FREE WHITEWATER

Daily Bread for 4.23.21

Good morning.

Friday in Whitewater will be partly cloudy with a high of 58.  Sunrise is 5:58 AM and sunset 7:47 PM, for 13h 45m 59s of daytime.  The moon is a waxing gibbous with 81.7% of its visible disk illuminated.

On this day in 1985, Coca-Cola changes its formula and releases New Coke. The response is negative, and the original formula is back on the market in less than three months.

Recommended for reading in full — 

 Patrick Marley reports Federal COVID relief coming to Wisconsin and its local governments totals $20 billion, new report says:

The report provides the best accounting yet of the funds flowing into the state because of the pandemic. It tallies $19.9 billion coming to the state but notes that figure likely understates how much Wisconsin will ultimately receive.

By any measure, $20 billion is a stunning sum of money. For instance, it would be enough to run Milwaukee County for 17 years.

The report notes the recent round of aid is about twice as much as Wisconsin governments received from Congress in 2009 in response to the Great Recession.

The biggest share of the COVID-19 aid — $5.2 billion — comes as general relief to the state. Evers must follow federal rules for spending that money but has substantial leeway on what he does with it. He is concentrating the funding on the health care response and economic aid, such as with aid to businesses and renters.

….

Local governments are also getting general relief, with Wisconsin counties and municipalities receiving $2.3 billion in the latest round of help.

The federal government is providing more than $4 billion for the state’s unemployment system because of the pandemic. That provided those who lost their jobs with extra help — $600 a week initially and $300 a week more recently.

Another $3.7 billion is going to K-12 schools, colleges and universities and $800 million toward child care, the report found.

….

The report examines aid going to governmental entities but not directly to individuals. For instance, it does not include in its total the stimulus checks sent to Wisconsinites over the last year, which the nonpartisan Legislative Fiscal Bureau estimates to be $13.6 billion.

Adam Serwer writes ‘Anglo-Saxon’ Is What You Say When ‘Whites Only’ Is Too Inclusive:

Last week, far-right Republican Representatives Marjorie Taylor Greene and Paul Gosar distanced themselves from a proposal to create an America First Caucus, after a document bearing the group’s name made reference to “Anglo-Saxon political traditions.”

….

it helps to understand that “Anglo-Saxon” is what you say when “whites only” is simply too inclusive.

The Anglo-Saxonism to which I refer has little to do with the Germanic peoples who settled in medieval England. Rather, it’s an archaic, pseudoscientific intellectual trend that gained popularity during the height of immigration from Eastern and Southern Europe to the United States, at the turn of the 20th century. Nativists needed a way to explain why these immigrants—Polish, Russian, Greek, Italian, and Jewish—were distinct from earlier generations, and why their presence posed a danger.

They settled on the idea that the original “native” American settlers were descended from “the tribes that met under the oak-trees of old Germany to make laws and choose chieftains,” as Francis Walker put it in The Atlantic in 1893, and that the new immigrants lacked the biological aptitude for democracy. Anglo-Saxon was a way to distinguish genteel old-money types, such as nativist Republican Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, from members of inferior races who had names such as, well, McCarthy. The influential eugenicist Madison Grant insisted that the Irish possessed an “unstable temperament” and a “lack of coordinating and reasoning power.”

Bar in New York subway station gets noticed:

Whitewater Common Council Meeting, 4.20.21: 7 Points

The Whitewater Common Council met on Tuesday, 4.20.21.

The recording of the meeting is embedded above. The amended agenda for the meeting is available.

A few remarks on selected items of the agenda — 

1. Council Officers. Council re-elected unanimously Lynn Binnie as council president and Jim Allen as president pro tempore. (Video, 04:00.)

2. Council Members on Boards & Commissions.  (Video, 19:20.) Council members will serve for 2021-2022 on several boards or commissions:

Alcohol & Licensing: Gregory Majkrzak, Carol McCormick, Matthew Schulgit
CDA: Jim Allen, Lisa Dawsey Smith
Landmarks: Matthew Schulgit
Library Board: Brienne Brown
Parks & Recreation: Carol McCormick
Planning: Lynn Binnie (regular)Brienne Brown (alternate)
Birge Fountain: Jim Allen
Board of Review: Lynn Binnie, Jim Allen, Matthew Schulgit, Gregory Majkrzak
Tech Park Board: Brienne Brown
Fire & Rescue: Lisa Dawsey Smith
Public Works: Jim Allen, Matthew Schulgit, Carol McCormick
Finance: Lynn Binnie, Gregory Majkrzak, Lisa Dawsey Smith
Community Involvement: Lisa Dawsey Smith
Equal Opportunities Commission: Brienne Brown, Lynn Binnie

3. Neighborhood Services. Whitewater has a new Neighborhood Services director, Chris Bennett, having started in that position in late March. (Video, 23:00.)

4. Whitewater Police Department Liaison. Through Walworth County, the department now has an embedded Community Crisis Liaison, Amanda Akridge. (Video, 27:20.)

5. Tax Incremental District 4 Closed. (Video, 44:20.)

6. Community Participation. Whitewater’s city manager and council recommended residents to serve on municipal boards and commissions, and the council approved those recommendations without discussion. (Video, 44:50.)

7. Asides.

 Government officials exercise authority not only by law but also through community influence. As Whitewater has become increasingly fragmented (see The Subcultural City), community influence is harder to exercise. Many residents likely don’t know the names of their council members, biennial listings on a ballot notwithstanding.

Only if controversial issues flare will some council members or board members become familiar to their constituents. In that circumstance, a person’s role and title won’t matter nearly so much as his or her ability to navigate the controversy of the moment. Don’t you know who I am? means almost nothing as against let me show you how I address these problems.

It wasn’t always this way in Whitewater; it’s this way now.

 Whitewater’s discussion of tax incremental districts won’t be meaningful; the city already plans new districts.

 Whitewater’s council may again meet in person in June. (Video, 57:10.) Whatever value meeting in-person may have had as an expression of solidarity with frontline workers has long since passed. This municipal council, and the school district’s board, have lagged trends elsewhere.

Daily Bread for 4.22.21

Good morning.

Thursday in Whitewater will be mostly sunny with a high of 58.  Sunrise is 6:00 AM and sunset 7:53 PM, for 13h 45m 59s of daytime.  The moon is a waxing gibbous with 72% of its visible disk illuminated.

Whitewater’s Community Involvement & Cable TV Commission meets via audiovisual conferencing at 4 PM and the Community Development Authority meets via audiovisual conferencing at 5:30 PM (subsequently canceled).

On this day in 1876, the first major league baseball game is played at the Jefferson Street Grounds in Philadelphia.

Recommended for reading in full — 

 KellyMeyerhofer reports UW-Madison reports nearly 1,400 COVID-related sanctions this school year:

Messages sent to UW-Madison students last fall, like “Follow public health guidelines or risk suspension,” laid out the high stakes for students weighing whether to break COVID-19 rules.

Disciplinary data show UW-Madison went to that extreme just once, suspending a single student last fall. The university sanctioned nearly 1,400 others for COVID-related public health violations so far this school year.

As the Mifflin Street Block Party slated for Saturday nears, Madison police are reminding students of rules requiring physical distancing at outdoor events and warning of potential fines. UW-Madison officials said the university will assist police in holding students accountable for any public health violations.

Tim O’Brien writes Fox News and the Murdochs Will Keep Tucker Carlson Despite Ad Boycott Over Race:

Jonathan Greenblatt, the chief executive officer of the Anti-Defamation League, asked advertisers gathered Tuesday for Global Marketer Week to press Fox Corp. to fire its resident flamethrower and ratings-magnet, Tucker Carlson.

Carlson has been trafficking in white supremacist myths recently on Fox News and his broadcasts, Greenblatt said, offer an “example of how hatred is being mainstreamed in America in 2021.” He recommended that advertisers rein in spending on Carlson’s show. “You can hold them accountable like few other actors in society because your dollars are the fuel that enables their business model.”

There is a long tradition of companies using ad budgets to strong-arm reporters, commentators and their publishers into avoiding unfavorable coverage, so invoking the power of the purse to stymie inquiries and conversations is thorny. In this particular instance, though, it’s helpful to remember who Carlson is and what he’s up to. He’s certainly not a reporter, and he’s not a commentator in any classic sense. He’s a deft propagandist and performance artist who steeps himself and his audience in bigotry, racism and “cancel culture” antics to keep the world at bay.

….

Does staying the course make business sense for Rupert Murdoch and his son even if they don’t have ethical qualms about it? They’ve never stopped supporting programs simply because advertisers have threatened to walk, perhaps because advertisers have found other places in the Fox empire to park their money even after abandoning hosts such as Carlson and Laura Ingraham.

Advertisers have been pulling out of Carlson’s show over the last year, and its ad revenues slid accordingly, despite boffo ratings. Carlson has no blue-chip advertisers on his show, and one of his biggest sponsors is My Pillow Inc., the company founded by a Donald Trump loyalist, Mike Lindell. But Fox’s overall ad revenues were up about 14% in its most-recent quarter, in part because of a handsome – and one-time – boost from political advertising tied to the 2020 presidential election.

 Jogger and bear in face-off:

Foxconn: New, More Realistic Deal Means 90% Reduction in Goals

After years of flamboyant lies about what Foxconn would be able to achieve in Wisconsin, there’s a new deal with that foreign corporation. That new arrangement reflects a reduction of 90% or more in what Wisconsin expects and what the state will offer. Local governments have already wasted millions on absurdly grandiose, false promises

Not a single family should have lost a home over this fraud, yet over one hundred did. Will boosters of this project be able to rebuild what government action took from those families? These boosters would consider a single blade of grass gone askew on their own lawns a tragedy, but for those who lost their homes, these same men have not even a word in apology.

Ricardo Torres reports Foxconn, state agree to new deal; Foxconn expecting to hire up to 1,454 by 2025. The company originally promised to hire up to 13,000 people:

A new agreement between Foxconn Technology Group and the state announced Tuesday dramatically scales back the number of jobs the company promises to create — to only 1,454 — and reduces the capital investment to a fraction of what was originally promised.

In return, Foxconn stands to receive far less state cash.

The agreement allows for Foxconn to get a maximum of $80 million in tax credits compared to the previous agreement which would have granted the company $2.85 billion in state money if the company met certain hiring and capital investments.

Foxconn four years ago promised to bring 13,000 high-tech jobs to Wisconsin and create a massive Racine County facility that former Gov. Scott Walker and President Donald Trump, both Republicans, heralded as transformational for the state’s economy.

No significant manufacturing has taken place at the Mount Pleasant campus that the company developed with assistance from state and local government.

The number of jobs now promised amounts to a little more than 10% of the original expectation, and the company’s capital investment appears to have ended.

(Emphasis added.)

David Shepardson and Karen Pierog report Foxconn mostly abandons $10 billion Wisconsin project touted by Trump:

Taiwan electronics manufacturer Foxconn is drastically scaling back a planned $10 billion factory in Wisconsin, confirming its retreat from a project that former U.S. President Donald Trump once called “the eighth wonder of the world.”

Under a deal with the state of Wisconsin announced on Tuesday, Foxconn will reduce its planned investment to $672 million from $10 billion and cut the number of new jobs to 1,454 from 13,000.

The Foxconn-Wisconsin deal was first announced to great fanfare at the White House in July 2017, with Trump boasting of it as an example of how his “America first” agenda could revive U.S. tech manufacturing.

….

It was supposed to build cutting-edge flat-panel display screens for TVs and other devices and instantly establish Wisconsin as a destination for tech firms.

But industry executives, including some at Foxconn, were highly skeptical of the plan from the start, pointing out that none of the crucial suppliers needed for flat-panel display production were located anywhere near Wisconsin.

The plan faced local opposition too, with critics denouncing a taxpayer giveaway to a foreign company and provisions of the deal that granted extensive water rights and allowed for the acquisition and demolition of houses through eminent domain.

Previously10 Key Articles About FoxconnFoxconn as Alchemy: Magic Multipliers,  Foxconn Destroys Single-Family HomesFoxconn Devours Tens of Millions from State’s Road Repair BudgetThe Man Behind the Foxconn ProjectA Sham News Story on Foxconn, Another Pig at the TroughEven Foxconn’s Projections Show a Vulnerable (Replaceable) WorkforceFoxconn in Wisconsin: Not So High Tech After All, Foxconn’s Ambition is Automation, While Appeasing the Politically Ambitious, Foxconn’s Shabby Workplace ConditionsFoxconn’s Bait & SwitchFoxconn’s (Overwhelmingly) Low-Paying JobsThe Next Guest SpeakerTrump, Ryan, and Walker Want to Seize Wisconsin Homes to Build Foxconn Plant, Foxconn Deal Melts Away“Later This Year,” Foxconn’s Secret Deal with UW-Madison, Foxconn’s Predatory Reliance on Eminent Domain, Foxconn: Failure & FraudFoxconn Roundup: Desperately Ill Edition,  Foxconn Roundup: Indiana Layoffs & Automation Everywhere, Foxconn Roundup: Outside Work and Local Land, Foxconn Couldn’t Even Meet Its Low First-Year Goal, Foxconn Talks of Folding Wisconsin Manufacturing Plans, WISGOP Assembly Speaker Vos Hopes You’re StupidLost Homes and Land, All Over a Foxconn Fantasy, Laughable Spin as Industrial Policy, Foxconn: The ‘State Visit Project,’ ‘Inside Wisconsin’s Disastrous $4.5 Billion Deal With Foxconn,’ Foxconn: When the Going Gets Tough…, The Amazon-New York Deal, Like the Foxconn Deal, Was Bad Policy, Foxconn Roundup, Foxconn: The Roads to Nowhere, Foxconn: Evidence of Bad Policy Judgment, Foxconn: Behind Those Headlines, Foxconn: On Shaky Ground, Literally, Foxconn: Heckuva Supply Chain They Have There…, Foxconn: Still Empty, and the Chairman of the Board Needs a Nap, Foxconn: Cleanup on Aisle 4, Foxconn: The Closer One Gets, The Worse It Is, Foxconn Confirm Gov. Evers’s Claim of a Renegotiation DiscussionAmerica’s Best Know Better, Despite Denials, Foxconn’s Empty Buildings Are Still Empty, Right on Schedule – A Foxconn Delay, Foxconn: Reality as a (Predictable) Disappointment, Town Residents Claim Trump’s Foxconn Factory Deal Failed Them, Foxconn: Independent Study Confirms Project is Beyond Repair, It Shouldn’t, Foxconn: Wrecking Ordinary Lives for Nothing, Hey, Wisconsin, How About an Airport-Coffee Robot?, Be Patient, UW-Madison: Only $99,300,000.00 to Go!, Foxconn: First In, Now Out, Foxconn on the Same Day: Yes…um, just kidding, we mean no, Foxconn: ‘Innovation Centers’ Gone in a Puff of Smoke, Foxconn: Worse Than Nothing, Foxconn: State of Wisconsin Demands Accountability, Foreign Corporation Stalls, Foxconn Notices the NoticeableJournal Sentinel’s Rick Romell Reports the Obvious about Foxconn Project, Foxconn’s ‘Innovation’ Centers: Still Empty a Year Later, Foxconn & UW-Madison: Two Years and Less Than One Percent Later…, Accountability Comes Calling at Foxconn, Highlight’s from The Verge’s Foxconn AssessmentAfter Years of Promises, Foxconn Will Think of Something…by July, and Foxconn’s Venture Capital Fund.

Daily Bread for 4.21.21

Good morning.

Wednesday in Whitewater will see occasional showers with a high of 45.  Sunrise is 6:01 AM and sunset 7:44 PM, for 13h 43m 20s of daytime.  The moon is a waxing gibbous with 62.3% of its visible disk illuminated.

Whitewater’s Parks & Recreation Board meets via audiovisual conferencing at 5:30 PM.

This day in 753 BC is the traditional date on which Romulus founds Rome.

Recommended for reading in full — 

Excerpts from a full transcript of Biden and Harris on the Chauvin Trial Verdict (‘The president and the vice president addressed the nation on Tuesday evening’):

VICE PRESIDENT KAMALA HARRIS:

Black men are fathers and brothers and sons and uncles and grandfathers and friends and neighbors. Their lives must be valued in our education system, in our health care system, in our housing system, in our economic system, in our criminal justice system, in our nation. Full stop.

Because of smartphones, so many Americans have now seen the racial injustice that Black Americans have known for generations. The racial injustice that we have fought for generations. That my parents protested in the 1960s. That millions of us, Americans of every race, protested last summer.

Here’s the truth about racial injustice: It is not just a Black America problem or a people-of-color problem. It is a problem for every American. It is keeping us from fulfilling the promise of liberty and justice for all. And it is holding our nation back from realizing our full potential. We are all a part of George Floyd’s legacy. And our job now is to honor it and to honor him.

….

PRESIDENT BIDEN:

The murder of George Floyd launched a summer of protests we hadn’t seen since the civil rights era in the ’60s. Protests that unified people of every race and generation in peace and with purpose to say enough. Enough. Enough of the senseless killings. Today — today’s verdict is a step forward. I just spoke with the governor of Minnesota, who thanked me for the close work with his team.

And I also spoke with George Floyd’s family again. Remarkable family of extraordinary courage. Nothing can ever bring their brother, their father back. But this can be a giant step forward in the march toward justice in America. Let’s also be clear that such a verdict is also much too rare. For so many people it seems like it took a unique and extraordinary convergence of factors.

A brave young woman with a smartphone camera, a crowd that was traumatized. Traumatized witnesses, a murder that lasts almost 10 minutes in broad daylight for ultimately the whole world to see. Officers standing up and testifying against a fellow officer instead of just closing ranks, which should be commended. A jury who heard the evidence, carried out their civic duty in the midst of an extraordinary moment under extraordinary pressure.

 David Smith reports Trumpism lives on in new think tank – but critics say it’s ‘just a grift’ (‘The America First Policy Institute calls itself ‘non-partisan’ and a ‘non-profit’ but critics regard it as a cash cow for Trump alumni with stained reputations’):

[Michael] D’Antonio [an author and political commentator on CNN suggested] that the AFPI will spend time attacking Joe Biden and is unlikely to impress political scholars. “I can’t imagine anyone outside of the Trumpian universe taking anything that they produce seriously,” he added. “It’s not exactly a team of policy superstars. Many of these people are so disgraced that their options for gainful employment outside of this make-believe world of Trump policy are very limited.”

Meet the innovators looking to revolutionize housing with sustainable 3D printed homes:

Daily Bread for 4.20.21

Good morning.

Tuesday in Whitewater will be cloudy with a high of 40.  Sunrise is 6:03 AM and sunset 7:43 PM, for 13h 40m 39s of daytime.  The moon is a waxing gibbous with 51.8% of its visible disk illuminated.

The Whitewater Common Council meets via audiovisual conferencing at 6:30 PM.

On this day in 1775, the Siege of Boston begins, following the battles at Lexington and Concord.

Recommended for reading in full — 

 Scott Bauer reports Foxconn, Wisconsin reach new deal on scaled back facility:

Foxconn Technology Group, the world’s largest electronics maker, has reached a new deal with reduced tax breaks for its scaled back manufacturing facility in southeast Wisconsin, Gov. Tony Evers and the company announced on Monday.

Details of the new deal were not immediately released. It was scheduled to be approved at a Tuesday meeting of the Wisconsin Economic Development Corp., the state’s top jobs agency that previously negotiated the initial deal with Foxconn.

The new deal will reduce the potential tax breaks by billions of dollars and still have potential tax breaks worth more than $10 million for the company, a person with knowledge of the new contract who was not authorized to speak publicly about the deal said Monday.

(The devil’s in the details: the WEDC will vote on this deal without prior public disclosure of its terms, Foxconn has a record of false promises amount to billions, and Foxconn’s ventures in other places are struggling. See Odds are stacked against Foxconn in electric car market.)

 Rachel Abrams reports One America News Network Stays True to Trump:

Months after the inauguration of President Biden, One America News Network, a right-wing cable news channel available in some 35 million households, has continued to broadcast segments questioning the validity of the 2020 presidential election.

“There’s still serious doubts about who’s actually president,” the OAN correspondent Pearson Sharp said in a March 28 report.

That segment was one in a spate of similar reports from a channel that has become a kind of Trump TV for the post-Trump age, an outlet whose reporting has aligned with the former president’s grievances at a time when he is barred from major social media platforms.

Some of OAN’s coverage has not had the full support of the staff. In interviews with 18 current and former OAN newsroom employees, 16 said the channel had broadcast reports that they considered misleading, inaccurate or untrue.

To go by much of OAN’s reporting, it is almost as if a transfer of power had never taken place. The channel did not broadcast live coverage of Mr. Biden’s swearing-in ceremony and Inaugural Address. Into April, news articles on the OAN website consistently referred to Donald J. Trump as “President Trump” and to President Biden as just “Joe Biden” or “Biden.” That practice is not followed by other news organizations, including the OAN competitor Newsmax, a conservative cable channel and news site.

 Andrew Roth reports US ambassador to leave Moscow as tensions rise:

Washington’s ambassador to Moscow has announced that he will return to the US for consultations, days after the Russian government recommended he leave the country during what it said was an “extremely tense situation”.

John Sullivan’s departure will leave both countries’ embassies without their top diplomats at a crucial moment, with Washington and Moscow recently announcing new sanctions, a Russian military buildup near Ukraine, and concerns about the opposition leader Alexei Navalny’s health while in detention.

“I believe it is important for me to speak directly with my new colleagues in the Biden administration in Washington about the current state of bilateral relations between the United States and Russia,” Sullivan said in a statement on Tuesday.

Rediscovered forgotten species brews promise for coffee’s future:

Film: Tuesday, April 20th, 1 PM @ Seniors in the Park, Wonder Woman 1984

This Tuesday, April 20th at 1 PM, there will be a showing of Wonder Woman 1984 @ Seniors in the Park, in the Starin Community Building:

(Superhero action)

Rated PG-13

2 hours, 31 minutes (2020)

Diana Prince (Gail Gadot) lives quietly among mortals in the vibrant, sleek 1980s, but soon she will have to muster all of her strength, wisdom and courage as she finds herself squaring off against Maxwell Lord and the Cheetah, a villainess who possesses superhuman strength and agility.

Masks are required and you must register for a seat either by calling, emailing, or going online at https://schedulesplus.com/wwtr/kiosk. There will be a limit of 10 people for the time slot. No walk-ins.

One can find more information about Wonder Woman 1984 at the Internet Movie Database.

Daily Bread for 4.19.21

Good morning.

Monday in Whitewater will be rainy with a high of 46.  Sunrise is 6:04 AM and sunset 7:42 PM, for 13h 37m 56s of daytime.  The moon is a waxing crescent with 41.8% of its visible disk illuminated.

On this day in 1775, the Revolutionary War begins with an American victory in Concord during the battles of Lexington and Concord.

Recommended for reading in full — 

 Fred Hiatt writes China’s third phase of genocide denial: Attacking those who speak the truth:

At first, when a few brave journalists at Radio Free Asia began alerting the world to the terrible events unfolding in western China, China’s Communist rulers denied that anything at all was taking place.

Then, when satellite photos and survivor testimony became too overwhelming, the regime admitted that, yes, there are camps. But not concentration camps! Those are … vocational schools! Pay no attention to the barbed wire and guard towers.

Now, even as it maintains its increasingly threadbare lies, the regime is intensifying the third phase of genocide denial: attacking the truth-tellers.

More than 1 million Uyghurs and other Muslim minorities are being held in China’s brutal camps. Hundreds of mosques and Muslim cemeteries have been destroyed. Muslim women are forcibly sterilized; Uyghur children are taken from their homes and sent to state-run boarding schools. Men can be sent away for wearing a beard or declining to consume pork or alcohol. The Chinese Communists are attempting to wipe out a culture, a way of life, a people.

We know this thanks to Radio Free Asia reporter Gulchehra Hoja and her colleagues, to a few dogged academics and to dozens of survivors and exiles who have bravely given testimony.

At a news conference this month, the Chinese Foreign Ministry attacked many of those witnesses as liars, criminals, terrorists and persons of “bad morality,” as RFA reported.

One of those named as a terrorist was Hoja, 48, who agreed to speak with me Friday. While we were talking, she learned that the regime has listed her father, Abduqeyum Hoja, as a terrorist as well.

“He is 80 years old!” she exclaimed. “A retired archaeologist. What kind of terrorist?”

 Kenneth Chang reports NASA’s Mars Helicopter Achieves First Flight on Another World (‘The experimental Ingenuity vehicle completed the short but historic up-and-down flight on Monday morning’):

A small robotic helicopter named Ingenuity made space exploration history on Monday when it lifted off the surface of Mars and hovered in the wispy air of the red planet. It was the first machine from Earth ever to fly like an airplane or a helicopter on another world.

In NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California, engineers cheered just before 7 a.m. Eastern time as an image was transmitted back to Earth by the helicopter showing its shadow looming over the Martian surface during its flight, which occurred around 3:30 a.m. on Mars.

The achievement extends NASA’s long, exceptional record of firsts on Mars. But it was also something different for NASA — a high-risk, high-reward project with a modest price tag where failure was an acceptable outcome.

Ingenuity helicopter flies on Mars — see the first pic & video:

Daily Bread for 4.18.21

Good morning.

Sunday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 60.  Sunrise is 6:06 AM and sunset 7:41 PM, for 13h 35m 13s of daytime.  The moon is a waxing crescent with 32.6% of its visible disk illuminated.

On this day in 1923, Yankee Stadium, “The House that Ruth Built,” opens.

Recommended for reading in full — 

Kelly Meyerhofer reports UW branch campuses ‘at risk of closure’ under bill giving tech colleges more freedom:

Wisconsin technical colleges could more easily establish general education degree programs under a Republican bill that the University of Wisconsin System says would threaten the existence of some of its smallest campuses.

The bill introduced earlier this month would eliminate a longstanding requirement that technical colleges receive approval from the UW Board of Regents before starting associate degree programs in arts and sciences on their campuses.

Of the state’s 16 technical colleges, just six offer such two-year programs, which are the most common stepping stone for students to go on to a four-year university and earn a bachelor’s degree. Other technical colleges have tried establishing the programs in recent years but have historically received rare support from the UW System.

That’s because the System’s small branch campuses offer the same two-year programs. Allowing more technical colleges to start their own could cut into branch campus enrollment, which has suffered steep losses in recent years.

….

Nine of the 13 branch campuses this fall had a head count enrollment of 500 or fewer students. Demographics show even fewer students graduating from Wisconsin high schools between 2025 and 2030.

(These branch campuses, like the technical colleges, are principally two-year programs. Campuses like UW-Whitewater at Rock County might be directly affected, but four-year comprehensive programs like UW-Whitewater here in Whitewater indirectly affected by their association with a branch campus.)

Danielle Ivory, Lauren Leatherby, and Robert Gebeloff report Least Vaccinated U.S. Counties Have Something in Common: Trump Voters:

About 31 percent of adults in the United States have now been fully vaccinated. Scientists have estimated that 70 to 90 percent of the total population must acquire resistance to the virus to reach herd immunity. But in hundreds of counties around the country, vaccination rates are low, with some even languishing in the teens.

The disparity in vaccination rates has so far mainly broken down along political lines. The New York Times examined survey and vaccine administration data for nearly every U.S. county and found that both willingness to receive a vaccine and actual vaccination rates to date were lower, on average, in counties where a majority of residents voted to re-elect former President Donald J. Trump in 2020. The phenomenon has left some places with a shortage of supply and others with a glut.

For months, health officials across the United States have been racing to inoculate people as variants of the coronavirus have continued to gain a foothold, carrying mutations that can make infections more contagious and, in some cases, deadlier. Vaccinations have sped up and, in many places, people are still unable to book appointments because of high demand. In Michigan, where cases have spiraled out of control, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat, recently urged President Biden to send additional doses.

But in more rural — and more Republican — areas, health officials said that supply is far exceeding demand.

 First-ever camera collar footage from a wild wolf:

Whitewater’s Local Politics 2021: The Limits of Local Politics

This is the final post in a series on Whitewater’s local politics of 2021.

Earlier posts at FREE WHITEWATER have addressed the limits of local politics in the community: local public (or powerful private) institutions have a limited power of action (with harmful actions likely to be more immediate than helpful ones).

It’s certain that a few officials can – and will – redirect whatever public money they can find to business special interests of their choosing. Their creed has no more appeal (or truth) than the Egyptian Book of the Dead does today: it may have meant something to someone once, but no majority anywhere adheres to it now.

More broadly: how very sad that those who spent years seeking political positions will find that the local limelight is no more than a dim, flickering flame. Pride isn’t public policy; pride is a character flaw.

Of other immediate challenges, notably excessive force against a few or closed government against many, or lowest-common-denominator educational standards, there are ever-present (and in some cases greater) risks.

There is also, only mentioned by allusion in this series, the change to local politics ideologically: a malevolent nativism slithers through Whitewater. It’s ill-thought and ill-read. Too many politicians in this city have responded with heads down and eyes averted. Many of Whitewater’s officeholders let this band go unchallenged through an entire campaign, to the detriment of the city.

This situation doesn’t require a series – it requires years of work.

Of community gains, however, one would be better off looking beyond local government or local notables.

What Whitewater needs most won’t be found through local politics.

Previously: Unofficial Spring Election ResultsThe Kinds of Conservatives in WhitewaterThe City’s Center-LeftThe City’s Few Progressives, The CampusThe Subcultural CityThe Common CouncilCOVID-19: Skepticism and RhetoricMarketing, and  Majoritarianism.

Daily Bread for 4.17.21

Good morning.

Saturday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 57.  Sunrise is 6:07 AM and sunset 7:40 PM, for 13h 32m 29s of daytime.  The moon is a waxing crescent with 24.0% of its visible disk illuminated.

On this day in 1970, the ill-fated Apollo 13 spacecraft returns to Earth safely.

Recommended for reading in full — 

Craig Gilbert writes As politics is nationalized, April’s non-partisan elections are looking more and more like November’s partisan ones:

Five months after the November 2020 presidential race, Wisconsin held a contest for state school superintendent.

The November election was close.

The April election wasn’t.

The November election attracted massive attention.

The April election didn’t.

The November election drew 3.3 million voters to the polls.

The April election drew about 912,000.

The November election was partisan.

The April election was nonpartisan.

But as different as they were, the two elections did have something in common.

The geographic voting patterns were remarkably similar.

By and large, the counties that performed the best for Democrat Joe Biden last fall also performed the best for the winning and more liberal candidate in this month’s race for state school superintendent, Jill Underly.

And the counties that performed the best for Republican Donald Trump last fall generally performed the best for Underly’s more conservative opponent, Deborah Kerr.

This happened despite vast differences in turnout, spending and media attention in the two races and the fact that one office — the presidency — is the ultimate partisan prize and the other is a low-profile, nonpartisan office overseeing the state’s public schools.

Dalton Bennett, Shawn Boburg, Sarah Cahlan, Peter Hermann, Meg Kelly, Joyce Sohyun Lee, Elyse Samuels, and Brian Monroe report 17 requests for backup in 78 minutes (‘A reconstruction shows how failures of planning and preparation left police at the Capitol severely disadvantaged on Jan. 6’):

At 1:13 p.m. on Jan. 6, a D.C. police commander facing a swelling crowd of protesters on the west side of the U.S. Capitol made an urgent call for more officers in riot gear. “Hard gear at the Capitol! Hard gear at the Capitol!” Cmdr. Robert Glover shouted into his radio.

Glover and a team of D.C. police officers had rushed to the besieged complex moments earlier at the behest of Capitol Police. By the time they arrived, the Capitol grounds were already being overrun by a mob intent on overturning President Donald Trump’s electoral defeat.

Over the next 78 minutes, Glover requested backup at least 17 times, according to a Washington Post analysis of the events, and the mob on the west side eventually grew to at least 9,400 people, outnumbering officers by more than 58 to one.

 Storm chaser Mike Olbinski records Shadows in the Sky: