FREE WHITEWATER

Daily Bread: April 1, 2008

Good morning, Whitewater

It’s April 1st, traditionally a day of pranks and jokes. I’d had thought of going that route myself with a post, but I’ll refrain from that course. The forecast is for a chance of rain or snow, with a high of 39 degrees. That’s joke enough. The calendar says spring, but the weather says midwest spring.

It’s election day across the state. In Whitewater, voters have choices in municipal, county, and statewide races. These races include a contentious Wisconsin Supreme Court contest. No contest in the city is similarly heated.

The Common Council meeting typically held tonight will take place on Thursday, April 3rd at 6:30 p.m. There are no scheduled public meetings today.

At 5 p.m. tonight, the FFA will hold its alumni spaghetti dinner at the high school.

The Brewers won yesterday, in ten innings, having put a lead at risk. They beat the Cubs, so all is forgiven. I’ll debut a new, sporadic feature on Brewers baseball next week, called Ballpark. I’ll cover the Brewers season, with posts appearing about once each week.

New Environmental Website: Greenvoting.com

In Wisconsin, there are thousands of independent websites, many of them covering a single city or town, but others devoted to an issue or project. From a student-led effort at Marquette University, there’s a new environmental website called Greenvoting.com. Here’s a description of the Greenvoting.com website:

Greenvoting is sort of a hybrid between Wikipedia and Craigslist. We are a resource of information on issues related to the environment (with a focus on Wisconsin), but our information is primarily user-generated. We are also a community resource, and we invite individuals and organizations to contribute to our site, edit (yes!) our pages, and collaborate with other individuals and organizations.

We are utilizing an innovative web service provided by a company called Wetpaint, which allows users to edit web pages without any special training. It’s as easy as word processing!

Best wishes to Regina and everyone working on this new website.

Register Watch™ for the March 28, 2008 Issue (Part 2)

This is the second part of my Register Watch™ post for the March 28th issue of the Whitewater Register. In this post, I’ll review Register editor Carrie Dampier’s editorial, “In Defense of the Register and free speech.” As you’ll see, I don’t think she successfully defends either.

Before I begin, I’ll note that Dampier responds in part to a letter from Register subscriber Henri Kinson. Readers may freely compare Kinson’s letter and Dampier’s editorial, on points of clarity, style, and reasoning. I am sure that they’ll find that the letter is superior to the editorial. Kinson certainly needs no assistance from me; his argument prevails on its own. (I am sure, too, that Kinson would disagree with some of the positions that I’ve taken in FREE WHITEWATER. Many thanks, surely, for his supportive words.)

I’ll confine my remarks to Dampier’s editorial.

On Public Conduct. Dampier begins with the contention that she need not cover a story that I created on my blog. She may cover what she wants. It’s false, though, to contend that this is a story that I created.

I created nothing. Public officials acted, and sought out a blogger using a pen name, over months, repeatedly referring to people they falsely believed might be writing at this site as suspects, persons of interest, etc. They acted; I learned of it, and published it. The creators of this story have offices at our municipal building.

Their words, their actions, their conduct. I will happily give credit where credit is due.

(For my series, please click this link: Witch-Hunting a Blogger in Whitewater, Wisconsin.)

On Embarrassment. Dampier observes that embarrassment is not “community news.” That depends on the cause of the embarrassment, I suppose. It’s clear, official rationalizations notwithstanding, that public conduct to overcome lawful, anonymous speech is more than the embarrassment of slipping on a banana peel, after all. It involves public conduct, of public officials, in response to constitutionally-protected speech.

On Being a Hack. Dampier contends that my reference to her as a hack is a personal insult. On the contrary, it’s an apt evaluation of her work in her vocation. Consider a critique of a professional football player, for example. Suppose a receiver drops the ball, play after play, week after week. While evaluating the receiver’s conduct, a writer refers to the receiver as ‘butterfingers.’ That’s not a personal attack — it’s an evaluation of the receiver’s limited professional skill and talent.

If one said that the receiver’s wife looked like a barracuda, now that would be a personal attack. I made no comments of this kind about Dampier or any of her acquaintances.

To call the receiver ‘butterfingers,’ is acerbic, surely, but apt and colorful, too. In the same way, the term hack refers traditionally to a writer who writes poorly, and reasons no better. I am of the opinion that the term cries out for use, in this instance. I would feel remiss if I had not used it.

It says all that one need say about Dampier that, as editor of the town’s newspaper, she offers as her defense that she provides nothing that someone watching local television could not provide. There we find a surprising lack of self-awareness. If that’s it, of what value is a role as editor and reporter?

Pen Names and Anonymity. Dampier contends that, since her surname appears on her stories, “when someone wants to tell me why I’m a hack, they know who to come looking for.” When a reporter writes a sentence that awkward, it only confirms my previous assessment.

In any event, I’m really not anonymous — I use a pen name. It’s the same person, with the same pen name, at the same website. The only person of whom I’ve ever heard who doubted that it was the same man, all the time, was our chief of police (who sought several, thought one might be aiding others, and was wrong on all accounts).

All the city knows how to reach me — my email address has been on my site from its first day, in May 2007. The risible theory that the city wanted civil discourse ignores the prominent link on my website entitled, simply enough, “EMAIL.”

Dampier, the Defender of Childhood Esteem. Dampier contends that she has avoided the story — of official conduct, not mine – because it might lessen the chance to cover a story — wait for the sugary line — for the “proud parents of a Whitewater High School athlete.”

If there is anyone in the city who finds this argument convincing, he deserves a free subscription to the Register. No one could seriously contend that a paper does not have room for both stories. A paper that has room for a front page story on spring, entitled, “Hope Springs Eternal, ” has room for anything.

Dampier may choose as she wants, but she cannot credibly contend that a child will be robbed of his justly earned recognition; a paper of this size has room for many stories. (It even has room for an editorial that relies on an ‘I did it for the children‘ justification.)

The District Attorney’s Office. Dampier contends that she’ll cover the story of the matter of official conduct when it goes before the D.A.’s office, and charges are filed.

No one sensible would make this argument.

First, it’s clear that every normal paper runs all sorts of public policy stories that do not involve litigation.

Second, if litigation were the standard, then the Register should be covering in great detail the federal constitutional suit against former Whitewater police investigator Larry Meyer. I’ve not noticed that coverage; no one else has either.

Third, Dampier should know that the conduct implicated in my public records request involves federal, and not purely, state matters.

Consider the implication of Dampier’s argument — officials’ actions aren’t a story for the Register because they’ve not been charged with a crime. A standard that low is laughable, and hardly a ringing endorsement of their leadership, either.

Amount of Time and Use of Time. Dampier observes that she’ll not cover this story, but then proceeds to print the justifications of a public official that sometimes one will have to take time for a personal emergency.

So be it; actions against a lawful website are hardly a family emergency. They are, however, an indication — a strong one, I think — that local officials have lost all perspective.

Local Newspapers. If Dampier believes that following the local herd puts her in better stead than a statewide newspaper, she’s welcome to that belief. I suggest that she email her opinion to journalists across the state; the arrogance of her opinion will serve as a bit of amusement for those who receive it.

Malicious Intent. Dampier makes an empty and false assertion. There’s no malicious intent, just acerbic criticism of a type found in newspapers and magazines across America, and in opinion columns each day. It takes a thin skin to find malice where it does not exist. It takes, also, a great presumption — Dampier is in no position to discern intent; she cannot discern what does not exist.

Robust commentary tales place across America, in far larger places, with far less fuss, than hypersensitive officials here make of it.

Opinion and Fact. Here one finds the oddest part of Dampier’s editorial — her contention that I have sought vindication of assertions of fact.

I need no vindication; I certainly would not have sought it in the actions of public officials against lawful speech.

What is most telling, though, is Dampier’s contention that I have sought vindication of what I write as fact. That’s nonsense — the lawful position of what I write is that it is opinion commentary. She cannot possibly — whatever her limitations — fail to understand that FREE WHITEWATER is a website of commentary. By design most of the posts are opinion pieces, like short editorials. Most blogs are like this, and much of America’s tradition of political commentary is like this, stretching back to our earliest history.

Dampier cannot possibly be confused about this, unless she’s hopeless unaware of our own country’s history of commentary and lawful, protected speech.

“Deranged Thought….Words of Violence”. That Dampier is so overwrought is embarrassing. I cannot say that I would have thought much of her editorial in any event, but her false mention of acts of violence is just ridiculous in its own unique, sad way.

This website is a small blog of independent commentary. It’s polemical, but entirely peaceful commentary. Dampier can no more attribute anything else to me than I can attribute the sound journalism of others to her.

A ordinary, sensible person could live a thousand years and yet never write anything so false and hysterical as she has written. She is, as I have contended before, an editor who needs and editor.

Voltaire. When one first saw the title of Dampier’s editorial, “In Defense of the Register and free speech,” could one not see a quote from Voltaire on the way? I would have put money on it, but the likelihood was so great that I would never have been able to find profitable odds.

Her contention that she stands with Voltaire, though, is unavailing — she spends most of her editorial undermining the right to lawful, constitutionally protected American speech, only to end with a quick, over-used quotation.

Voltaire’s remarks don’t make a weak editorial better; they’re merely a line in the place of an argument.

Daily Bread: March 31, 2008

Good morning, Whitewater

School and campus are back in session. It was pleasant to see so many students back yesterday. Our city is better when they’re here.

The Park & Rec Board meets at 5 p.m. today. The agenda is on the city website, and they’ll meet in the Cravath Lakefront room, on the second floor of the municipal building.

Both the Farmers’ Almanac and the National Weather Service are in agreement — it’s likely to be a rainy, stormy day, all day. March ends not as a lamb, but more like a lion.

Register Watch™ for the March 28, 2008 Issue (Part 1)

This is the first part of my weekly Register Watch™ feature for the March 28th issue of Whitewater’s weekly paper. A second, bonus part will appear later.

As you might expect, the Register, now in its 152nd year, highlights campaign coverage of our upcoming April 1st elections. Three election stories dominate the page: a referendum in the Town of Whitewater on whether to permit alcohol sales, the election of a municipal judge for the City of Whitewater, and the race for the Walworth County Board’s District 4.

I am not a resident of the Town of Whitewater, so the issue does not face my community. What’s missing from the story is what you’ll find only if you visit the website of prominent Milwaukee radio host Charlie Sykes, of 620 AM WTMJ. At Sykes’s blog, you see that a resident of the town sought Federal court intervention to permit him to speak against referendum issue. (See, “A Victory for Free Speech“, Charlie Sykes, March 21, WTMJ AM 620 website.)

You might have also seen these details linked on FREE WHITEWATER, but not the Register.

On the Walworth County Board race between incumbent Jerry Grant and challenger Jim Stewart, one sees that editor Carrie Dampier describes both as public servants. I have no doubt that both candidates love our community; the description, though, is telling. The term public servant reveals a bias toward continued office-holding. One could as easily use the terms politician, long-time politician, or entrenched incumbent. I don’t favor term limits, but a bias toward politicians as public servants, rather office holders or, well, politicians, is evident.

I have not decided on a candidate in this race, but one obvious detail is missing in Dampier’s coverage of the two candidates. One is the publisher of a website that declares it is a “NEWS and SPORTS site.” (In many ways, it offers better coverage than the Register, as I have remarked previously. It’s not, I think, a news site in the conventional sense. FREE WHITEWATER’s not a news site either — it is a website of independent commentary.)

It is surely worth mentioning that one candidate has a daily website selecting stories for publication. Nothing in the story, including the candidate’s biography at the end, notes the fact.

There is no change in the mix of advertisements that appear in the first section of the Whitewater Register: of the nearly four dozen ads in the first section of the paper, only about one quarter are for Whitewater businesses. This local number includes both campaign advertisements for the upcoming election, and advertisements from the Register itself. (The Register is part of the Southern Lakes Newspapers chain, 700 N. Pine Street, Burlington, WI 53105.)

Friday Morning Cartoon

The Friday Morning Cartoon features is back. This morning, it’s Betty Boop in Snow White, from 1933. (Cab Calloway even has a part.)

You may have read that someone say that these are just, in his words, “youtube cartoons.” That’s not true at all. They’re creative and clever expressions of American humor, from generations ago. They may appear on YouTube™ now, but they delighted audiences in the theater when they first appeared.

Many of these cartoons appeared when America faced all manner of existing domestic and waxing foreign challenges. We were no timid people then, as we are not now. In the face of these difficulties, we were resilient and creative. That generation left us a legacy both serious and light.

And Betty Boop? As you’ll see, she’s still got it.

more >>

Daily Bread: March 28, 2008

Good morning, Whitewater

The week ends with a National Weather Service forecast of sunny skies and a high of thirty-nine degrees. That’s where the Farmers’ Almanac predicted that we’d be. The NWS has a budget approaching a billion dollars; the Farmers’ Almanac has, undoubtedly, far less. Still, the NWS offers a website with super-cool satellite photographs, so the advantage rests with them.

It’s the last day of vacation for students in the district and the campus. That may be of some disappointment to those vacationing. Our city will do benefit and be stronger, though, when students return to the campus. We are better with them than without them — welcome back this weekend.

If the skies are clear tonight, as they are predicted to be, in our southwest sky we’ll find both the constellation Orion the hunter, and Mars above it. Lovely sights await.

Free Speech for the Town of Whitewater

Longtime readers know that, for the most part, I have confined my commentary to activities within the City of Whitewater, population 14,296. Not far from the city, however, sits the Town of Whitewater, a separate municipality, with a population of less than 2,000, situated near Whitewater Lake.

There’s a story from the Town of Whitewater that calls out for notice — the sensible decision of a Federal judge to enjoin action against a Town of Whitewater resident. The resident wanted to mail out postcards against a town referendum that would permit liquor sales (the Town of Whitewater is presently dry). Prior use of the campaign finance law against speech from an ordinary citizen dissuaded resident John Swaffer from mailing his postcards out of concern that the campaign finance law would be used against him, too.

Additional details of the story are available at the WTMJ website. (See, “A Victory for Free Speech“, Charlie Sykes, March 21, WTMJ AM 620 website.)

Ordinary citizens have reason to be concerned when politicians threaten use of the campaign finance law to prevent free expression against their political initiatives. Although I am not opposed to alcohol sales to adults, I am strongly opposed to efforts to use campaign finance laws to limit political speech in the way described here.

Our finance laws should not become a tool by which incumbents, or or any political faction, prevent opposition to their plans. This has happened before, in the City of Whitewater, too. If I recall correctly, Whitewater Unified School District board member Henri Kinson wanted to distribute flyers against a spending referendum, and found the law used against him. I was not writing back then, but I remember thinking how use of the law against his distribution of flyers was simultaneously petty and outrageous.

It should never happen anywhere that elected officials use campaign finance laws as a cudgel against expression. It’s not merely bad policy, and over-extension of the law — it’s an unjustified violation of political speech that benefits entrenched interests at the expense of ordinary citizens.

Daily Bread: March 27, 2008

Good morning, Whitewater

Spring is now a week old, and there is a significant chance of snow in the forecast. The expected accumulation, through, is less than predicted even a day ago — according to the National Weather Service, perhaps only a few inches. That is, all considered, a good characterization of early spring in Wisconsin.

This is a day without school, in the city or at campus, and without any listed public meetings.

I’ll be posting, though, throughout the day — the private sector carries on.

Common Council Meeting for March 18, 2008

In our small city, we have a Common Council of seven members, and a city manager appointed by the council. Of our seven council members, six have been elected, and one sits as an appointee to fill the remainder of a vacant term.

They do not sit in session alone: the city clerk sits in the center of the group, and the police chief, Jim Coan, sits off to one side, beside the seat for the city manager. The police chief seldom speaks, as there is almost never a need for his participation. From his vantage, though, he stares out into the chamber, and with sloping shoulders and darkly circled eyes, surveys the small town he arrogantly and wrongly dominates.

In the session on the 18th, the city manager was not present. No matter; he had done his work for the town faction two days earlier, when he had endorsed Coan’s shameful witch-hunt against lawful speech as not merely legitimate, but ‘very legitimate.’ City Manager Brunner is not from our town — and will eventually leave for a more lucrative post — but while he remains here, he will have earned the thanks of the town’s most reactionary clique.

Coan walked all over Brunner last fall by upending Brunner’s city budget, but Brunner can do no more on his own account than endorse wrongful and mediocre conduct. Coan may have underestimated some, but he has sized Brunner up just right.

Brunner was not present at the meeting on March 18th. Sitting in for him was Director (yes, Director) of Public Works, Dean Fischer. If there has ever been evidence of inflation in titles and positions, Dean Fischer is surely a confirming example. (I’ll have more to say about Fischer on Friday.)

That Fischer and Coan were sitting next to each other was fortuitous; Fischer will not have to email to request our police department license plates on bloggers in the future. If he’s seated next to Coan again, and finds himself similarly inclined, Fischer need only whisper.

As for the meeting, nothing of great importance was discussed, and that would include council member Nosek’s concern that salt and sand from our recent winter may never fully disappear without human intervention.

Nosek even pined for former council member Hixson’s suggestion that our city purchase a leaf vacuum. Nosek opposed the proposal at the time, I think; desperate times, I suppose, call for desperate measures.

Nosek would put something like the proposed leaf vacuum to work as a salt and sand vacuum. I can help him, as I helped then-member Hixson. I offered a similar proposal in November 2007.

Over at the FREE WHITEWATER Department of Engineering for Better Everyday Living™, the design team built a device for leaf vacuuming. They estimated the cost per unit at only $76.94. Here’s the schematic:

I am not sure if it will work for salt and sand, but if Nosek’s interested, I’ll send one over to the municipal building.

Daily Bread: March 26, 2008

Good morning, Whitewater

In our city, only one municipal meeting is listed for today: a 6 PM meeting of the Bicycle Advocacy Group, at the municipal building. We could use such a group, although I was not aware of it previously. Most of us could benefit from more time outside, on a bike, or walking, or running. I walk through the city every day, exploring different sections of town, and there is always something interesting to see.

The National Weather Service reports that it will be mostly sunny today, with a high of 50 degrees. For those much interested in weather forecasts, the NWS puts a discussion of its forecasts on its website. I am not a meteorologist, but the reasoning behind the forecast is available for those who might like to see it.

Over at the Farmers’ Almanac, there’s a notation that Arcturus crossed the meridian early this morning. It reminds me of a story about that red giant star, over thirty-six light years distance from earth.

I once saw a talk show segment where a guest insisted that he was from a planet orbiting Arcturus. He looked like anyone else, really, except he was slightly taller, had a pallid complexion, and spoke in an affected manner. He had all sorts of pronouncements for earthlings. The audience didn’t know what to make of it.

(Apparently, there are many odd UFO theories that beings from a world near Arcturus have, and continue, to visit our planet. A quick Google search leads to webpages that hold all the fantastic details.)

I find it hard to believe that beings supposedly from Arcturus have visited our world; it is even less likely that they’ve made a stop in Whitewater. It’s an incredible tale, but sadly no less credible than the contention that a police chief and one of his lieutenants would visit a citizen’s house merely for the purpose of ‘civil discourse.’

And that, after all, is a tale that our police chief and city manager both dare to tell with a straight face.

Register Watch™ for the March 20, 2008 Issue

Here is one of my new features, along with the Daily Bread morning post. I have called it Register Watch™, and it will be a weekly review of the latest issue of our local, but dismal paper, the Whitewater Register. Going forward, it will appear one day after the latest issue of the Register; typically Register Watch™ will appear on Friday mornings.

(Quick note to my ignorant critics in municipal office: You acted wrongly and stupidly against America’s clear tradition of free speech. Your self-justification is both feeble and embarrassing. (See my post to your attention, To the Municipal Opponents of Free Speech.) You’ll not cow someone into silence; I have more to write than ever before. This feature is a small part of that expanded effort.)

The March 20th issue of the Register offers two front page stories on local or county elections, one on Leslie Steinhaus as a candidate for a superintendent’s position in Minnesota, and one more, beyond these. Ready, Whitewater? The largest amount of space, virtually everything below the fold, is devoted to an ode to spring, entitled (ready, again?) “Hope Springs Eternal.” Oh my.

Of course, the biggest story in town, covered only out of town and on this website, is the outrageous, wrong, and embarrassing conduct of our police chief against a lawful blogger. You may have heard something about this, on this website, in a series entitled, “Witch-Hunting a Blogger in Whitewater, Wisconsin.” It was also covered on the frontpage of our state’s leading newspaper, the Wisconsin State Journal. (See, “Front Page: The Wisconsin State Journal Covers Municipal Actions Against Free Whitewater Website.”)

From the Register there’s nothing. That’s nothing, as in not a thing. You should not be surprised. If a story does not support the stodgy, inept, narrow-minded town faction’s position, it will not appear in the Register.

You may guess why that is; I am not sure. I cannot confirm the rumor that the Register publishes the truth only in disappearing ink.

Dampier is listed as an editor at the Register, but that must refer to her editing duties at another publication, because her “Hope Springs Eternal” story is the worst-written and edited since, well…. memory fails, as my third grade studies were so long ago.

The stories on the candidates for election are pedestrian and predictable.

Is the Register really a Whitewater paper, may I ask? In the first section, of over forty-five prominent advertisements, only about ten are from Whitewater concerns (and this paltry number includes political ads for Whitewater candidates, and ads for the Register itself.) Why so few local merchants, and so many (wasting their money) from outside our city? You know why — the Register is the weakest link in a local chain. It’s hardly a Whitewater paper, though.

I knew about the Steinhaus story long before it made its way to the Register, and it’s almost as light as the fluff on spring. I chose not to write about it. Steinhaus is a first-round candidate for a position in Minnesota. All that requires is a brief paragraph. The Register runs the news from the front page to the inside. You’ll excuse me if, upon hearing of the possibility of her departure, I’ll not pour some Chivas quite yet. It’s waiting, though.

Daily Bread: March 25, 2008

Good morning, Whitewater

There is no school today, and no municipal public meetings are scheduled in the city.

Our library is open today, as it is most weekdays, from 9:00 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. It is one of the great treasures of our city. I support plans to expand the library, so that it will be able to offer still more. I am sure that the staff would welcome your visit.

(Our library offers a prominent link for translation in Spanish, too. As we have a significant Spanish speaking population, it’s an example that our local government should follow. I have called for this before; I’ll keep doing so.)

The Farmers’ Almanac says that Orion’s Belt set at 12:24 a.m. this morning. I am not sure if they intend to describe the entire constellation, or if someone at the almanac is being precise about which part of that constellation set at 12;24 a.m. No matter — as Orion departs the northern sky, Scorpius arrives, and summer draws closer. My father and I enjoyed skywatching, and Orion was one of the first constellations he identified for me. Here’s a link to more about Orion, from the Earth & Sky website.

I have received email messages from across America in support of free speech. One correspondent had a signature tag on her email from a clever film —

“It’s 106 miles to Chicago, we’ve got a full tank of gas, half a pack of cigarettes, it’s dark, and we’re wearing sunglasses.”
“Hit it.”

I am old enough that I recalled the line from having seen the movie during its original theatrical release. I asked to make sure I had identified the movie correctly as the original Blues Brothers, and received a reply with which I wholly agree:

“Yup, it sure is. The original Blues Brothers was a sublime parody of modern social disasters. With a really rocking soundtrack.”

Well said.