FREE WHITEWATER

Daily Bread for 3.3.20

Good morning.

Tuesday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of forty-four.  Sunrise is 6:24 AM and sunset 5:48 PM, for 11h 23m 34s of daytime.  The moon is a waxing gibbous with 57% of its visible disk illuminated.

  The Whitewater Common Council meets at 6:30 PM.

  On this day in 1945, American and Filipino troops recapture Manila.

Recommended for reading in full —

Becky Dernbach reports How Caucus Chaos Led Minnesota to Embrace the Primary:

Minnesotans, at least compared to other Americans, love voting. The North Star State regularly leads the country in voter turnout; in fact, the state even clinched an all-time record, when 78 percent of its registered citizens came out to vote in the 2004 election.

But in 2016, it became clear the volunteer party-run caucuses the state had been using for decades weren’t designed for record turnout. As enthusiastic Minnesotans flocked to their precinct caucuses at the appointed time to cast their vote for their party’s presidential nominee, they found the system overwhelmed by sheer numbers. “So many people participated that the system collapsed and it didn’t work,” says state Rep. Pat Garofalo (R-Farmington). “It was a complete shit-show.”

In the Minneapolis elementary school gym where I showed up to caucus that year, so many people came that we ran out of chairs. Some people had to cast votes on Post-It notes because conveners ran out of official supplies. Others never made it into their caucus location at all after searching for parking, navigating the crowds, and waiting in long lines. Minnesota Secretary of State Steve Simon, a Democrat, says he heard a lot of complaints from voters “about inaccessibility, about chaos, about fairness.”

So this year, Minnesota ditched the caucus in favor of a presidential primary. Instead of crowding everyone at the polls at once, the primary will allow people to vote throughout the day. The primary will also provide early and absentee voting options, opening up the contest to people who can’t attend at a set time on a Tuesday evening.

Mary Kate McCoy reports Wild Rice Struggles To Survive In A Changing Climate:

While exact numbers are unknown, researchers estimate close to half of the manoomin that was once in Wisconsin has been lost. The waterways it’s found a home on for thousands of years have been turned upside down by habitat loss, water quality and human activity.

Climate change is yet another challenge to manoomin’s future. Tribal members and researchers are fighting to preserve the plant through restoration and educational efforts, but say the sacred plant faces an uphill battle to survive in a changing environment.

To McGeshick, restoring manoomin is about more than just the one plant — it’s restoring an entire ecosystem that people, animals and plants rely on.

“We all gotta live here,” he said. “The benefit of all of it … we get wild rice to eat. To me, what more could you ask for?”

Tonight’s Sky for March 2020:

Daily Bread for 3.2.20

Good morning.

Monday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of forty-one.  Sunrise is 6:26 AM and sunset 5:46 PM, for 11h 20m 40s of daytime.  The moon is a waxing crescent with 46.9% of its visible disk illuminated.

  The Whitewater School Board meets at 6:30 PM.

  On this day in 1933, King Kong opens at the 6,200-seat Radio City Music Hall in New York City and the 3,700-seat RKO Roxy across the street.

Recommended for reading in full —

Anna Fifield reports China compels Uighurs to work in shoe factory that supplies Nike:

LAIXI, China — The workers in standard-issue blue jackets stitch and glue and press together about 8 million pairs of Nikes each year at Qingdao Taekwang Shoes Co., a Nike supplier for more than 30 years and one of the American brand’s largest factories.

They churn out pair after pair of Shox, with their springy shock absorbers in the heels, and the signature Air Max, plus seven other lines of sports shoes.

But hundreds of these workers did not choose to be here: They are ethnic Uighurs from China’s western Xinjiang region, sent here by local authorities in groups of 50 to toil far from home.

After intense international criticism of the Communist Party’s campaign to forcibly assimilate the mostly Muslim Uighur minority by detaining more than a million people in reeducation camps, party officials said last year that most have “graduated” and been released.

But there is new evidence to show that the Chinese authorities are moving Uighurs into government-directed labor around the country as part of the central government’s “Xinjiang Aid” initiative. For the party, this would help meet its poverty-alleviation goals but also allow it to further control the Uighur population and break familial bonds.

Ronald J. Daniels writes It’s colleges’ job to train citizens. Higher education isn’t rising to the challenge:

As historian and journalist Yoni Appelbaum said recently, impeachment is a constitutional mechanism with the words “break glass in case of emergency” emblazoned on it, raising fundamental questions about the balance of powers and the limits of executive authority.

Yet, according to one poll, fewer than a third of Americans actually know what impeachment is.

That so many members of the public aren’t prepared to make sense of a constitutional emergency should come as no surprise. We’ve been failing at participating in the daily business of our democracy for years. Political tolerance hit a 20-year low in 2014 (a decline that shows no signs of abating), alarming numbers of young people struggle to distinguish reliable information from misinformation online, and the public’s faith in core democratic institutions — and fellow citizens — is eroding more by the day.

….

The responsibility of addressing this crisis must lie with our educational institutions. Too often, K–12 schools are asked to shoulder this burden. But with nearly 70 percent of all high school graduates enrolling in college, higher education cannot skirt its obligation for nurturing democratic citizens.

It is a charge that dates to the origins of the republic. In his first State of the Union address, in 1790, George Washington implored Congress to invest in higher education to teach students the subtle and difficult art of good democratic citizenship, which included the skill of “uniting a speedy, but temperate vigilance against encroachments, with an inviolable respect to laws.”

These Volunteers Are Fighting Soil Erosion:

Sunday Animation: BLOOMS

Blooms are 3-D printed sculptures designed to animate when spun under a strobe light. Unlike a 3D zoetrope, which animates a sequence of small changes to objects, a bloom animates as a single self-contained sculpture. The bloom’s animation effect is achieved by progressive rotations of the golden ratio, phi Φ, the same ratio that nature employs to generate the spiral patterns we see in pinecones and sunflowers. The rotational speed and strobe rate of the bloom are synchronized so that one flash occurs every time the bloom turns 137.5º (the angular version of phi).

Daily Bread for 3.1.20

Good morning.

Sunday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of fifty-two.  Sunrise is 6:27 AM and sunset 5:45 PM, for 11h 17m 47s of daytime.  The moon is a waxing crescent with 37.7% of its visible disk illuminated.

  On this day in 1781, the Articles of Confederation goes into effect after being ratified by all thirteen states.

Recommended for reading in full —

Jane Chong writes of Donald Trump’s Strange and Dangerous ‘Absolute Rights’ Idea:

That claim is a favorite Trump refrain, and like a brake warning light, it tends to signal that the car is no longer safely in contact with the legal road. In May 2017, after The New York Times reported that Trump had spilled highly classified information to Russian government officials, he tweeted that he had “the absolute right to do so.” In December of that year, when asked whether the investigation into Hillary Clinton’s emails should be reopened, Trump invoked his “absolute right to do what I want to do with the Justice Department.” Six months later, in June 2018, Trump tweeted that Robert Mueller’s investigation was “totally UNCONSTITUTIONAL,” and that if push came to shove, “I have the absolute right to PARDON myself.”

….

This is a profound misunderstanding of the American constitutional system. Within that system, rights protect individuals against incursions by the state. The assertion of “absolute rights” by the country’s chief executive stands this concept on its head by purporting to insulate state conduct, however arbitrary and transgressive, from review or even critique. The idea is incompatible with the design of Article II, which vests the president with conditional, circumscribed authority to ensure that the laws are “faithfully executed.” Some of that authority is his alone to exercise—for example, only the president can grant pardons, command the armed forces, and recognize foreign states. But to the extent he misunderstands or abuses that authority, the Constitution facilitates challenge by the other branches. In extreme cases, that challenge is supposed to take the form of impeachment and removal.

Allison Keyes writes Harriet Tubman, an Unsung Naturalist, Used Owl Calls as a Signal on the Underground Railroad:

Many people are aware of Harriet Tubman’s work on the Underground Railroad and as a scout, spy, guerrilla soldier, and nurse for the Union Army during the Civil War. Fewer know of her prowess as a naturalist.

At the Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad State Park in Church Creek, Maryland, Ranger Angela Crenshaw calls Tubman “the ultimate outdoors woman.” She even used bird calls to help guide her charges, eventually helping some 70 people, including her parents and four brothers, escape slavery.

“We know that she used the call of an owl to alert refugees and her freedom seekers that it was OK, or not OK, to come out of hiding and continue their journey,” Crenshaw says. “It would have been the Barred Owl, or as it is sometimes called, a ‘hoot-owl.’ ‘They make a sound that some people think sounds like ‘who cooks for you? Who cooks for you?’ ”

See link to Barred Owl at the Audubon website for information about the bird, and the bird call, Tubman so effectively used.

Everything You Didn’t Know About Eagles:

Daily Bread for 2.29.20

Good morning.

Leap Day in Whitewater will be sunny with a high of thirty-four.  Sunrise is 6:29 AM and sunset 5:44 PM, for 11h 14m 55s of daytime.  The moon is a waxing crescent with 28.6% of its visible disk illuminated.

  On this day in 1944, the Allies begin Operation Brewer during which the United States Army’s 1st Cavalry Division would take the Japanese-held Admiralty Islands.

Recommended for reading in full —

 Jeramey Jannene reports DNC Host Committee Hires New Leaders:

Just over three weeks after firing two New Jersey political operatives hired to lead Milwaukee’s Democratic National Convention host committee, the organization’s board has hired two prominent local leaders to replace them.

Raquel Filmanowicz will serve as the Milwaukee 2020 Chief Executive Officer. She’ll take a leave of absence from her job as Director of U.S. Community Giving for BMO Harris Bank to lead the convention effort. Prior to joining BMO in 2012, Filmanowicz spent a decade at the Milwaukee Health Department rising to the position of health operations administrator overseeing operations in three different divisions. Her role with Milwaukee 2020 will place her in charge of fundraising, volunteer recruitment and venue organization.

Paula Penebaker who retired as head of the YWCA at the end of 2019 after 20 years, will join the host committee as Chief Operating Officer. She will be responsible for managing the host committee staff, based out of the Milwaukee Center office building.

….

Filmanowicz, 45, and Penebaker, 67,  both have served in a number of board positions with other Milwaukee organizations. Filmanowicz serves as board chair for the Hispanic Professionals of Greater Milwaukee and was appointed to the board of the Wisconsin Center District in 2018 by Barrett. Penebaker currently serves on the board of Milwaukee World Festival and previously served on the boards of the Rotary Club of MilwaukeePublic Policy Forum and Milwaukee County Federated Library System.

Vicky Hallett writes Tired of biking in the gym? Virtual reality lets you cycle in Iceland, instead:

Transporting yourself with fitness equipment is a selling point of Peloton, whose much-mocked holiday commercial featured a woman receiving a Peloton bike as a Christmas present — or maybe as a punishment. What the ad didn’t emphasize is that the same product that allows you to attend a 6 a.m. cycling class every day also offers “scenic outdoor” options, with virtual rides through places such as Paris, U.S. national parks and New Zealand.

You’ll have more company for your “outdoor” workout with Zwift, an app that works with either a bike or a treadmill. It throws users together on its virtual courses, which include routes in New York; London; Innsbruck, Austria; and Watopia — an imaginary island with an active volcano, sloths and hairpin turns. (Bicycling magazine declared it “the best place to ride this winter.”)

(I use Zwift, an app available on Apple or Android phones, tablets, or Apple TV.)

The Power of Sketching in Visual Communication:

Miscellany on Development Policy in Whitewater

There’s a significant difference between local, political calls for urgency and genuine need. Recent discussions about development policy in Whitewater only bolster this view.

A few remarks (as I’ve been asked more than once what I think of the last two months’ events) —

Independence. The best decision one could make when writing about policy in Whitewater is to remain independent of politicians, appointees, and smarmy special interest groups. The temptation is to get close; that temptation leads only to error. The more one watches, the more one is confirmed in this view.

Urgency. Matters of true urgency are ones that involve an immediate risk to life or liberty.

Calls for urgency in the hiring of a Community Development Authority director, although not truly urgent, matter only if those calls will have practical advantage for the majority of residents’ personal and household conditions.

There’s no sign whatever that a new director will be an advantage to ordinary residents’ economic situations. Of course, it’s true that a few local special interests may – themselves – benefit by controlling development policy.  They may feel a sense of urgency; their urgency means nothing to a reasonable person.

There’s something shamelessly absurd about men who’ve wrecked policy for decades complaining about a few months here or there

Hiring. The Whitewater Community Development Authority has a timeline for hiring. Their schedule won’t matter – it’s not the timeline for a director that matters, it’s the policy direction that matters.

Whitewater’s practice and development structure is sub-standard, and is organized more like a stereotypical backward southern town than a modern-day professional community. A key aspect of that deficient practice & structure is the ease with with private special interests can manipulate public policy, by capturing control of agency appointees and agency agendas. 

Any worthy candidate will review this CDA’s track record, and the kind of special interest ‘stakeholders’ who’ll be part of the interviewing process, and walk away. Serious candidates will notice the gap between Whitewater and other communities’ practices, and the low-quality of self-described local ‘development leaders,’ through their own research and in their impressions while interviewing.

The only candidates who’ll remain interested will be the desperate or dim-witted. Someone with respect for his or her credentials would not work in the development structure Whitewater has had for the last generation.

A Thorough Critique.  A thorough critique involves a broader perspective. It’s better, for now, to let a process unfold, listening as those involved speak freely.

 

Daily Bread for 2.28.20

Good morning.

Friday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of twenty-six.  Sunrise is 6:31 AM and sunset 5:43 PM, for 11h 12m 03s of daytime.  The moon is a waxing crescent with 20.1% of its visible disk illuminated.

  On this day in 1935, DuPont scientist Wallace Carothers invents nylon.

Recommended for reading in full —

Jill Lapore writes of The Last Time Democracy Almost Died (‘Learning from the upheaval of the nineteen-thirties’):

The last time democracy nearly died all over the world and almost all at once, Americans argued about it, and then they tried to fix it. “The future of democracy is topic number one in the animated discussion going on all over America,” a contributor to the New York Times wrote in 1937. “In the Legislatures, over the radio, at the luncheon table, in the drawing rooms, at meetings of forums and in all kinds of groups of citizens everywhere, people are talking about the democratic way of life.” People bickered and people hollered, and they also made rules. “You are a liar!” one guy shouted from the audience during a political debate heard on the radio by ten million Americans, from Missoula to Tallahassee. “Now, now, we don’t allow that,” the moderator said, calmly, and asked him to leave.

….

“Epitaphs for democracy are the fashion of the day,” the soon-to-be Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter wrote, dismally, in 1930. The annus horribilis that followed differed from every other year in the history of the world, according to the British historian Arnold Toynbee: “In 1931, men and women all over the world were seriously contemplating and frankly discussing the possibility that the Western system of Society might break down and cease to work.” When Japan invaded Manchuria, the League of Nations condemned the annexation, to no avail. “The liberal state is destined to perish,” Mussolini predicted in 1932. “All the political experiments of our day are anti-liberal.” By 1933, the year Adolf Hitler came to power, the American political commentator Walter Lippmann was telling an audience of students at Berkeley that “the old relationships among the great masses of the people of the earth have disappeared.” What next? More epitaphs: Greece, Romania, Estonia, and Latvia. Authoritarians multiplied in Portugal, Uruguay, Spain. Japan invaded Shanghai. Mussolini invaded Ethiopia. “The present century is the century of authority,” he declared, “a century of the Right, a Fascist century.”

Earth has a new mini-moon, temporarily – See its orbit:

Daily Bread for 2.27.20

Good morning.

Thursday in Whitewater will be partly cloudy with a high of twenty-eight.  Sunrise is 6:32 AM and sunset 5:42 PM, for 11h 09m 11s of daytime.  The moon is a waxing crescent with 13.1% of its visible disk illuminated.

  The Whitewater Community Development Authority meets at 5:30 PM.

  On this day in 1967, a cabin fire during a launch rehearsal kills all three Apollo 1 crew members—Command Pilot Virgil I. “Gus” Grissom, Senior Pilot Ed White, and Pilot Roger B. Chaffee—and destroys their command module.

Recommended for reading in full —

Briana Reilly reports Several Wisconsin counties take initiative to test wells for contamination:

Local officials across Wisconsin are gearing up to test wells this year as they seek to gather more data about potential contaminants and how groundwater quality may have changed over time.

The testing comes in the wake of Gov. Tony Evers’ labeling of 2019 as “The Year of Clean Drinking Water” and a series of public hearings around the state held by the Water Quality Task Force that resulted in more than a dozen bills aiming to curb contamination and bolster conservation efforts.

Amid the state-level push, three southwestern counties have banded together to fund the area’s first expansive groundwater survey called the Driftless Area Water Study, while at least four others across the state are working independently on their own efforts.

Bob Bauer and Jack Goldsmith write How to Reform the Pardon Power:

President Trump is reportedly “obsessed” with the pardon power, which he apparently understands to be the unbounded constitutional authority to dispense forgiveness as he pleases. In his recent rash of 11 pardons and commutations, Trump dispensed with the Department of Justice process for vetting pardon applications and relied instead on the advice of friends and allies, and on his own judgments about redressing “unfairness.” He has also argued he has an “absolute right to PARDON myself” (while at the same time denying the need to do so). Trump revels in the belief that his pardon and commutation decisions are his alone: His critics might not like his choices, but they have to live with them.

So, it appears, lawmakers unhappy with grants of clemency are left to voice dissatisfaction and to press the president to explain. And in the past, that is what they have done. After pardoning Richard Nixon, President Gerald Ford made an extraordinary appearance on the Hill to defend his decision. The Senate and House inquired into Bill Clinton’s history of controversial pardons and, in some cases, voted resolutions of bipartisan disapproval. But, barring a constitutional amendment, many people appear to believe that Congress can do nothing more to regulate the president’s “absolute” pardon power.

We disagree. As we discuss in detail in a forthcoming book on institutional reforms of the presidency, there are limits Congress may and should impose on at least some exercises of the pardon power. And by prescribing those limits, the legislature can prevent or deter the most egregious abuses, while encouraging future presidents to adhere more closely to norms of process and restraint.

Citizenship Amendment Act: Millions in India Could End Up in Modi’s New Detention Camps:

Cashierless (and so Cashless)

One reads that Amazon has opened its first cashless, full-size grocery store in Seattle. See Amazon is opening its first full-size, cashierless grocery store. Here’s a first look inside.

A few remarks:

This is a technological achievement, and other companies are working along similar lines.

No cashier means, definitionally, no cash transactions. That’s convenient for many consumers, but not for some low-income shoppers who rely on cash purchases. This larger Amazon market in Seattle’s Capitol Hill neighborhood will do well, as the residents in that part of the city (and quite a few other neighborhoods) are relatively younger, prosperous, and technologically-sophisticated.

However intriguing this technology, however beautiful Seattle – and they are beguilingly intriguing & beautiful – these developments will not soon reach all of America.

Whitewater’s residents have more pressing needs.

Daily Bread for 2.26.20

Good morning.

Wednesday in Whitewater will be cloudy with a high of twenty-nine.  Sunrise is 6:34 AM and sunset 5:40 PM, for 11h 06m 19s of daytime.  The moon is a waxing crescent with 7.5% of its visible disk illuminated.

  On this day in 1815, Napoleon escapes from exile on Elba.

Recommended for reading in full —

Keri Blakinger reports Newsrooms Rethink a Crime Reporting Staple: The Mugshot:

Online mugshot galleries, where news organizations post rows of people who were arrested, once seemed like an easy moneymaker for struggling newsrooms: Each reader click to the next image translated to more page views and an opportunity for more advertising dollars.

But faced with questions about the lasting impact of putting these photos on the internet, where they live forever, media outlets are increasingly doing away with the galleries of people on the worst days of their lives.

Last month, the Houston Chronicle became the latest major paper to take that plunge. At an all-hands staff meeting, the paper’s editors announced their decision to stop posting slideshows of people who have been arrested but not convicted—and who are still presumed innocent under law.

“Mugshot slideshows whose primary purpose is to generate page views will no longer appear on our websites,” Mark Lorando, a managing editor at the Chronicle, later explained in an email to The Marshall Project. “We’re better than that.”

….

2016 survey of 74 papers by Univision’s Fusion channel found that 40 percent published mugshot galleries. There’s no comprehensive tracking of such media practices so it’s not clear how much that figure has changed.

Sam Gringlas reports With An Election On The Horizon, Older Adults Get Help Spotting Fake News:

At the Schweinhaut Senior Center in suburban Maryland, about a dozen seniors gather around iPads and laptops, investigating a suspicious meme of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

Plastered over her image, in big, white block letters, a caption reads:

“California will receive 13 extra seats in Congress by including 10 million illegal aliens in the 2020 U.S. Census.”

The seniors are participating in a workshop sponsored by the nonprofit Senior Planet called “How to Spot Fake News.” As instructed, they pull up a reputable fact-checking site like Snopes or FactCheck.org, and within a few minutes, identify the meme is peddling fake news.

“It’s right there!” 86-year-old Marlene Cianci tells the class. “Just a two-step thing and there it was!”

Researchers say classes like this one should be more widely offered, especially with the 2020 election approaching.

After Russia launched a massive disinformation campaign on social media during the 2016 election, many middle and high schools rushed to add digital literacy courses to their curriculums. Now, U.S. officials say Russia is again interfering in U.S. elections. But experts say older adults may struggle the most with identifying fake news, and classes designed to teach these skills to seniors aren’t yet common nationwide.

recent study suggests these classes could be increasingly important. Researchers at Princeton and New York University found that Facebook users 65 and over posted seven times as many articles from fake news websites, compared to adults under 29.

Single fox rescue turns into a whole litter rescue:

Pro-Market

There is an issue that – while extremely important today – receives too little attention not only in the traditional media but also in the blogosphere, and academia: the subversion of competition by special interests. Following Adam Smith, the vast majority of economists believe that competition is the essential ingredient that makes a market economy work. Yet, what ensures that markets are indeed competitive? While a competitive market system ends up benefitting everyone, nobody benefits enough to spend resources to lobby for it. Business has very powerful lobbies; competitive markets do not. The diffuse constituency which is in favor of competitive markets has few incentives to mobilize in its defense.

This is where the media can play a crucial role. By gathering information on the nature and cost of this subversion of competition, by distributing this information among the public at large, and by making this information salient, media outlets can reduce the power of vested interests. By exposing the distortions created by special interests, they can create the political demand for a competitive capitalism.

(Emphasis both in original and added.)

Via The blog of the Stigler Center at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business.