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Daily Bread for 9.4.13

Good morning.

Wednesday will be sunny with a high of eighty-two, with west winds of 5 mph. Sunrise was 6:23 AM and sunset will be 7:24 PM. The moon is a waning crescent with only 1% of its visible disk illuminated.

410px-Edward_S._Curtis_Geronimo_Apache_cp01002v

Via Wikipedia – Geronimo – Apache (1905) Description by Edward S. Curtis: This portrait of the historical old Apache was made in March, 1905. According to Geronimo’s calculation he was at the time seventy-six years of age, thus making the year of his birth 1829. The picture was taken at Carlisle, Pennsylvania, the day before the inauguration of President Roosevelt, Geronimo being one of the warriors who took part in the inaugural parade at Washington. He appreciated the honor of being one of those chosen for this occasion, and the catching of his features while the old warrior was in a retrospective mood was most fortunate.

On this day in 1886, Geronimo surrenders:

On this day in 1886, Apache chief Geronimo surrenders to U.S. government troops. For 30 years, the mighty Native American warrior had battled to protect his tribe’s homeland; however, by 1886 the Apaches were exhausted and hopelessly outnumbered. General Nelson Miles accepted Geronimo’s surrender, making him the last Indian warrior to formally give in to U.S. forces and signaling the end of the Indian Wars in the Southwest….

Geronimo and a band of Apaches were sent to Florida and then Alabama, eventually ending up at the Comanche and Kiowa reservation near Fort Sill, Oklahoma Territory. There, Geronimo became a successful farmer and converted to Christianity. He participated in President Theodore Roosevelt’s inaugural parade in 1905. The Apache chief dictated his autobiography, published in 1906 as Geronimo’s Story of His Life. He died at Fort Sill on February 17, 1909.

Puzzability‘s series for the week is entitled, Labor Unions:

Labor Unions
We’re sure you can work this all out. For each day this Labor Day week, we started with the name of a TV character and his or her occupation. Each day’s clue shows the name and the occupation melded together in a string of letters, with each in order but intermingled with the other.

Example:
SAHNDEYRTAIYFLOFR

Answer:
Andy Taylor/sheriff

What to Submit:
Submit the character’s name and his or her occupation, in that order (as “Andy Taylor/sheriff” in the example), for your answer.

Here’s today’s puzzle:

Wednesday, September 4
PBOSYBHCAHORLTOGLISETY

The Nature Conservancy

If a man wanted to leave a legacy of land to remain forever in its natural state, then he could donate it to the Nature Conservancy (http://www.nature.org/), a charity that preserves donated nature land in exactly that way.

I’m indebted to a sharp reader who offered this suggestion for proposed parkland for Walworth County. I’ve mentioned the Nature Conservancy before, but sadly forgot the argument for that worthy charity when writing a post about someone who wants millions in public money, professedly to preserve the natural condition of his land. One is always made better by the knowledgeable suggestions of talented people – my thanks to a reader who helped me retrieve what I had carelessly dropped.

(See, about that parkland post from last week, Parkland at a Price of Millions: Bogus Philanthropy at Public Expense.)

A Nature Conservancy donation would preserve the land’s condition without hitting taxpayers for the cost of a private seller’s would-be legacy.

(It would otherwise be a public cost of about two-million dollars, from a seller who – by the account of Walworth County’s Central Services Director Kevin Brunner – actually wanted three million originally, a figure 50% higher than even the most generous appraisal number. So much for a genuine, charitable impulse.)

A Nature Conservancy donation in this matter (as for so many other donors who’ve done the same across America) would be a truly commendable gift to all Walworth County.

Recent Tweets, 8.25-8.31

Daily Bread for 9.3.13

Good morning.

It’s a beautiful Tuesday for Whitewater: sunny, a high near seventy-five, and calm winds from the west at 5 mph in the morning.

Common Council meets tonight at 6:30 PM.

On this day in 1783, the Revolutionary War comes to a legal end:

The American Revolution officially comes to an end when representatives of the United States, Great Britain, Spain and France sign the Treaty of Paris on this day in 1783. The signing signified America’s status as a free nation, as Britain formally recognized the independence of its 13 former American colonies, and the boundaries of the new republic were agreed upon: Florida north to the Great Lakes and the Atlantic coast west to the Mississippi River….

The National Archives have a more online information about the Treaty in their 100 Milestone Documents series.

On this day in 1947, the federal government sells a Walworth County marijuana farm:

1947 – War Assets Office Sells Hemp Factory
On this date the federal War Assets Office sold a local government-owned hemp mill to Walworth Foundries. The mill, located on Highway 14 two miles north of Darien, consisted of 20 acres where marijuana was grown and seven buildings where the hemp was used to create rope and burlap, as part of the war effort. [Source: Janesville Gazette]

Yes, Walworth County. No, the county didn’t fall apart, or the world end. In fact, one recalls that the Allies won the Second World War, preserving democratic civilization, while liberating millions from fascism and Japanese imperialism. Those twenty acres did their part for that effort.

Puzzability‘s series for the week is entitled, Labor Unions:

Labor Unions
We’re sure you can work this all out. For each day this Labor Day week, we started with the name of a TV character and his or her occupation. Each day’s clue shows the name and the occupation melded together in a string of letters, with each in order but intermingled with the other.

Example:
SAHNDEYRTAIYFLOFR

Answer:
Andy Taylor/sheriff

What to Submit:
Submit the character’s name and his or her occupation, in that order (as “Andy Taylor/sheriff” in the example), for your answer.

Here’s today’s puzzle:

Tuesday, September 3
AALTLYTMOCRBENALEY

Happy Labor Day

Labor-Day-Stamp

Detailed illustration of a 3-cent stamp issued to commemorate Labor Day in 1956.
The image comes from a mosaic in the lobby of the AFL-CIO building in
Washington, D.C.

Daily Bread for 9.2.13

Good morning.

A mild and partly sunny Labor Day awaits, with a high of seventy-two and northwest winds at 5 to 10 mph. Sunrise was 6:21 AM and sunset will be 7:27 PM.

On this day in 1945, Japan formally surrenders to the Allies aboard the U.S.S. Missouri. The Associated Press reported the news:

Aboard The U.S.S. Missouri in Tokyo Bay, Sunday, Sept. 2–Japan surrendered formally and unconditionally to the Allies today in a twenty-minute ceremony which ended just as the sun burst through low-hanging clouds as a shining symbol to a ravaged world now done with war.
[A United Press dispatch said the leading Japanese delegate signed the articles at 9:03 A.M. Sunday, Tokyo time, and that General MacArthur signed them at 9:07 A.M.] Twelve signatures, requiring only a few minutes to inscribe on the articles of surrender, ended the bloody Pacific conflict.
On behalf of Emperor Hirohito, Foreign Minister Mamoru Shigemitsu signed for the Government and Gen. Yoshijiro Umezu for the Imperial General Staff.

On this day in 1862, Wisconsinites express unfounded worries over a suspected tribal attack:

1862 – Rumored Indian Attack Panics Citizens
On this evening, Manitowoc settlers were awakened to the cry of “Indians are coming.” Messengers on horseback arrived from the Rapids, Branch, Kellnersville, and other nearby communities, announcing that Indians were burning everything in their path, starting what was known as the “Indian Scare of 1862.” Fire and church bells gave warning to frightened residents. Over the next few days, people from the surrounding areas fled to Manitowoc and other city centers.

Ox carts were loaded with women and children carrying their most valuable belongings. Men arrived with guns, axes, and pitchforks, anything with which to defend themselves and their community. A company of recruits from the Wisconsin 26th Regiment formed themselves into two scouting units, both of which returned to report that there was no threat of an Indian attack. Even after the excitement had subsided, many frightened farm families could not be persuaded to return home. [Source: Manitowoc County, Wisconsin Genealogy]

Daily Bread for 9.1.13

Good morning.

A new month begins, with high of eighty-three and an even chance of afternoon thunderstorms. Sunrise was 6:20 AM, and sunset will be 7:29 PM. The moon is a waning crescent with 14% of its visible disk illuminated.

The Friday Poll’s now closed, but on the question of whether it’s a good idea to call 9-1-1 over a spider on one’s sofa, the results are in: 80.77% said the call was unreasonable, and 19.23% thought it was reasonable. (See, Poll: Calling 9-1-1 Over a Spider.)

There’s a story at Gizmodo of a radio ad about extraterrestrials discussing Earth’s conquest that scared some children and led to police and school inquiries to radio station.

The ad’s hardly a Mercury Radio Theatre quality production:

Here, by the way, is that far-better Mercury Theatre War of the Worlds program from October 30, 1938:

Daily Bread for 8.31.13

Good morning.

The month ends on an initially cloudy day that will later grow sunnier, with a high of eighty, and northeast winds of 5 mph.

Solidarity_(Polish_trade_union)_(logo)

On this day in 1980, the Polish trade union Solidarity formally organizes, after weeks of labor strikes, to represent Polish workers in a Communist country that supposedly had no labor strife at all:

Solidarity ….full name: Independent Self-governing Trade Union “Solidarity” – …. is a Polish trade union federation that emerged on 31 August 1980 at the Gdansk Shipyard under the leadership of Lech Walesa. It was the first non–communist party-controlled trade union in a Warsaw Pact country. Solidarity reached 9.5 million members before its September 1981 Congress (up to 10 million[1][2]) that constituted 1/3 of the total working age population of Poland.[3] In its clandestine years, the United States provided significant financial support for Solidarity, estimated to be as much as 50 million US dollars.[4]

In the 1980s, Solidarity was a broad anti-bureaucratic social movement, using the methods of civil resistance to advance the causes of workers’ rights and social change.[5] The government attempted to destroy the union during the period of martial law in the early 1980s and several years of political repression, but in the end it was forced to negotiate with the union.

The Round Table Talks between the government and the Solidarity-led opposition led to semi-free elections in 1989. By the end of August a Solidarity-led coalition government was formed and in December 1990 Walesa was elected President of Poland. Since then it has become a more traditional, liberal trade union. 30 years after emerging its membership dropped to between just over 400,000[1] and 680,000.[2]

Parkland at a Price of Millions: Bogus Philanthropy at Public Expense

How about a plaque for the site of Walworth County’s parkland scheme, should it be completed?

DEDICATED TO ONE PRIVATE SELLER WHO FULFILLED HIS DREAM WITH MILLIONS OF YOUR TAX DOLLARS

Last Sunday saw another public-relations exercise in selling the residents of a rural county on purchasing private land, at a cost of millions in public money (all of which – state or local – comes from taxpayers’ earnings).

See, from Walworth County Sunday, Land of Opportunity?

Candidly, the arguments for justifying the purchase are even weaker in this story than those described in an earlier newspaper story (June 9) and a subsequent Gazette editorial (June 15).

(For my earlier posts critiquing the deal, see Hey, Walworth County, How About Buying Over-Priced, Half-Unsuitable Parkland with Taxpayer Money! and Part 2: Hey, Walworth County, How About Buying Over-Priced, Half-Unsuitable Parkland with Taxpayer Money!)

On the basis of these three attempts to hawk the deal, one could almost propose a Theory of Devolution: something can get successively smaller and more primitive over time.

A few responses to the latest arguments in favor, and some suggestions, too:

1. A private seller’s dream at others’ expense.

One reads that owner-seller Duane Clark has a dream, yes a dream:

It took a journey of 3900 miles for Duane Clark to reaffirm what he knew in his heart to be true.

The problem, and his quest, was to convince others that his nearly 200 acres in the town of Lyons should be preserved for the masses to enjoy.

The ‘masses’ – too funny, really: A seller has a dream that can be fulfilled for the little people – the unwashed, undifferentiated masses – not through his philanthropy or their voluntary contributions but only through their compulsory taxation.

Amazing, isn’t it, that Walworth County now has a new definition of philanthropy: the philanthropist donates a gift that’s entirely paid with other people’s tax money.

A seller’s dream, but on your dime. He’ll receive millions, from taxes collected, so that he can be a philanthropist.

Very, very few of the people taxed to fulfill one man’s supposed dream will ever receive millions from a land sale – yet here the private seller’s happy to build his dream on their backs.

That’s not genuine philanthropy – it’s an embarrassment.

2. About those supposedly few large pieces of land left.

The seller offers 200 acres, but the Kettle Moraine State Forest, Southern Unit, is already 22,000 acres of superior land with assuredly superior care. Our area does not lack for recreational land.

Still, these gentlemen would like common people to pay for an uncommonly selfish deal that adds only 0.9% to area parkland. That’s zero-point-nine, a number even less than one.

3. The price of an option to purchase.

One reads that an extension of the option to purchase from August to January was ‘free,’ and without additional change to the county. No, not really: the original cost of the option was $5,000, for a deal that these parties – at least professedly – would be willing to make with no one else.

The seller hasn’t asked for more toward an option on this scheme, but then who else would even consider this parkland idea?

Too funny: not only does the seller reportedly want his philanthropy at others’ ($1.9 million) expense, he wouldn’t even offer the original option without getting $5,000 for it.

That’s some philanthropy, I wouldn’t wonder.

4. The Walworth County Board Chairman Salutes a Dreamer (and would enrich him, too).

Nancy Russell, County Board Chairwoman, wants everyone to know why this matters:

The thing is that this has been a dream of Mr. Clark’s for a long time…”

I’m sure it has been, but I’m equally sure that there are many people in Chairwoman Russell’s county who dream about adequate food, clothing, and shelter, too.

Not one of those impoverished residents is asking that their dreams be fulfilled at a price of $1.9 million. No one (not otherwise obtuse) who has been fortunate in his or her life believes that Clark’s dream is as meaningful as the dream of mere sustenance that some unfortunate few have each night.

No one owes a dreaming private man these millions in public money.

5. “…but there are always reasons to say no to a project like this…”

Yes there are, and they’re more compelling than enriching one seller at others’ expense.

6. About that public hearing.

Another supervisor touts a public hearing response that was favorable to this sale. These are small-scale surveys, of those attending from among those who are able to attend, and aren’t slightly representative of the county’s demographics – and everyone in Walworth County government knows as much.

More to the point, the proper comparative measure isn’t this pricey deal among other land deals, but this deal specifically against all possible county expenditures.

Similarly, the proper popular survey would be among all people, legitimately sampled, rather than limited, unrepresentative surveys.

7. “…but if we don’t take advantage of it, the money will simply go somewhere else…”

Here one sees an appeal to gluttony.

What was once a deadly sin is now a principle of public policy.

It’s a contention both wrong and inefficient. It’s wrong because in conditions of restraint, appropriated money need not be spent. It’s simply inefficient because it signals demand even when there are better uses elsewhere.

Here’s what it really means, too: let’s spend it on a bad idea before someone in the state has a better idea.

Let’s spend it needlessly in Walworth County so no one elsewhere in Wisconsin will have the chance to spend it properly in their respective counties.

8. Ask way too much, settle for merely too much.

Here’s what Central Services Director Kevin Brunner has to say about the seller’s price:

But when we got involved in discussions he was asking well in excess of $3 million.

Well, thank you, Mr. Brunner, for admitting to the community that a supposed philanthropist was looking to grab even more from the public treasury. Much appreciated (even if the revelation comes at the expense of a story line – about how generous all this is – that he can’t keep straight.)

That’s some negotiating position Mr. Brunner has there, too: someone asks him to spend $50 on a can of Coke, and he feels feel satisfied if he pays only $30.

Funny thing, though: he’s not paying with his money, is he? Every big project is the same: he’s been a wheeler-dealer with someone else’s (tax) money. They earned it; he spends it.

9. About that Appraisal Price.

Now Mr. Brunner and others have had months to think of justifications for this scheme, but watch how easily it is to refute the argument in defense of the appraised price. Here’s what Mr. Brunner said about that price:

You can argue that $1.9 (million) or $2 million was too much, but that’s what the appraisal numbers say.

Here’s a quick reply:

A single mother walks into a car dealership, to buy a used car for herself and her three children. She’d like something for transportation to work and her children’s activities. She’s thinking about a hatchback or a small SUV.

The salesman, however, insists that the car for her – the one that would be best, the one she must buy – is a 2010 Maybach Model 62 sedan in excellent condition, for just $386,295.

20130830-135055.jpg

The woman is stunned, and she asks why he thinks she could possibly afford a $386,295 automobile.

The salesman replies that he thinks she should because that’s the Kelley Blue Book Value and he might have asked even more for it.

There we are: Mr. Brunner hits on the idea of an appraised price, but he shows no willingness or ability to place that price in a proper context.

Those who want to leave a legacy should donate it freely, not charge others for the supposed privilege.

A few helpful suggestions:

1. Walworth County officials are really at sea on even simple economic justifications for their proposals. Someone needs to find and begin a remedial course on economics, at the simplest level.

2. Walworth County needs a better point-man for these ideas. The County Administrator must be able to find someone of strong reasoning, somewhere. It’s a county of over one-hundred thousand, after all.

It’s evident he’s not yet found someone of that ability.

3. Does County Administrator Bretl understand the residents of his county? I’m not sure. Best guess is that he’s working in a county echo-chamber, and consequently he has almost no feel for how his arguments sound when examined outside this group. (Without question, Kevin Brunner had this problem in Whitewater as city manager, too.)

4. Better still, come up with better ideas.