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Three Fundamental Failures: Employment, Income, and Poverty

An earlier post addressed Walker’s Fundamental Failure to meet his jobs pledge even after eight years.

The record is much worse: years of corporate subsidies and meddling in the marketplace for preferred businesses & political cronies have produced failures of employment, income, and poverty.

(Small town officials who copied this approach on the local level, as with the Whitewater Community Development Authority, produced similar failures. Their trickle-down market manipulation for favored projects left Whitewater poorer than a decade before. See A Candid Admission from the Whitewater CDA and Reported Family Poverty in Whitewater Increased Over the Last Decade.)

  Wisconsin’s Employment Performance. Walker Never Reached 250,000 Jobs Created (‘Finalized statistics show just 233,101 jobs created in 8 years, trailing 33 states in growth’):

New “gold standard” job numbers released Wednesday show Wisconsin created a total of 233,101 private sector jobs during the eight years Scott Walker was governor, falling nearly 17,000 jobs short of the 250,000 job benchmark Walker promised for his first four-year term.

The numbers also show that over Walker’s eight years in office, private sector jobs grew in Wisconsin by 10.3 percent, which ranked 34th among all states and trailed the national growth rate of 17.1 percent.

  Wisconsin’s Income Performance. Wisconsin Income Growth Lagged National Average (‘Wisconsin Ranks 33rd Among States For Personal Income Growth Rate’):

Growth in Wisconsin incomes has lagged the national average since the Great Recession, putting the state in the bottom third among the 50 states.

That’s the finding of a new report on personal incomes from the Pew Charitable Trusts. It finds Wisconsin ranked 33rd in the nation in income growth from 2007 to 2018.

The report, based on data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, looks at total personal income, adjusted for inflation. It includes workers’ wages and benefits, but also accounts for income Wisconsinites made from owning a business or property, plus all income Wisconsinites received from Social Security or other government payments.

The overall finding: Wisconsin’s growth since the Great Recession has been tepid. Among its Midwestern neighbors, Wisconsin’s 1.4 percent growth trailed Minnesota (1.9 percent), Indiana (1.8 percent) and Iowa (1.5 percent), but it led Illinois (1.1 percent and was virtually tied with Michigan and Ohio, which both also had 1.4 percent overall growth in the years studied).

  Wisconsin’s Poverty Level. Poverty Hasn’t Declined in State (‘Study finds no decline since Great Recession’):

Poverty in Wisconsin has remained mostly stagnant over the past decade, despite historically low unemployment in recent years, according to a new report from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

The report by the Institute for Research on Poverty, released Monday, found Wisconsin’s poverty rate continues to hover around 10 percent. The state has fluctuated between 10 and 11 percent since the report was first released in 2008.

“We’re just not going anywhere — we’re treading water,” said Timothy Smeeding, co-author of the report and professor at the UW-Madison’s LaFollette School of Public Affairs.

The report uses a metric developed at the Institute for Research on Poverty which weighs families’ income, public benefits and tax credits against expenses including child and health care, making adjustments for cost-of-living variance across the state.

Daily Bread for 7.1.19

Good morning.

Monday in Whitewater will see a mix of clouds and sun, with scattered thundershowers, and a high of eighty-eight.  Sunrise is 5:20 AM and sunset 8:37 PM, for 15h 16m 30s of daytime.  The moon is a waning crescent with 2.3% of its visible disk illuminated.

On this day in 1967, the sale of oleo becomes legal:

Recommended for reading in full:

Anne Applebaum writes Putin’s attack on Western values was familiar. The American reaction was not:

Russian scorn for liberal democracy has a long history, and a certain kind of Russian disdain for the West is nothing new. As far back as 1920, Lenin declared that parliaments were “historically obsolete” and predicted that it was just a matter of time before they disappeared. In 1956, the Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev famously said that “history is on our side.” The Soviet Union was winning, he said, and the West was dying: “We will bury you.”

That’s the historical background for the interview that the Financial Times conducted with the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, on the eve of this weekend’s Group of 20 summit. The conversation ranged over many issues, with the curious exception of Ukraine, which the newspaper chose not to bring up. But in the course of the conversation, Putin returned more than once to a theme that Lenin and Khrushchev would have found familiar. The “so-called liberal idea,” he told his interlocutors, “has outlived its purpose.” A few minutes later he repeated himself: “The liberal idea has become obsolete.”

….

The liberal idea, to Putin, has nothing to do with rights, or freedoms, or separation of powers; nothing to do with judicial independence, the rule of law, private property, or any of the other things that make liberal societies prosperous and free. The comments were telling: Putin’s understanding of the Western liberal world and of Western liberal values is not, it seems, any more sophisticated than that of the Internet trolls whose wages he pays. Nor is it much more sophisticated than Lenin’s or Khrushchev’s.

The Financial Times interview appeared Friday morning. On Friday afternoon, President Trump appeared with Putin, laughing and joking. He waved away a group of journalists: “Get rid of them. Fake news is a great term, isn’t it? You don’t have this problem in Russia, but we do.”

(Emphasis added.)

Uri Friedman and Yara Bayoumy write The Coming Reset in the U.S.-Saudi Alliance

Fed up with the catastrophic human cost of Saudi Arabia’s military intervention in Yemen’s civil war and appalled by the murder of the Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi, Congress seemingly attempts some sort of measure to censure the kingdom every week. Yet at every turn, the White House has blocked or circumvented those moves, standing staunchly by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, or MbS, while escalating its confrontation with his archenemy, Iran.

The real reckoning in the U.S.-Saudi partnership could come if a Democrat is elected president in 2020, though early warning signs are already visible.

Tonight’s Sky: July 2019:

Daily Bread for 6.30.19

Good morning.

Sunday in Whitewater will see scattered thunderstorms with a high of eighty-seven.  Sunrise is 5:20 AM and sunset 8:37 PM, for 15h 17m 11s of daytime.  The moon is a waning crescent with 6.6% of its visible disk illuminated.

On this day in 1859, daredevil Jean François Gravelet (professionally known as Charles Blondin) becomes the first person to walk a tightrope across Niagara Falls.

Recommended for reading in full:

Sophie Carson reports Wisconsin gun manufacturer shipped unmarked rifles, pistols to Australian arms dealer illegally, plea deal says:

[Andy] Huebschmann owns Germantown-based Thureon Defense LLC and is licensed to manufacture and deal guns, according to the plea agreement. He met Paul Munro of Australia at a Las Vegas gun trade show about seven years ago, and Munro persuaded him to ship him Thureon guns under the radar.

….

To carry out the scheme, Munro and others constructed a shipping crate with a secret compartment under the floor in which to pack the guns and rifle parts and delivered it to the Thureon offices, according to the plea agreement.

Between 2013 and 2016 Huebschmann shipped Munro rifle kits with parts for semi-automatic or fully automatic triggers, frames and slides that could be assembled into full pistols and other weapons. He did not have export licenses for the shipments.

….

The maximum sentence for his charge — violating the Arms Export Control Act— is 20 years in prison and a $1 million fine.

(No portion of rights under the Second Amendment includes concealing gun shipments to Australia.)

Elaina Plott reports Another Allegation—And Trump’s Allies Just Don’t Care (‘Inside the president’s orbit, the gravity of sexual-assault accusations against him no longer seems to register’):

“What was she, like, the 28th or something?” one former White House official pondered to me. In a separate conversation, another offered a different guess: “Twenty-two? Twenty-three?”

They were talking about E. Jean Carroll, the longtime Elle advice columnist who, for the first time last week, publicly accused Donald Trump of assaulting her in a Bergdorf Goodman dressing room more than 20 years ago. And what they were trying to do was locate the latest number of women who have accused the president of sexual misconduct. (The answer: at least 22.)

For these former officials, the apparently incalculable magnitude of this number did not cause them to reconsider Trump’s every denial of the varied allegations—to wonder, for example, about the likelihood that 22 or 23 or 28 women were all lying in their stories of harassment, groping, unwanted kissing, and, in Carroll’s case, sexual assault.

Rather, for them, the increase in the number of women seemed to mirror the increase in their indifference. Another accusation, they seemed to say, was like another dollop of numbing cream. “I didn’t read it,” the second former official told me, referring to Carroll’s written account in New York, which was an excerpt from her forthcoming book. “We’re just kind of numb to it all at this point.”

Surfing the Amazon River’s Endless Wave:

Daily Bread for 6.29.19

Good morning.

Saturday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of eighty-six.  Sunrise is 5:19 AM and sunset 8:37 PM, for 15h 17m 48s of daytime.  The moon is a waning crescent with 13% of its visible disk illuminated.

On this day in 1862, 5th Wisconsin Infantry and Co. G of the 1st U.S. Sharpshooters take part in the Battle of Savage’s Station during the Peninsular Campaign in Virginia.

Recommended for reading in full:

Josh Lederman and Kristen Welker report Trump defends Biden after Democratic debate, says Harris got ‘too much credit’:

Speaking to reporters at a news conference after the G-20 summit in Japan, Trump said that the line of attack by Harris was “so out of the can,” suggesting it was rehearsed ahead of time.

“It wasn’t that outstanding, and I think probably he was hit harder than he should have been hit,” Trump said.

(It’s notable that Trump feels the need to address Harris‘s performance.  If she’s the nominee, Trump will find himself facing a tenacious opponent who will overmatch him in every way.  My own views on Harris are here.)

Patrick Marley and Molly Beck report Wisconsin’s GOP speaker says he wants to consider legalizing medical marijuana, just after rejecting governor’s plan:

MADISON – Days after rejecting a medical marijuana plan, Assembly Speaker Robin Vos said Friday he wants to debate the issue this fall even though it would be extremely difficult to pass.

Vos, of Rochester, in recent years has shown support for legalizing medical marijuana, but other Republicans who control the Legislature have expressed deep skepticism toward the idea.

“I’d like to have at least a discussion about medical marijuana,” Vos said Friday when asked about his top priorities for lawmakers when they return to the Capitol in the fall.

He acknowledged that the idea is unlikely to go anywhere even if he finds enough support for it among the five dozen Republicans in his house. That’s because of staunch opposition to the idea from Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald of Juneau.

(Joe, commenting here, was spot on about this as a political issue.)

 Surviving the Worst Skydiving Accident in History:

The professional skydiver Dan Brodsky-Chenfeld was poised to achieve his dreams. He was training with his team for the World Championships—a life goal since he started practicing the sport at age 5, jumping off his bunk bed with a blanket for a parachute.

Then, on April 23, 1992, Brodsky-Chenfeld lived a nightmare. Along with 22 others, he boarded a plane for a routine training jump. Two months later, he awoke from a coma to discover that a horrific plane crash—one of the worst in skydiving history—had crippled his body and claimed the lives of 16 of his skydiving teammates. The doctors told him that he was lucky to be alive, but he would never skydive again.

In Yali Sharon’s short documentary Above All Else, Brodsky-Chenfeld describes his traumatic near-death experience, the inspiring vision he had before waking from his coma, and his miraculous recovery.

Right on Schedule – A Foxconn Delay

Talking up the Foxconn project – a habit of the ignorant or scheming – gets harder all the time.

Foxconn looks to have pushed back its construction schedule – to 2021 (past the presidential election). See Foxconn Appears To Push Back Opening Of Mount Pleasant Plant (‘Company Denies Delay But Offers Few Details’).

Here’s the present state of affairs, as Josh Dzieza reports One Year After Trump’s Foxconn Groundbreaking, There is Almost Nothing to Show for It:

Foxconn says it will still eventually employ 13,000 people, and that this factory is only the initial phase. The company says the factory will come online in the fourth quarter of 2020, though Gou also recently told reporters that Trump would attend the start of production next May. Foxconn has said the factory will employ 1,500 people.

Yet the building plans Foxconn submitted to the village show only 570 parking spots. At the end of last year, the company employed just 156 people in the state. It’s possible Foxconn could make up the remaining thousand or so workers by filling its currently vacant innovation centers, though its current rate of hiring makes that unlikely, and it’s probably not what anyone had in mind when they envisioned the return of manufacturing jobs to Wisconsin. To put this shortfall in perspective, Foxconn’s original target was to employ 5,200 people next year.

So one year after the groundbreaking, Foxconn owns a lot of vacant office space across Wisconsin, and it’s building something, but that something has gone from the first Gen 10.5 outside of Asia, to a much smaller Gen 6, to an assembly facility, back to a Gen 6, to possibly not even that.

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 Confirms Gov. Evers’s Claim of a Renegotiation DiscussionAmerica’s Best Know Better, and Despite Denials, Foxconn’s Empty Buildings Are Still Empty.

Friday Catblogging: Catcams for Science

Karin Bruillard reports Catcam videos reveal cats don’t sleep all day. (Just some of it.):

What does a cat do when nobody’s looking?

One way to find out is to set up a pet cam to spy on kitty at home. Another way is to put little video cameras on cats’ collars, set the animals loose and examine hours and hours of footage.

That’s what Maren Huck did. Huck, a behavioral ecologist at the University of Derby, in the United Kingdom, recruited 21 English felines, 16 of which tolerated the Oreo-size cameras enough to count as participants in this project.

Indoors, Huck said, most cats’ No. 1 activity would almost certainly be sleeping. But these cats’ lives were recorded when they were outdoors, and they had a higher priority: Their top activity was “resting” — not sleeping, but not exactly up and at ’em. Another preferred pastime was “exploring,” which Huck said amounts to “sniffing at plants or things.”

Daily Bread for 6.28.19

Good morning.

Friday in Whitewater will see occasional thunderstorms with a high of eighty-five.  Sunrise is 5:19 AM and sunset 8:37 PM, for 15h 18m 22s of daytime.  The moon is a waning crescent with 21.3% of its visible disk illuminated.

On this day in 1832, Gen. Atkinson starts up the Rock River in the Black Hawk War.

Recommended for reading in full:

 Dan Balz reports Harris upstages Biden and Sanders with dominating performance:

Harris delivered a dominating performance through much of the two hours, attacking Biden on civil rights, showing passion on race and other issues and silencing her fellow candidates when their crosstalk early in the debate threatened to show Democrats as a squabbling and disagreeable family.

It was when, as others talked about racial issues, that she broke in and changed the flow of the evening by reminding voters of the attributes that help define her candidacy. “As the only black person on this stage, I would like to speak on the issue of race,” she declared.

Biden asserted that Harris’s criticisms on race were a “mischaracterization of my position across the board.” But her attacks, delivered at close range and with forcefulness and personal references, left a mark on the former vice president and established her as a candidate to be reckoned with.

Harris has often struggled to match the promise of her candidacy, but in her first opportunity arrayed as one of 10 candidates, she made the most of the opportunities she was given — and took some on her own to announce her arrival on the big stage.

Thursday’s debate may not change the polls much but it will probably reorder how Democrats begin to think about the choices before them.

(Some points and disclosures. I’m not a Democrat but a Never Trump libertarian. That places my views, along with many others, into an opposition that Benjamin Wittes has called a Coalition of All Democratic Forces, a vast group of particular views united in the defense of a traditional liberal democratic political order.  A third party would prove useless against Trump; it’s a grand coalition in support of a major party – in this case the Democratic Party – that will end his political career.  Harris’s particular views often diverge from libertarian lines, needless to say.  She is, however, unquestionably intelligent, knowledgeable, and in temperament well-suited to face Trump.  I am a Harris donor, and although I would support any major-party opponent to Trump, it seems to me impossible for a discerning person to doubt her strengths and the promise of her candidacy.)

The New York Times podcast The Daily offers corroboration of E. Jean Carroll’s accusations against Donald Trump:

The writer E. Jean Carroll came forward last week with explosive accusations that Donald Trump sexually assaulted her in the 1990s. Today, the two women she confided in after the alleged attack discuss it publicly for the first time.

How IOT – an Internet of Things – Gives Rise To Smart Stores:

One Paywall to Rule Them All?

Two days ago, I wrote about another local newspaper becoming part of the APG chain. See Another Newspaper in the Shredder.

It’s possible that these acquisitions will lead to an area-wide paywall, and perhaps even a strong paywall (hard to get around even with advances in incognito browsing).

The theory, one supposes, is that the chain’s paywall would operate as news cartel, where readers would have no choice save to pay to read news behind that one wall to rule them all.

It’s a strategy sure to fail, just as Sauron’s one ring to rule them all was a failed strategy.

Far, far too few people will pay either a local paper or a chain publication for the kind of weak reporting that’s been standard fare in rural communities. When a publisher dares readers to take it or leave it, the answer is that they’ll leave it. That is, in fact, what’s led local family-owned papers to go under; few paid for pabulum.

That makes one wonder if the APG acquisitions are truly a long-term proposition, or if they’re simply the scheme of a private company with a less candid version of a media-buying hedge fund’s drain-and-discard approach.

A preliminary hunch: these papers are all headed for an abattoir, although perhaps on a slower schedule than would have been true under a hedge fund.

A few more observations:

1. If local papers are in trouble, so is local government: few residents will pay to read stories that are little more than press releases, leaving officials without an otherwise common-but-fading aura of press respectability.

2. If local officials can’t rely on widely available press-reworkings of their claims, then they’ll have to write unassisted. Most officials aren’t good at writing on their own – years of relying on others to boost their claims have left them weak in style and argumentation (worse even than the quality of local newspapers’ efforts).

This is an inviting opportunity for rural residents “to craft their own publications, of their own views, from their own means, under their own control, publishing independently of others’ political or economic influence.”

Major Supreme Court Decisions (And Where to Find Them)

There were two major United States Supreme Court decisions handed down today, on partisan gerrymandering and on a possible citizenship question for the 2020 census form.

There will be significant commentary – some informed, some not – about these decisions, but it’s worth reading them in full.  Like most decisions, they’re lengthy, yet always worth reviewing directly. (I’ll dig into them as soon as I can.)

Two good sources for opinions (and sound commentary) are the SCOTUSblog (a private blog by lawyers writing about America’s high court) and the Legal Information Institute. Both are nationally recognized and respected sources.  (Some newspapers and a few networks offer good analysis from serious lawyers, but others rely on hacks who merely placate partisan viewers.)

Here are excerpts and links to these two decisions (one involving consolidated cases) from the reliable SCOTUSblog:

Department of Commerce v. New York

Docket No. Op. Below Argument Opinion Vote Author Term
18-966 S.D.N.Y. Apr 23, 2019
Tr.Aud.
Jun 27, 2019 5-4 Roberts OT 2018

Holding: The Secretary did not violate the Enumeration Clause or the Census Act in deciding to reinstate a citizenship question on the 2020 census questionnaire, but the District Court was warranted in remanding the case back to the agency where the evidence tells a story that does not match the Secretary’s explanation for his decision.

Judgment: Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded, 5-4, in an opinion by Chief Justice Roberts on June 27, 2019. Chief Justice Roberts delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court with respect to Parts I and II, and the opinion of the Court with respect to Parts III, IV–B, and IV–C, in which Justices Thomas, Alito, Gorsuch and Kavanaugh joined; with respect to Part IV–A, in which Justices Thomas, Ginsburg, Breyer, Sotomayor, Kagan and Kavanaugh joined; and with respect to Part V, in which Justices Ginsburg, Breyer, Sotomayor and Kagan joined. Justice Thomas filed an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part, in which Justices Gorsuch and Kavanaugh joined. Justices Breyer filed an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part, in which Justices Ginsburg, Sotomayor, and Kagan joined. Justice Alito filed an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part.

Rucho v. Common Cause

Consolidated with:

Docket No. Op. Below Argument Opinion Vote Author Term
18-422 M.D.N.C. Mar 26, 2019
Tr.Aud.
Jun 27, 2019 5-4 Roberts OT 2018

Holding: Partisan gerrymandering claims present political questions beyond the reach of the federal courts.

Judgment: Vacated and remanded, 5-4, in an opinion by Chief Justice Roberts on June 27, 2019. Justice Kagan filed a dissenting opinion, in which Justices Ginsburg, Breyer and Sotomayor joined.

Daily Bread for 6.27.19

Good morning.

Thursday in Whitewater will see periods of sun, a late afternoon thunderstorm, and a high of eighty-nine.  Sunrise is 5:18 AM and sunset 8:37 PM, for 15h 18m 51s of daytime.  The moon is a waning crescent with 29.4% of its visible disk illuminated.

Whitewater’s Community Development Authority is scheduled to meet at 5:30 PM.

On this day in 1950, in response to communist North Korea’s invasion of the South, Pres. Truman orders United States forces to the peninsula.

Recommended for reading in full:

 Patrick Marley and Molly Beck report Key senator defends Tesla provision, gives Republicans enough votes to pass state budget:

To get the vote of Kapenga, Assembly Republicans added a provision to the budget Tuesday that would allow Tesla to sell its electric vehicles directly to consumers rather than having to go through dealers as other car companies must.

Kapenga owns Integrity Motorsports of Eagle. An accountant, Kapenga said the car business is a hobby and he would not gain financially from the measure that would allow Tesla to sell cars more easily in Wisconsin.

He choked back tears during the Wednesday news conference, arguing the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel story on his ties to Tesla impugned his character.

“Just remember as reporters what you say not only impacts the senator it impacts me as a dad … what you say in the press does impact people’s lives,” he said.

See also Provision on electric vehicles is aimed at getting GOP senator who sells Tesla parts to vote for budget.

(Those must have been heavy crocodile tears Kapenga was fighting.)

 The Washington Post offers a Fact Checker’s Guide to Manipulated Video:

The Internet is increasingly populated with false and misleading videos. These videos — spread by politicians, advocacy groups and everyday users — are viewed by millions. The Fact Checker set out to develop a universal language to label manipulated video and hold creators and sharers of this misinformation accountable. We have found three main ways video is being altered: footage taken out of context, deceptively edited or deliberately altered.

. Rich Kremer reports DNA Evidence Backlog Greatly Reduced:

As Attorney General Josh Kaul and Gov. Tony Evers advocate for more DNA analysts at the Wisconsin Department of Justice, new data shows the backlog of DNA evidence at the state’s crime labs has been cut by nearly half in 2019.

Data obtained by WPR from the DOJ through an open records request show the number of DNA evidence cases pending for more than 90 days in 2019 dropped from 766 in January to 410 in April.

The DNA backlogs have been hotly debated since it was reported in 2015 that there were 6,000 untested sexual assault kits in Wisconsin. Former state attorney General Brad Schimel vowed to speed up DNA analysis at the state’s crime labs by increasing funding for the labs and contracting with testing centers in other states. In September 2018, Schimel claimed the state’s backlog of untested sexual assault kits had been eliminated.

An insect-sized robot:

What Trump’s ‘Not My Type’ Defense Means

Writing at The Atlantic, Megan Garber explains The Real Meaning of Trump’s ‘She’s Not My Type’ Defense (‘The president, in attempting to downplay E. Jean Carroll’s rape allegation against him, isn’t talking about attraction. He’s talking about protection‘):

There is, as always, a certain clarity to Trump’s cruelty. The president seems to understand, on some level, something profoundly true about the creaking mechanics of misogyny: Sexual abuse is not, ultimately, about sexual attraction. It is about power. It is about one person’s exertion of will over another. In this way, “She’s not my type” is deeply entangled with the president’s long-standing habit of dismissing unruly women through his negative assessments of their attractiveness: the women as the sexual commodities, Donald Trump as the discerning consumer.

….

Google News, today, is a testament to Trump’s preferred framing of things. “Trump says columnist who accused him of sexual assault is ‘not my type.’” “Donald Trump says sexual assault accuser E Jean Carroll ‘not my type.’” On it goes. And the story, in the process, becomes not one about an alleged incident of sexual violence, or about an alleged serial sexual predator occupying the Oval Office, or about another woman—the 22nd woman—coming forward to accuse the president of the United States of sexual misconduct. It becomes a story about a man who has a type, and a woman who fails to live up to it.

Daily Bread for 6.26.19

Good morning.

Wednesday in Whitewater will be sunny with a high of eighty-five.  Sunrise is 5:18 AM and sunset 8:37 PM, for 15h 19m 17s of daytime.  The moon is a waning crescent with 39.4% of its visible disk illuminated.

On this day in 1834, an act of Congress creates new land districts:

On this date an Act of Congress created the Green Bay land district (east of a line from the northern boundary of Illinois to the Wisconsin River) and west of this, the Wisconsin Land district. The act followed land cessions by Native Americans defeated in the Black Hawk War. The creation of the land districts opened up much of southeastern Wisconsin for settlement.

Recommended for reading in full:

Mary Spicuzza, Patrick Marley, and Molly Beck report Provision on electric vehicles is aimed at getting GOP senator who sells Tesla parts to vote for budget:

A last-minute budget provision to make it easier to sell cars made by Tesla is aimed at winning the crucial vote of Sen. Chris Kapenga, who has pushed for the measure in the past and owns a business that sells Tesla parts and salvaged electric vehicles.

Assembly Republicans added the measure to the budget Tuesday, a day before the GOP-controlled Senate was to take it up. Kapenga is a longtime supporter of the Tesla proposal but said he wasn’t sure yet if he would vote for the budget.

(How very odd: it’s almost as though WISGOP scheming were no more subtle than an avaricious landlord and his few dogsbodies interfering in the economic policy of a small rural town.)

 Danny Hakim reports N.R.A. Shuts Down Production of NRATV:

The National Rifle Association has shut down production at NRATV.

The N.R.A. on Tuesday also severed all business with its estranged advertising firm, Ackerman McQueen, which operates NRATV, the N.R.A.’s live broadcasting media arm, according to interviews and documents reviewed by The New York Times.

While NRATV may continue to air past content, its live broadcasting will end and its on-air personalities — Ackerman employees including Dana Loesch — will no longer be the public faces of the N.R.A. It remained unclear whether the N.R.A. might try to hire some of those employees, but there was no indication it was negotiating to do so.

The move comes amid a flurry of lawsuits between the N.R.A. and Ackerman, and increasing acrimony that surfaced after two prominent N.R.A. board members first criticized NRATV in an article in The Times in March. The separation had become inevitable: The two sides said last month that they were ending their three-decade-plus partnership.

(A legitimate defense of the Second Amendment involves neither support for Trump nor financial dependency on Russian oligarchs.  See Investigators Are Zeroing in on Top NRA Leaders’ Russia Ties—and Challenging the Gun Group’s Story.)

Places to avoid: Rat Falls From Ceiling, Onto Customer’s Menu at Restaurant

Another Newspaper in the Shredder

One reads that APG has purchased another Wisconsin newspaper, the Beloit Daily News.

 

A few reminders:

1. Advertising revenue won’t sustain most locals newspapers, in print or online.

2. Only desperate advertisers will pay for ads in local newspapers running mostly press releases. There aren’t enough of desperate advertisers.

3. Subscriptions (for newspapers or online content behind a paywall) are an option only for sought-after content.

4. Press releases are seldom sought-after content. There aren’t enough readers who’ll pay to read press releases.

5. Local chains lost their way with editors and editorial positions that reflexively embraced local officials, business insiders, and happy-talk news.

6. Some of these chains, including APG, are making few changes in editors or editorial positions.

7. Keeping the same editors and editorial positions will leave these local papers effectually unchanged.

8. Effectually unchanged means eventually doomed.

Residents should craft their own publications, of their own views, from their own means, under their own control, publishing independently of others’ political or economic influence.

Nothing else will endure.