FREE WHITEWATER

Daily Bread: July 3, 2008

Good morning, Whitewater

The National Weather Service predicts today will be mostly sunny with a high of 73 degrees. The Farmers’ Almanac, looking ahead from last year to today, predicts thunderstorms.

Today begins with a Clean Sweep for the Downtown — beginning at 7 a.m. today —

What: Downtown Clean Sweep
Where: Meet behind Main Street Shops at 7 AM, or any time between 7 and 10 for information on what to do.
When: Thursday, July 3rd from 7 AM to 10 AM.
What to bring: Gloves if you have them, and brooms, which we seem to be short of. We’ll have bags.
What we’ll do: Pick up litter along parade route and the municipal lots. For more info: Bug Tami (preferred method at 262-473-2200 or 920-723-3375) or call Kristine at 473-9822.

Later today, the Independence Day holiday events in Whitewater begin. A full listing is available at July 4th events.

The website also has specific information on the Independence Day Parade, beginning at 10:00 a.m.

In Wisconsin History, on July 3rd, 1919, Milwaukee County’s public airportwas established.

Daily Bread: July 2, 2008

Good morning, Whitewater

Here’s a quick reminder about tomorrow’s Clean Sweep for the Downtown

What: Downtown Clean Sweep
Where: Meet behind Main Street Shops at 7 AM, or any time between 7 and 10 for information on what to do.
When: Thursday, July 3rd from 7 AM to 10 AM.
What to bring: Gloves if you have them, and brooms, which we seem to be short of. We’ll have bags.
What we’ll do: Pick up litter along parade route and the municipal lots. For more info: Bug Tami (preferred method at 262-473-2200 or 920-723-3375) or call Kristine at 473-9822.

The Clean Sweep is in support of the July 4th events (beginning July 3rd), a listing of which is available at July 4th events.

There’s also information on the Friday, July 4th Independence Day Parade, beginning at 10:00 a.m.

So what happened on July 2nd in Wisconsin History? Abraham Lincoln came through our way on this date in 1832, during the Black Hawk War. Interesting point about Lincoln — he served an officer, and later volunteered as a private, in the conflict. He had no expectation that he had to have a certain rank to serve.

The Wisconsin Historical Society website relates that Lincoln came through Janesville, but he was closer than that — there’s a marker near Cold Spring that refers to Lincoln’s experiences in our area.

Police Accreditation in the June 26th Register

I recently offered an assessment of the accreditation of our police department. My post from June 17 on the subject is available on my website.

I noted four deficiencies with accreditation. First, accreditation is a self-selected status, and does not test or measure all departments in the state. Second, a list of several hundred standards includes many trivial ones. Third, the accreditation groups often include those who know and have ongoing contacts with those that they rate – rather than being truly impartial and untainted by routine association. Fourth, accreditation ignores serious abuses – a department can be accredited on small matters while large failings are uncorrected.

I erroneously predicted that the Register would run a screaming headline trumpeting accreditation as one of the greatest accomplishments in Whitewater history. Forgive me, Register: Police Chief Jim Coan carries his own water in your page three story.

The story merely repeats the same, often misleading, claims made on behalf of accreditation. Only in the eighth paragraph does editor Carrie Dampier acknowledge that accreditation is a “voluntary process.”

Here is the key question: (1) how many departments even bothered to participate, and (2) how many who participated received accreditation? You can easily guess the answer: if it were an impressive ratio Coan would mention it in a press release. He doesn’t provide the answer, but that is, in fact, an answer all its own.

I mentioned that a checklist of 220 items will include many that are trivial or have no unique connection to policing. In the Register story, Coan now contends that our department met 232 standards!

Does he think the larger number makes the department about 5% better? Both numbers are obviously silly, but it says something embarrassing and comical about the leadership of our department that someone even bothered to announce the larger number.

(Despite all those many checklist standards, could no one establish a standard for basic arithmetic and numbers-counting? Next time: 233 standards!)

Finally, I think there is no leadership in all Wisconsin that so loves flowery adjectives and adverbs over true quality. We hear over and over about a “very prestigious and professional honor” and – wait for it – that this is a “very good, nice honor.”

When will our leadership see that third-rate public relations is no substitute for first-rate accomplishment?

By the way, how much police leadership time did the city devote to this checklist award? Now, that’s a number – if provided honestly – that would really tell something.

Daily Bread: July 1, 2008

Good morning, Whitewater

July 1st is a memorable date in Wisconsin history, according to the Wisconsin Historical Society. Consider these disparate events from our history —

1838 – First Known Norwegian Settler in Wisconsin
1899 – The Gideons Organize in Janesville
1927 – General Mitchell Field Begins Passenger Service
1959 – Circus World Museum Opens to the Public
1967 – Sale of Oleo Becomes Legal (For decades, margarine was illegal in America’s Dairyland!)

As a reminder, a summary of July 4th events in Whitewater is available at http://www.ww4th.com/festivalschedule.html. Information on the Friday, July 4th Independence Day Parade, beginning at 10:00 a.m., is available online, too.

The National Weather Service predicts sunny skies, with a high of 84. The Farmers’ Almanac predicts thunderstorms over the next three days.

Why We Fight, Why We Write

Beginning in 1942, Capra directed a series on films for soldiers (and later civilians) called Why We Fight. It says much about the human condition that, even after Nazi Germany declared war on the United States, the government felt it necessary to fund films to explain the reasons for fighting the Axis.

In our present conflict, against Al Qaeda and the Taliban, we have no similar documentary series. If we did, I am sure that a film explaining the fight against terrorism, now in its seventh year, would not justify humiliating and degrading passengers at a Texas airport.

Nonetheless, that’s what happened to Mandi Hamlin, when

TSA [Transportation Security Administration] agents at the airport in Lubbock, Texas, forced Mandi Hamlin to remove her nipple rings on February 24, saying she could not board her flight to Dallas until she did so. The removal was a painful and embarrassing process that required the use of pliers and elicited snickers from the screeners.

At the time, the TSA had a written policy on its website, apparently, that allowed a passenger with piercings to (1) request a pat-down search or (2) remove the piercings in private. Security guards denied Hamlin’s offer to show the piercings privately to a female TSA agent.

She was given a pair of pliers instead.

A TSA internal investigation found no wrongdoing, although the TSA promises to change its procedures.

The TSA’s conduct is detestable for two reasons. First, the TSA’s conduct is wrong under any circumstances, and does nothing to promote our security. Other means for examination were available. It dilutes a serious fight against repressive regimes to rationalize this sort of humiliation of a citizen of a free society.

Power, placed in the hands of vulgar employees with a prurient interest, is power wrongly conferred.

Second, it’s predictable that an ill-trained force, with self-justifying leaders, would acquit itself of any wrongdoing. An internal investigation, from a force of a force, will typically yield no true accountability.

(That’s why a serious force uses an independent investigative unit, or wholly independent investigator. “Wholly” excludes those one sees at social gatherings, routine meetings, or situations were members of an extended group evaluate each other.)

You may have heard, as I have, of officials in our small town who dribble countless words from the jargon of modern business life: professional, accountable, responsible, etc.

You would be wise to be cautious — as they say this about themselves, you have reason to doubt the objectivity of their praise. I wonder if Narcissus loved himself half so much as some of the leaders in our city seem to love themselves.

The injury that I have described — and injury it was — befell the passenger first and foremost.

She was not alone in experiencing injury, however. Every time that a mediocre official of the TSA performs shamefully, denies responsibility for his conduct, all the while praising his own skill, he injuries mature men and women who live in his community.

The TSA official does this by asking others, implicitly, to look away, and to deny the truth of his misconduct. He asks them to remain silent while he dissembles, injures, degrades, and then praises himself for doing it.

He asks them to be silent partners to his wrongful actions and lies.

That’s one of the reasons that libertarians write. They are dissenters against this sort of conduct (as are many others), and are at their best when they are clear and firm in their dissent. One does not have to be loved; it is enough to speak forthrightly about the abuses one observes.

In the speaking, one affirms of the full rights of citizenship, for others, and for oneself, too.

Bob Barr’s Campaign as Summer Begins

The New York Times has a story today on Bob Barr, the presidential nominee of the Libertarian Party. One might expect that a liberal paper might want to exaggerate the strength of Barr’s candidacy at McCain’s expense.

Actually, it’s a fair look at where Barr stands as summer begins: the potential to do better than any libertarian candidate before, but as yet without the money to realize that potential.
Barr has shown no ability to attract the number of contributions that Ron Paul attracted. (I was not a Paul supporter, but his fundraising ability is undeniable.)

Barr won the LP nomination on the sixth ballot, after overcoming opposition from left-leaning libertarians. Some of them will not support him under any circumstances.

Instead, Barr’s better opportunity lies in persuading center-right libertarians, independents, and disaffected Republicans to support him.

If Barr wants to attract many newcomers to his candidacy, he will need far more than he has raised so far.

Daily Bread: June 30, 2008

Good morning, Whitewater

A summary of July 4th events in Whitewater is available at http://www.ww4th.com/festivalschedule.html.

Information on the Friday, July 4th Independence Day Parade, beginning at 10:00 a.m., is also available.

I have updated my calendar to reflect a change in Planning Commission meetings — they are now scheduled for the third Thursday third Monday of each month.

[Note of Correction: The original post this morning said third Thursday — it should have said third Monday, with the meetings moving ahead one week from the fourth Monday. My small calendar on the right side of the website was correct, but this post was not. I have now corrected the text, above. The meetings are still on Mondays. ]

On this date in Wisconsin history, in 1940, Babe Didrikson won the Women’s Western Open professional golf tournament at Blue Mound Country Club in Wauwatosa. Didrikson was one of the great athletes of her era.

The National Weather Service predicts sunny skies, with a high of 79. The Farmers’ Almanac predicts fair and hot and dry weather.

Join the Downtown Clean Sweep on Thursday, July 3rd

There’s another opportunity to help Whitewater get ready for our July 4th Parade and Holiday. The 14th (!) Downtown Clean Sweep will take place this Thursday, July 3rd from 7 AM to 10 AM. (Volunteers are free to join for just an hour or two if that’s all the time they have.)

Here are the details:

What: Downtown Clean Sweep
Where: Meet behind Main Street Shops at 7 AM, or any time between 7 and 10 for information on what to do.
When: Thursday, July 3rd from 7 AM to 10 AM.
What to bring: Gloves if you have them, and brooms, which we seem to be short of. We’ll have bags.
What we’ll do: Pick up litter along parade route and the municipal lots. For more info: Bug Tami (preferred method) or call Kristine at 473-9822.

Every volunteer will receive a coupon for a free cup of coffee, courtesy of the Sweet Spot!

For more information, bother Tami or see the attached flyer. See you Thursday!

The Downtown Whitewater Organization Committee

Tamara Brodnicki
Executive Director
Downtown Whitewater, Inc.
162 West Main Street, Suite L
Whitewater, Wisconsin 53190
Phone: 1-262-473-2200
Mobile: 1-920-723-3375
director@downtownwhitewater.com
www.downtownwhitewater.com

Here’s a copy of the flyer for the event:



Why Video and Music?

Sometimes, people will ask why I have posts with videos (or today, music).

Why not? America is awash in new media. Blogs are only one of the new media that have hit big in the last decade.

For someone who prefers one compliant newspaper, three television networks, and a news magazine or two, this new era must seem disorderly and chaotic.

I suppose that at times it is disorderly and chaotic.

This is what life looks like when a free people has the ready means to express itself. Americans have always seized new opportunities – it’s one of our best characteristics.

A Little (Free Enterprise) Music from Oingo Boingo

I thought I would post a YouTube Song from Oingo Boingo, a band that had a libertarian bent. (Danny Elfman of the group went on to become a major Hollywood composer.) Their music isn’t my typical fare, but I always have time for them.

Here they are performing Capitalism, as posted by AraMiraBlack. (Lyrics appear below.)





There’s nothing wrong with Capitalism
There’s nothing wrong with free enterprise
Don’t try to make me feel guilty
I’m so tired of hearing you cry

There’s nothing wrong with making some profit
If you ask me I’ll say it’s just fine
There’s nothing wrong with wanting to live nice
I’m so tired of hearing you whine
About the revolution
Bringin’ down the rich
When was the last time you dug a ditch, baby!

If it ain’t one thing
Then it’s the other
Any cause that crosses your path
Your heart bleeds for anyone’s brother
I’ve got to tell you you’re a pain in the ass

You criticize with plenty of vigor
You rationalize everything that you do
With catchy phrases and heavy quotations
And everybody is crazy but you

You’re just a middle class, socialist brat
From a suburban family and you never really had to work
And you tell me that we’ve got to get back
To the struggling masses (whoever they are)
You talk, talk, talk about suffering and pain
Your mouth is bigger than your entire brain
What the hell do you know about suffering and pain . . .

(Repeat first verse)

(Repeat chorus)

There’s nothing wrong with Capitalism
There’s nothing wrong with Capitalism
There’s nothing wrong with Capitalism
There’s nothing wrong with Capitalism
more >>

Daily Bread: June 27, 2008

Good morning, Whitewater

There are no public meetings scheduled for the City of Whitewater. Even so, you’ll still find something to do, make, build, see, or explore.

On this date in 1837, according to the Wisconsin Historical Society, the Milwaukee Sentinel was founded. It began as a weekly paper.

The National Weather Service predicts heavy rain today, with a high in the mid eighties. The Farmers’ Almanac predicts hot and dry weather, then thunderstorms.

China’s Restrictions on Cars During the Olympics

The Wall Street Journal‘s weekend edition had a story about how that dictatorship’s government will restrict use of automobiles in Beijing during the Olympic Games. They are trying to limit auto use to reduce air pollution in the capital city.

The finest minds of state planning will accomplish a 50% reduction in traffic through an alternating daily ban on cars with odd or even license plates.

As the Journal reports, it is an easy ban for the rich to circumvent: corporations are arranging for the purchase of alternative license plates.

Didn’t Jimmy Carter try to ration gas sales based on an odd-even license restriction? I cannot recall how well that went, as I have a condition that causes me to repress memories of failed administrations.
(For that reason, I cannot recall anything between January 1977 and January 1981.)

It says nothing good about the Chinese government that they cannot develop a better scheme than Carter did a generation ago, albeit for different reasons.)