

What possible electoral contest in Whitewater in 2009 would most resemble the local, political equivalent of the Iran-Iraq War?

First, a quick check with a prominent man, someone who aspired to be a statesman. Only one man — really only one — could provide the proper perspective on the Iran-Iraq War: Dr. Henry Kissinger.

When asked about the war between two, less than ideal nations, Kissinger remarked, that it was “a shame that both countries couldn’t lose” that war.

True enough.

So, what’s the local, political equivalent of that foreign conflict?

It would be a political contest for an at-large City Council seat between politician-dentist Dr. Roy Nosek and politician and Whitewater Register contributor Marilyn Kienbaum.

Whitewater just wouldn’t have its own unique students-within-a-tiny-cramped-corridor line and my-nostalgic-salt-of-the-earth-any-other-ideas-be-damned feel without such community treasures.

The first reader in with the target answer was Thomas Paine, right on the question, and right on a fine pseudonym, too.

Later in the week, but certainly coming in as an honorable mention, was the Phantom Stranger, with an entry that included a fine science fiction reference.

Thanks to others answering along this same line, but at other times during the week.

Now, for remarks on a few other kinds of guesses.

School Board/School District Politics. Interesting, I wasn’t thinking about the Whitewater Unified School District at all. Several people wrote in with rivalries, or potential rivalries, among administrators or board members within that group. I was not thinking of anything other than a conventional electoral contest, but I appreciate these entries. Note to Reader X: Wow. They don’t even talk when the pass each other in the hall? That’s pretty darn weird, actually.

Municipal Administration. Many wrote in with possible political conflicts between elected politicians and someone appointed to municipal office. These were all good guesses, although, in the end, this is an Administration that cannot take a decisive stand where it matters, and is thin-skinned. Hardly the stuff of a serious or protracted struggle over anything.

John Adams A few wrote in asking if I had an interest in running for office. The answer there is no, quite a few times over. Thanks for thinking of me, though. There’s more than one role for those in town, and I have this one, quite happily.

All the guesses were great fun, and I will likely bring back this Quiz of the Week feature, when interesting questions suggest themselves.

Press Release: Rep. Hixson Helps Secure Transportation Funding for District

January 7, 2009

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT

State Representative Kim Hixson/608-266-9650

HIXSON HELPS SECURE TRANSPORTATION FUNDING FOR DISTRICT

MADISON – State Rep. Kim Hixson announced Wednesday the Wisconsin Department of Transportation has awarded a 2009 Supplemental Transportation Rural Assistance Program (STRAP) grant to Janesville, Milton, Whitewater and UW-Whitewater.
The STRAP grant will fund a feasibility study for:
§ Establishing commuter bus service between Janesville, Milton, and Whitewater, including the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater campus, and the rural areas in between these communities
§ Establishing an internal transit service within Milton
§ Reviewing and upgrading the shared-ride taxi service in the Whitewater

“Comprehensive transportation planning in our area is critical to economic development and job creation. Potential employers want to be certain their workers have reliable transportation,” Hixson said. “I was pleased to bring officials together from these communities last spring to address the important issue of transportation. I look forward to working with all parties involved to ensure we have the best result for the people of the 43rd Assembly District.”

In spring 2008, Hixson worked with community leaders to organize a series of transportation summits to assess the transportation needs of the region.
“Kim was personally involved in getting this project off the ground. He understood the need and potential for the study, and he really picked up the ball and ran with it,” stated David Mumma, Transit Director for the City of Janesville. “Based on my experience, I would expect the study will conclude by late 2009 or early 2010. Depending on the findings of the study, and the ability of the various stakeholders to raise the necessary operating funds, service could begin by the fall of 2010.”

According to DOT officials, the project has been awarded a grant of up to $44,160. The state will pay 75 percent of the feasibility study, while the communities of Janesville, Milton, and Whitewater and the UW-Whitewater will pick up the additional 25 percent of the costs bringing the grand total to a maximum of $58,965.

“Wisconsin is the only state in the nation to receive these federal funds to develop new approaches to support public transportation in rural areas,” said Governor Jim Doyle in his announcement about the grant.

Daily Bread: January 9, 2009

Good morning, Whitewater

The week ends with one scheduled public meeting: the Whitewater University Tech Park Committee meets at 1:00 p.m. at the UWW University Center- Room 241. The agenda for the meeting is available online.

(For a post expressing my doubts about a university-technology park in Whitewater, see “A City-University Technology Park in Whitewater.” Tone deaf to the cultural challenges to the technology park? Then you likely won’t get a technology park, all other plans notwithstanding.)

In world history on this date, in 1493, ultra-famous Christopher Columbus makes a mistake profound, unsettling, and easily possible after last call: “Columbus mistakes manatees for mermaids”:

On this day in 1493, Italian explorer Christopher Columbus, sailing near the Dominican Republic, sees three “mermaids”–in reality manatees–and describes them as “not half as beautiful as they are painted.” Six months earlier, Columbus (1451-1506) set off from Spain across the Atlantic Ocean with the Nina, Pinta and Santa Maria, hoping to find a western trade route to Asia. Instead, his voyage, the first of four he would make, led him to the Americas, or “New World.”

Not half as beautiful? — oh my. (I have yet, by the way, to see a painting of Mrs. Columbus.)

The full account is available at the History Channel website.

League of Women Voters’ January Newsletter

Whitewater-Area League of Women Voters’ has published its January 2009 Newsletter, with a schedule of upcoming LWV events. A copy of the newsletter is available as a pdf link in this post, and as a link on my blogroll.

Here are upcoming events:

On February 15th, 2009 there will be an 18th Annual Susan B. Anthony Celebration, at 11:30 a.m. at The Gathering Place, Milton, with a presentation from Genevieve G. McBride: “Women’s Wisconsin: Past and Present”. Details, here:

Dr. McBride’s presentation, “Women’s Wisconsin: Past and Present,” will reveal a lesser-known side of Wisconsin history, told through the stories of women who built not with bricks and mortar but with social institutions.

Dr. McBride is former director of Women’s Studies and an Associate Professor of History at UW-Milwaukee, where she teaches and researches American history, specializing in women’s, African American, and Wisconsin history. She is the author of On Wisconsin Women: Working for Their Rights from Settlement to Suffrage and more recently editor of Women’s Wisconsin, a unique anthology of writings by and about Wisconsin women featuring article excerpts as well as women’s letters, reminiscences, and oral histories previously published over many decades in the Wisconsin Magazine of History. Open to all, the 18th Annual Susan B. Anthony Birthday Celebration is sponsored by the Rock County Women’s History Committee in partnership with the Janesville League of Women Voters.

The reservation deadline is Friday, February 6 with Carolyn Brandeen, 608/754-7004, brandeen@charter.net or Kris Koeffler, 608/868-4229. Seating is limited and prepayment of $30 per person is necessary to confirm reservations. Make checks payable to the League of Women Voters at P.O. Box 8064, Janesville, WI 53547-8064. The Gathering Place is located at 715 Campus Street in Milton. Doors will open at 11 a.m. and the buffet brunch begins at 11:30.

Here is a partial listing of events, with more information and events inside the newsletter.

Date: January 22, 2009 (Thursday)
Event: Polling Issues and Analysis
Speaker: Professor Bill Mickelsen, UW- Whitewater, Dept. of Mathematics and Computer Science.
Location: City Hall Council Chambers, 7:00PM

There’s also a Fall Fairhaven Lecture Series, available to the public at no charge. Here are the lectures in the upcoming series:

JAN. 26: What the Heck is Passacaglia?
Christian Ellenwood, Associate Professor, Music Department

FEB. 2: The Bible of the Amiens: The Sculpture of the Great Cathedral

Chris Henige, Associate Professor & Chair, Art Department

(“All lectures are open to the public at no charge on Mondays at 3 p.m. at the Fellowship Hall, located at the Fairhaven Retirement Community, 435 West Starin Road, Whitewater, WI 53190. The Fall 2008 Fairhaven Lecture Series will examine a number of critical issues relevant to the 2008 elections. Sponsored by the UW-Whitewater Office of Continuing Education.”)

The League of Women voters, a nonpartisan political organization, encourages the informed and active participation of citizens in government, works to increase understanding of major public policy issues, and influences public policy through education and advocacy. We take action on public policy positions established through member study and agreement. We are political, but we do not support or oppose any political party or candidate.

more >>

Daily Bread: January 8, 2009

Good morning, Whitewater

There are no public meetings scheduled for the city today.

In Wisconsin history on this date, the Wisconsin Historical Society reports that in 1910, our fair state experienced a startling episode of labor unrest, as “Vagrant Snow Shovelers Strike for Pay:

On this date 228 vagrants were brought in to shovel snow at the Chicago & Northwestern rail yard in Janesville. Shortly thereafter, they went on strike for 25 cents an hour and better food. Two days later, they went on strike again, asking for 30 cents an hour.

Predictions for 2009

Here’s my local, amateur version, in honor of former columnist William Safire’s long-standing tradition, of offering annual predictions. The list for 2009:

1. In 2009, the University will win the following number of national sports championships:
A. None
B. One
C. Two
D. More than two

2. The land adjacent to Whitewater’s award-winning roundabout will be
A. Fully developed
B. Partially developed
C. Proposed, but undeveloped, along an entirely new plan
D. As it is now, with no additional development proposed or undertaken

3. Of the following print publications,how many will fold in 2009? (Daily Union, Janesville Gazette, Good Morning Advertiser, Whitewater Register, City of Whitewater Newsletter as Utility Bill Insert, Journal of the American Medical Association.)
A. None
B. One
C. Two
D. More than two

4. This year, how many current Common Council members will be defeated in their bids for office?
A. None
B. One
C. Two
D. Three

5. Following last year’s prediction — between now and year’s end, the unemployment rate in Whitewater will
A. Drop
B. Increase slightly
C. Increase significantly — up 25% or more as a percentage increase year-over-year
D. No change

6. Of these choices, it is most likely that the Whitewater City Manager will
A. Reduce unemployment in the city
B. Reduce poverty in the city
C. Increase opportunities for small businesses
D. Write the introduction to the next edition of Emily Post’s Etiquette

7. During the current recession, nearby Fort Atkinson and Delavan will fare, compared against Whitewater in economic health,
A. Worse than Whitewater
B. The same as Whitewater
C. Better than Whitewater
D. Far better than Whitewater

8. The City of Whitewater’s Administration will form a task force to study
A. Super-shrewd techniques in public relations
B. Wearing of plaid in the off-season
C. Use of false humility to win friends and influence people
D. The easier formation of task forces

9. Following last year’s prediction, market-penetration rate of the Whitewater Register will
A. Remain unchanged
B. Decline slightly
C. Decline significantly
D. Increase

10. The new District Administrator, after Dr. Steinhaus, for the Whitewater Unified School District will be
A. A current WUSD principal
B. Chief Jim Coan — no other teaches so well
C. An outside candidate
D. Dr. Steinhaus, again — will she really offer less in retirement than she does now? Stick with the known!

Adams’s guesses for 2009:

1. In 2009, the University will win the following number of national sports championships:
C. Two

2. The land adjacent to Whitewater’s award-winning roundabout will be
C. Proposed, but undeveloped, along an entirely new plan

3. Of the following print publications,how many will fold in 2009? (Daily Union, Janesville Gazette, Good Morning Advertiser, Whitewater Register, City of Whitewater Newsletter as Utility Bill Insert, Journal of the American Medical Association.)
B. One

4. This year, how many current Common Council members will be defeated in their bids for office?
C. Two

5. Following last year’s prediction — between now and year’s end, the unemployment rate in Whitewater will
B. Increase slightly

6. Of these choices, it is most likely that the Whitewater City Manager will
D. Write the introduction to the next edition of Emily Post’s Etiquette

7. During the current recession, nearby Fort Atkinson and Delavan will fare, compared against Whitewater in economic health,
C. Better than Whitewater

8. The City of Whitewater’s Administration will form a task force to study
D. The easier formation of task forces

9. Following last year’s prediction, market-penetration rate of the Whitewater Register will
C. Decline significantly

10. The new District Administrator, after Dr. Steinhaus, for the Whitewater Unified School District will be
C. An outside candidate

We’ll see how we did at predicting at year’s end.

Daily Bread: January 7, 2009

Good morning, Whitewater

There is a 7:00 p.m. FFA meeting scheduled at the high school this evening.

Longtime readers know that I am a libertarian, and like all libertarians, not fond of Richard M. Nixon, a big-government Republican if ever there were one. (I am not fond of local versions of Nixon either, as I have remarked before. Nothing hurts the Republican Party — what’s left of it — more than state-oriented solutions.)

A sound Republican?

Goldwater.

Some may doubt, of course, that Nixon was all wrong. They’re mistaken — he really was all wrong. I can prove it, too. A recent story from Wired reminds readers that Nixon mucked up everything, even American space exploration.

Nixon authorized the oh-so-solid-and-reliable Space Shuttle as America’s next space craft, on January 5th, 1972:

1972: President Richard M. Nixon announces that NASA will develop a space shuttle system, touting its reliability, reusability and low cost.

The Mercury and Gemini programs had put Americans into Earth orbit. Apollo had been to the moon seven times — landing four times — and would return to land twice again later in 1972.

But NASA wanted a reusable rocket ship to explore Earth orbit and to supply and staff a space station. Nixon gave the go-ahead:

I have decided today that the United States should proceed at once with the development of an entirely new type of space transportation system designed to help transform the space frontier of the 1970s into familiar territory, easily accessible for human endeavor in the 1980s and ’90s.

This system will center on a space vehicle that can shuttle repeatedly from Earth to orbit and back. It will revolutionize transportation into near space, by routinizing it. It will take the astronomical costs out of astronautics. In short, it will go a long way toward delivering the rich benefits of practical space utilization and the valuable spinoffs from space efforts into the daily lives of Americans and all people.

NASA director James Fletcher’s remarks referred once again to the shuttle’s “modest budget” and reduced complexity. The plan was to make 48 flights a year (.pdf) at about $50 million per launch ($250 million in today’s money).

Starting in 1981, the shuttles have made 124 space flights in 28 years, averaging four or five missions a year. The years immediately following the Challenger and Columbia disasters saw no flights. 1985 had a record high nine missions, and 1990 to 1997 averaged eight flights a year.
University of Colorado researcher Roger Pielke Jr. calculated in early 2005 that the shuttle program to that point had cost $145 billion, or about $1.3 billion per flight. (Based on a 1995 midpoint, that’s about $1.9 billion per flight in today’s dollars.)

The Apollo program cost a total $19.4 billion from 1960 to 1973. That averages almost $2.2 billion for each of the nine lunar missions. (Based on a 1967 midpoint, that would be about $13 billion each today.)

So, space shuttle flights have certainly been less expensive than Apollo lunar missions. But even adjusting for inflation and despite their many achievements, shuttle launches cost seven or eight times what was promised.

Yep — all wrong.