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A Key Difference Between Bristol, New Hampshire and Whitewater, Wisconsin

A sad story from April about Bristol, N.H. (population 3,300) reveals key differences between that town and Whitewater. While this new recession affects both communities, the economic hardship will be different.  See David Gelles, ‘This Is Going to Kill Small-Town America.’

Bristol depends on one major, private manufacturer:

By the end of March, with just a few local cases confirmed, gift shops, yoga studios and restaurants had all shut their doors. Hundreds lost jobs, contributing to a record surge in national unemployment claims.

But at least the Freudenberg factory was running at full strength. The factory, which employs 350 people and makes bonded piston seals and other components for carmakers around the world, has an outsize impact on Bristol’s economy.

Besides paying employees their salaries and the town taxes, the factory — part of a German industrial conglomerate — is the largest customer of Bristol’s sewage and water systems, a linchpin of the annual budget.

….

On April 3, the bad news started to spread around town. Freudenberg announced it was firing more than 100 people, shutting down its manufacturing of bonded piston seals and looking for additional buyouts. With car sales around the world essentially halted, automakers were suspending operations, and suppliers like Freudenberg were suddenly without revenue to pay workers in places like Bristol.

Whitewater’s difference is clear: she mostly depends on a (relatively large for the city’s size) public university campus, along with few light manufacturing concerns in her industrial park. It’s the public university – one that depends on public funds – that sustains Whitewater at her present size.

(Whitewater’s tax-designated business lobby, called the Greater Whitewater Committee, asserts a private, pro-business stance but looks more like a mouthpiece for a few who’ve thrived in a dependent economy in which public monies sustain a public university.)

That is, in fact, how Whitewater, WI is unlike Bristol, N.H.: she’s a small town dependent on a UW System school. That school – like so many other UW System schools – faces longterm fiscal challenges, demographic challenges that aggravate her fiscal challenges, and now a second set of economic problems from the current recession.

UW-Whitewater, however, is not truly at risk of closure. The school may shrink in student population, and doing so would weaken some parts of the local economy more than others, but as long as the school goes on the city will muddle along. Muddling along is hardly an auspicious prospect, but Whitewater’s never developed a diversified economy despite a thousand press releases insisting that she’s on the move.

One hopes the best for Bristol, New Hampshire, but a community in her position might, sadly, find itself a ghost town. Whitewater’s repeated failures of the last generation will likely not (one may be thankful) send her to the grave. It’s more likely that she’ll muddle along somewhat less capably over the next several years, a bit weaker each year. That, too, is tragic, but it’s a different kind of tragedy, less immediately dire but no less finally disconcerting.

Whitewater’s myriad needs require a shift in thinking & action, in which one turns away from public officials’ big statements and little gains, toward private, unselfish charitable actions. See An Oasis Strategy.

Daily Bread for 7.9.20

Good morning.

Thursday in Whitewater will see afternoon thundershowers with a high of eighty-nine. Sunrise is 5:26 AM and sunset 8:34 PM, for 15h 07m 53s of daytime.  The moon is a waning gibbous with 81.3% of its visible disk illuminated.

 

 On this day in 1868, the 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution is ratified, guaranteeing African Americans full citizenship and all persons in the United States due process of law.

Recommended for reading in full —

 Ryan Mac reports Facebook Said It “Stands Firmly Against Hate.” It’s Currently Running An Ad From White Nationalists:

On Tuesday, ahead of a meeting with social justice organizations and the release of a civil rights audit that took two years to complete, Facebook Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg wrote on her personal page that the company “stands firmly against hate.”

But as Sandberg hit publish, the social network was running an ad from a white nationalist Facebook page.

Since July 4, the company has been running an ad from “White Wellbeing Australia,” a two-month old Facebook page with 386 followers that has posted about a supposed “#whitegenocide” and fearmongered about the erasure of white children.

“White people make up just 8% of the world’s population so if you flood all white majority countries with nonwhites you eliminate white children for ever,” White Wellbeing Australia’s Facebook ad read, accompanied by a cartoon drawing of a white woman. “There will still be a billion Africans in Africa a billion Indians in India and 2 billion Asians in Asia.”

(Private companies like Facebook should be able to run – and remove – ads as they wish. Censorship is a government action; private publishers imposing terms of service are not ‘censoring’ readers or advertisers – they’re enforcing a private agreement. Facebook seems to enforce its own private policies only sporadically, and therein lies that platform’s contentious conduct. Facebook’s controversies are its own fault — major advertisers withholding support from Facebook for its inconsistency is an understandable reaction to others’ racist ads or posts that would sit alongside ads for these major advertisers’ brands.)

Meagan Flynn reports Leader of fake church peddling bleach as covid-19 cure sought Trump’s support. Instead he got federal charges:

In April, when President Trump mused whether injecting patients with disinfectant could kill the coronavirus, perhaps no one was more thrilled about the suggestion than Mark Grenon.

Grenon runs a fake church with his sons in Florida that sells people a life-threatening toxic bleach product he calls the Miracle Mineral Solution, federal officials say, which he fraudulently claims cures everything from covid-19 to cancer.

“Trump has got the MMS and all the info!!! Things are happening folks!” Grenon, 62, wrote on Facebook on April 24, linking to Trump’s comments. “Lord help others to see the Truth!”

Grenon had made $500,000 in 2019 alone selling his solutions to thousands of vulnerable, sick people across the country, according to the Justice Department, even though the Food and Drug Administration had warned for years that people could die if they drank MMS products, which are essentially bleach.

What it Means to Be American From A Naturalized Immigrant Judge:

Milwaukee Magistrate Judge Nancy Joseph often presides over naturalization ceremonies as immigrants become our nation’s newest Americans. As a native Haitian, now naturalized citizen, it’s a journey she’s intimately familiar with. She explains why, to her, being an American means being hopeful about what the United States can be.

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The Choice on Schools Is About Hard Work

Hennessey sees what truly matters: to do what is necessary. That’s a matter of preparation now, and thereafter the fulfillment of that preparation.

It’s much easier for a district to speak than to act, to declare than to do. Institutions that have a history of the grandiose mistake aspiration for action. To be more precise, they come to believe falsely that aspirational statements are sufficient actions.

The challenge school districts will have – including Whitewater’s district – amounts to action now and consistent action during the school year in fulfillment of clear, concrete plans.

One month will follow another; each day of each month will require a public health effort so regular that it becomes habit.

 

 

 

 

Daily Bread for 7.8.20

Good morning.

Wednesday in Whitewater will be mostly sunny with a high of ninety-one. Sunrise is 5:25 AM and sunset 8:34 PM, for 15h 09m 05s of daytime.  The moon is a waning gibbous with 88.4% of its visible disk illuminated.

 

 On this day in 1947, broadcast reports that a UFO crash landed in Roswell, New Mexico become known as the Roswell UFO incident.

Recommended for reading in full —

The AP reports Trump donors among early recipients of coronavirus loans:

WASHINGTON (AP) — As much as $273 million in federal coronavirus aid was awarded to more than 100 companies that are owned or operated by major donors to President Donald Trump’s election efforts, according to an Associated Press analysis of federal data.

Many were among the first to be approved for a loan in early April, when the administration was struggling to launch the lending program. And only eight businesses had to wait until early May before securing the aid, according to the AP’s review of data released Monday.

Quinta Jurecic and Benjamin Wittes write Trump Is Campaigning on a Platform of Abject Failure:

Trump’s case has obvious problems, both moral and intellectual. But, more pragmatically, the argument is flawed from an electoral standpoint. For example, even voters who believe that Trump deserves credit for the pre-coronavirus economy may worry that his disastrous response to the virus has contributed to the economic devastation the country now faces. Trump’s approval rating on his handling of the pandemic is not good; a solid and growing majority disapproves of it, and a whopping 85 percent of the country is either somewhat or extremely worried about the economy. Those aren’t good numbers against which to ask for a vote as an incumbent.

Moreover, the human costs of the pandemic beg for an electoral reckoning, one that Biden is likely to demand of Trump and to which the current president is extremely vulnerable. His propensity to wish the matter away only exacerbates this problem. And the United States’s performance cannot convincingly be portrayed as admirable in the face of rising COVID-19 case numbers not seen anywhere else in the developed world.

The attempt to tag Biden with the excesses of every anarchist protester is also unpersuasive. Whatever Biden is, he’s no leftist firebrand, and his rhetoric has not given aid or comfort to demonstrators engaged in illegal activity—who are not obviously part of his political camp in any event. Painting him as responsible for controlling the supposed mob Trump warns about will be tricky, particularly because Trump himself is the incumbent, and many Democratic primary voters supported Biden as a moderate alternative to more radical choices—as Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, no moderate herself, pointed outrecently. Finally, despite hopeful noises from his campaign that Trump’s culture-war shtick will ingratiate him with frightened suburban white women, the polls don’t bear this out. Rather, the attempt to stand behind law enforcement against protesters is actually unpopular, given the current public horror at police behavior, and sympathy with the large majority of protesters who have remained peaceful.

So Trump is swimming upriver with this case.

Artificial Feathers Let This Robotic Bird Fly With Incredible Agility:

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The Balancing That Shouldn’t Have Happened

In communities across America, when a common & rational direction is most needed, cities & towns are about to confront the absence of a rational consensus. Residents who are in the grip of conspiracy theories (Qanon, anti-vaxxers, rumors of antifa, etc.) and those who have retained a sound understanding may live in the same place, but might as well have come from different continents.

The conspiracy-possessed have, in too many communities, been indulged for years: local leaders have condescended to them, tried to balance their views as though they were serious, or run from them – indeed, leaders have done everything except speak bluntly and truthfully to them.

Politicians and appointees who never met a press release they wouldn’t send have been silent in the face of nuttiness.

At the same time, in a place like Whitewater, hundreds of commuting professionals without residency go home each night to other places. More should have been done to welcome them genuinely: not on the terms of a few self-promoting local notables, but on considerate, equal terms.

They are not going home to better places; they are leaving each day a place that deserves better care. A nightly separation from the city is not a sign of sophistication; it’s merely the conceit of sophistication.

The worst recent case is, of course, Trump and Trumpism: a thousand local resolutions and declarations, but not a single, truthful statement that the president is a bigoted, ignorant autocrat. There’s more reasonable doubt about exact the color of the sky than there will ever be about what Trump is, or what he has done to this republic.

Now, with a pandemic, cities & school districts find themselves facing small, oft-placated factions that repeat what they hear from a vainglorious fool. Now, with a pandemic, some of these cities & school districts find themselves with professionals who aren’t embedded in their workplace communities.

These have been – rightly – free choices.

They have also been – truly – poor choices.

It’s much harder to be direct after years of indirection, yet more necessary now than ever.

Daily Bread for 7.7.20

Good morning.

Tuesday in Whitewater will be mostly sunny with a high of ninety-one. Sunrise is 5:25 AM and sunset 8:31 PM, for 15h 11m 18s of daytime.  The moon is a waning gibbous with 94.1% of its visible disk illuminated.

 

 On this day in 1981, President Reagan appoints Sandra Day O’Connor to become the first female member of the Supreme Court of the United States.

Recommended for reading in full —

Ken Ward Jr. reports Companies Owned by This Billionaire Governor Received up to $24 Million in Bailout Loans:

Companies owned by West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice and his family received up to $24 million from one of the federal government’s key coronavirus economic relief programs, according to data made public Monday.

At least six companies from Justice’s empire showed up on the list of Paycheck Protection Program aid recipients released by the Small Business Administration.

The Greenbrier Hotel Corporation, Justice’s firm that owns and operates the iconic luxury resort, received a loan of between $5 million and $10 million.

That made it one of only nine companies in West Virginia to receive a loan of that size. Treasury Department officials did not specify the exact amount of the loans, and made public only the identities of companies that received more than $150,000.

In all, Justice companies received between $11.2 million and $24.4 million in PPP money. The Greenbrier Sporting Club, a Justice company that runs an upscale residential development adjacent to the hotel, received between $1 million and $2 million.

Blackstone Energy LTD and Bluestone Coke LLC, two coal companies owned by Justice’s family, each received $2 million to $5 million. Ranger Fuel Coal Corp. received $1 million to $2 million. Justice Energy Company Inc. received $150,000 to $350,000.

Justice’s companies received PPP money from a mixture of small local banks and regional financial institutions. Previous reporting has shown banks were favoring their existing, regular customers when processing PPP applications.

Justice is ranked by Forbes as a billionaire and West Virginia’s richest man.

Ryan Tracy, Chad Day and Heather Haddon report Small Business Loans Helped the Well-Heeled and Connected, Too:

Congress designed the Paycheck Protection Program to help small businesses weather fallout from the coronavirus pandemic, but the program’s $521 billion in loans also went to well-heeled and politically connected firms across the economy, including law offices, charities, restaurant chains and wealth managers.

….

On the list: Boies Schiller Flexner LLP, the law firm headed by antitrust litigator David Boies; Newsmax Media Inc., the media company run by Trump donor Christopher Ruddy; and an Indianapolis service provider to charities part-owned by Education Secretary Betsy DeVos.

Max Rivlin-Nadler reports Drive-Through Naturalizations Make New U.S. Citizens In The COVID-19 Era:

Immigration officers in El Cajon held drive-through ceremonies every weekday since early June to play catch-up for the three months that there were no ceremonies in Golden Hall.

“Golden Hall is a great ceremony, but this makes it a lot more personal almost,” said Madeline Kristoff, the USCIS field officer for San Diego. “The officers get to participate in ways they normally don’t get to in Golden Hall. And it’s really fun to talk to people who are driving through and get to hear a little of their stories.”

 ‘I Can Barely Keep Track’: Inside a Texas Hospital Battling Coronavirus:

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The Villages as a Dystopian America

Much has been made – understandably – about an elderly golf-cart-riding resident of The Villages retirement community shouting ‘white power’ during a pro-Trump parade. (The man’s bigotry is wrong, but his grasp of the meaning of Trumpism is right on target.)

It’s impossible to excuse the bigotry, but one can look at other vices within The Villages without excusing or ignoring bigotry. The resident’s prejudice took place as he and other Trumpist residents were queuing for a pro-Trump golf-cart parade.

While for someone who is disabled a cart or scooter is an understandable tool, it’s unlikely that all of the golf-cart riding paraders needed golf carts for locomotion. Many of them should have been able to walk, and it would have done them good to have done so.

As it turns out, residents of The Villages ride about in golf carts all the time. (There may be as many as 60,000 golf carts in this vast senior-living community.)

Honest to goodness – at least some of these residents should be walking more and riding less.

America is a dynamic and industrious place, and many older Americans remain suitably active and vigorous.

All these Trumpists ‘parading’ in their golf carts isn’t a sign of strength – it’s an embarrassing display of sloth.

One is reminded of a dystopian scene in Wall-E, where people of the future have grown too lazy to walk:

Repulsive in word and deed, so to speak.

Tucker Carlson is the Future of Fox Cable

Long after Trump fades & falters, there will be a large audience for lumpen revanchists on Fox News. These dead-enders won’t quickly meet their end – they’ll be a faction, and so an audience, waiting for a someone to inspire them in their ethnic prejudices, economic ignorance, and conspiracy theories. Fox News will exist after 1.20.21.

There’s commercial ad space to sell, and the Murdochs have billions yet to make, so someone has to hold the MyPillow® audience in front of their televisions…

It won’t be Hannity (who might as well be Trump’s manservant); it will be Tucker Carlson. Carlson drinks thirstily from a culture-war jug; he will go on that way long after Trump is a former president.

(Carlson, himself, may be fascist curious; genuine fascists, however, have no hesitation about expressing their love for him.)

For today, from the Axios Today podcast with Niala Boodhoo, Carlson as a present (and future) culture warrior:

Daily Bread for 7.6.20

Good morning.

Monday in Whitewater will be mostly sunny with a high of ninety-one. Sunrise is 5:24 AM and sunset 8:35 PM, for 15h 11m 21s of daytime.  The moon is a waning gibbous with 98.1% of its visible disk illuminated.

 

 On this day in 1885, Louis Pasteur successfully tests his vaccine against rabies on Joseph Meister, a boy who was bitten by a rabid dog.

Recommended for reading in full —
Shawn Boburg and Dalton Bennett writes Militias flocked to Gettysburg to foil a supposed antifa flag burning, an apparent hoax created on social media:

For weeks, a mysterious figure on social media talked up plans for antifa protesters to converge on this historical site on Independence Day to burn American flags, an event that seemed at times to border on the farcical.

“Let’s get together and burn flags in protest of thugs and animals in blue,” the anonymous person behind a Facebook page called Left Behind USA wrote in mid-June. There would be antifa face paint, the person wrote, and organizers would “be giving away free small flags to children to safely throw into the fire.”

As word spread, self-proclaimed militias, bikers, skinheads and far-right groups from outside the state issued a call to action, pledging in online videos and posts to come to Gettysburg to protect the Civil War monuments and the nation’s flag from desecration. Some said they would bring firearms and use force if necessary.

On Saturday afternoon, in the hours before the flag burning was to start, they flooded in by the hundreds — heavily armed and unaware, it seemed, that the mysterious Internet poster was not who the person claimed to be.

Biographical details — some from the person’s Facebook page and others provided to The Washington Post in a series of messages — did not match official records. An image the person once posted on a profile page was a picture of a man taken by a German photographer for a stock photo service.

Jennifer A. Kingson reports The impending retail apocalypse:

Why it matters: Malls are going belly up. Familiar names like J.C. Penney, Neiman Marcus and J. Crew have filed for bankruptcy. Increasingly, Americans’ shopping choices will boil down to a handful of internet Everything Stores and survival-of-the-fittest national chains.

Driving the news: A research report from UBS predicts that 100,000 brick-and-mortar U.S. retail stores will close by 2025, in a trend that started before the pandemic and has accelerated amid coronavirus-related shutdowns.

Indoor malls — which were turning into ghost towns even before the pandemic — are being converted into apartment complexes.

E-commerce has surged, even as stores reopen, as people are afraid of catching the virus in crowds and public spaces.

Ahn Do reports ‘You started the corona!’ As anti-Asian hate incidents explode, climbing past 800, activists push for aid:

Hate incidents directed at Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders are exploding this year, according to advocates pushing for California Gov. Gavin Newsom to boost funding for programs fighting bias and add a cultural representative to his new COVID-19 task force. 

Supporters and organizers of Stop AAPI Hate have documented 832 incidents across the Golden State in the last three months, with assaults and verbal tirades “becoming the norm” since the pandemic started, instigated by people following the inflammatory rhetoric of the nation’s highest-profile leader, they say. 

What Does The Future Of Air Travel Look Like?:

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