FREE WHITEWATER

Bad Policy Cannot Hold the City

If one can count The Three Ways Policy Goes Wrong and if one can answer the question If Policy Goes Bad in Three Basic Ways, What Should Be Done About It?, where does that leave the city?

It leaves the city, over time, better off: bad policy cannot hold the city.

There are only so many times that a few can insist that pigs’ ears are silk purses. Those times are nearly used up, albeit at a vast cost.

This underlies optimism: that experience itself refutes past and present claims in favor of big-ticket, but bad-policy, solutions.

That’s an uncomfortable spot for the advocates of the big projects of the past, but a good spot for Whitewater.

If Policy Goes Bad in Three Basic Ways, What Should Be Done About It?

If policy goes bad in one of three principal ways, then are the solutions to errors as easily stated (and brought into effect)? (See, from yesterday, The Three Ways Policy Goes Wrong.)

Most of the time, there are.

If the errors are from bad information or bad ideas, then positive change isn’t so hard. One simply contends and contends again, with a marketplace of ideas gradually replacing poor information or poor ideas with better ones.

This is the most common problem of policy, and it’s (fortunately) most easily managed.

If the mistakes are from the rarer case of bad motives, then there’s a different approach. That’s because bad information or bad ideas can be overcome easily in currently-serving policymakers, but those who are mired in bad motives are resistant to change. These stubborn policymakers are best removed and replaced.

The most severe policy problems are of motive (and motivation), coming from laziness, a sense of entitlement, needy self-promotion, and excuse-making. A sense of entitlement will get a community the also-independent wrong of conflicts of interest. (Fortunately, few bad motives involve bigotry or outright theft, wrongs one sees only infrequently by comparison with other problems of motive.)

As for the problems of this third kind, there’s a longer slog against stubborn policymakers of junk policy and sub-par performance. Bad loses to good (or at least better) in a free society. That’s why one can, reasonably, be an optimist about policy in America.

But truly troubled policymakers (Eliot Spitzer, Anthony Weiner among national figures of the moment) won’t go away. They’ll keep trying again and again as long as they’re ambulatory, and are beyond persuasion of fact or idea. If they retreat, it’s only to return again.

As they’re shameless, self-promoting, and gripped by their own outsized sense of entitlement, they’re simply resistant to ordinary reason or persuasion. Appealing to them, directly, is useless.

Instead, one commits to a long game, played each day, contending for a better way and critiquing rigorously the rotting produce of those very few that laziness, a sense of entitlement, needy self-promotion, or excuse-making has so powerfully and inescapably ensnared.

The supposed accomplishments of that ilk are, in any event, ephemeral, sham achievements. What they do rots and rusts, all the boasting in the world notwithstanding. Such is true nationally and locally.

That’s a commitment to a long game, but a winning one.

Daily Bread for 7.24.13

Good morning.

Midweek in Whitewater will be sunny and mild, with a high of seventy-three and calm winds.

Whitewater’s Fire & Rescue Task Force meets this morning at 9:30 AM.

614px-80_-_Machu_Picchu_-_Juin_2009_-_edit.2

On this day in 1911, American archeologist Hiram Bingham discovers the Inca settlement Machu Picchu:

Tucked away in the rocky countryside northwest of Cuzco, Machu Picchu is believed to have been a summer retreat for Inca leaders, whose civilization was virtually wiped out by Spanish invaders in the 16th century. For hundreds of years afterwards, its existence was a secret known only to the peasants living in the region. That all changed in the summer of 1911, when Bingham arrived with a small team of explorers to search for the famous “lost” cities of the Incas.

Traveling on foot and by mule, Bingham and his team made their way from Cuzco into the Urubamba Valley, where a local farmer told them of some ruins located at the top of a nearby mountain. The farmer called the mountain Machu Picchu, which meant “Old Peak” in the native Quechua language. The next day–July 24–after a tough climb to the mountain’s ridge in cold and drizzly weather, Bingham met a small group of peasants who showed him the rest of the way. Led by an 11-year-old boy, Bingham got his first glimpse of the intricate network of stone terraces marking the entrance to Machu Picchu.

Puzzability’s current series (7.22 to 7.26) is called Sun Screens:

Sun Screens
If you can’t stand the heat, we’ve got just the ticket. For each day this week, we’ll give a three-by-three letter grid in which we’ve hidden the title of a movie that’s set during the summer. Each has 10 or more letters and any number of words. To find the title, start at any letter and move from letter to letter by traveling to any adjacent letter—across, up and down, or diagonally. You may come back to a letter you’ve used previously, but may not stay in the same spot twice in a row. You will not always need all nine letters in the grid.

Example:
F S U
O M A
R E M

Answer:
Summer of Sam

Here’s Wednesday’s puzzle:

O E B
T H A
K C V

The Three Ways Policy Goes Wrong

How does public policy go wrong? I’m sure the answer’s not complicated.

There are a few principal ways, with all else being derivations: (1) bad information, (2) bad ideas, or (3) bad motives.

So either knowledge is poor, theory is poor, or ethics are poor.

I’ve organized the possibilities this way in order of severity, from least to most troublesome. Unsound information is most easily corrected, unsound theory some more difficulty, and unsound ethics with the most difficulty (if susceptible of correction at all).

Of ethics, a community may face either intentional misdeeds (lies, theft), objective conflicts of interest (self-dealing), or the occasional character flaw (laziness, a sense of entitlement, needy self-promotion, excuse-making, bigotry). One might separate character flaws into a fourth category, but I’ve classed them as ethical problems because their presence in matters of public policy acts as a cheat against the public, of resources or opportunity.

What’s missing here is an excuse for bad policy that is, in fact, almost never true: lack of intelligence. It’s not an excuse because the overwhelming number of people in a community don’t lack for intellect. There’s no immutable characteristic within a community, in fact, that inhibits good policy.

That’s true and fortunate, of course, as it means that there really is no good (insuperable) excuse for bad policy.

Posted also at Daily Adams.

Daily Bread for 7.23.13

Good morning.

Tuesday in Whitewater brings decreasing clouds and a high of seventy-five, with winds at 5 to 15 mph. Sunrise was at 5:37 AM, and sunset will be at 8:25 PM. The moon is in a waning gibbous phase with 98% of its visible disk illuminated.

Whitewater’s Urban Forestry Commission meets at 4:30 PM today.

NASA’s Cassini probe took pictures of the Earth from near Saturn, and the results are astonishing:

20130722_annotated_earth-moon_from_saturn_1920x1080

On this day in 1885, the death of a former president cuts short a serving vice president’s visit to Wisconsin:

1885 – U.S. Vice President Visits Ashland
On this date the untimely death of Ulysses S. Grant cut short Vice President Thomas Hendricks visit to Ashland. The Vice President arrived in Ashland via the steamship China in 1885. While Vice President Hendricks was in Ashland, he and his wife enjoyed trout caught in the Brule River and Fish Creek. [Source: “B” Book I, Beer Bottles, Brawls, Boards, Brothels, Bibles, Battles & Brownstone by Tony Woiak, p.11]

Puzzability’s current puzzle series (7.22 to 7.26) is called Sun Screens:

Sun Screens
If you can’t stand the heat, we’ve got just the ticket. For each day this week, we’ll give a three-by-three letter grid in which we’ve hidden the title of a movie that’s set during the summer. Each has 10 or more letters and any number of words. To find the title, start at any letter and move from letter to letter by traveling to any adjacent letter—across, up and down, or diagonally. You may come back to a letter you’ve used previously, but may not stay in the same spot twice in a row. You will not always need all nine letters in the grid.

Example:
F S U
O M A
R E M

Answer:
Summer of Sam

Here’s Tuesday’s puzzle:

R A I
E W N
Y D O

Succinctly Stated: ‘Imprison the Royal Family and Abolish the Monarchy’

606x341_223764_prince-charles-attends-opening-of-u

One wishes the Royal Baby, of whatever name he shall be christened, a long and happy life. But life would be better, for that young child, and all his country, if he were not a royal baby, but just a baby. Hamilton Nolan makes the sound case against royalty, only a part of which I’ve excerpted below:

The Royal Family is no better than a family of mobsters. It sucks its sustenance from the public coffers, enriching itself greatly at the expense of poor taxpaying citizens. It operates not as a meritocracy, but through strict nepotism and strategic alliances. And its strength is a rough measure of the lack of civilization in a particular culture. To be completely clear, we are not suggesting that people should “pay less attention” to the Royal Family, or that the UK should reduce the amount of money it spends on this obscene relic of a brutal monarchical past. We are suggesting that the Royal Family should, as an institution, be completely abolished, and that its remaining members be imprisoned and forced to work for the remainder of their lives to, in some token way, repay the public for all of these years of financial support. Perhaps by making license plates, or breaking rocks….

The Royal Family is more than an international embarrassment, though; it is a crime against the British public. It represents the taking of precious public resources for the most undemocratic, elitist, and unproductive use. It is akin to taxing the American public to support the Kardashian family…

Currently, the British monarchy gets 15% of the annual revenues generated by the Crown Estate. (Not to be confused with the slew of luxurious private estates that they own.) That will be well over $50 million this year. There are 2.5 million unemployed people in the UK right now. It is not too presumptuous to suggest that they might be able to find more productive uses for that money….

For the sake of all that is holy, please allow this Royal Baby to grow up free of the clutches of this crime family, lest its innocence be lost.

Via Imprison the Royal Family and Abolish the Monarchy.

Posted also @ Daily Adams.

Daily Bread for 7.22.13

Good morning.

Whitewater’s week begins with a mostly sunny day and a high of eighty-six, with a four-in-ten chance of thunderstorms this evening.

Downtown Whitewater’s Design Committee meets this morning at 8 AM.

On this day in 1991, Jeffrey Dahmer is caught in Milwaukee:

Milwaukee, Wisconsin, police officers spot Tracy Edwards running down the street in handcuffs, and upon investigation, they find one of the grisliest scenes in modern history-Jeffrey Dahmer’s apartment….

Apparently, police had been called two months earlier about a naked and bleeding 14-year-old boy being chased down an alley by Dahmer. The responding officers actually returned the boy, who had been drugged, to Dahmer’s apartment–where he was promptly killed. The officers, who said that they believed it to be a domestic dispute, were later fired.

A forensic examination of the apartment turned up 11 victims–the first of whom disappeared in March 1989, just two months before Dahmer successfully escaped a prison sentence for child molestation by telling the judge that he was desperately seeking to change his conduct. Dahmer later confessed to 17 murders in all, dating back to his first victim in 1978.

The jury rejected Dahmer’s insanity defense, and he was sentenced to 15 life terms. He survived one attempt on his life in July 1994, but was killed by another inmate on November 28, 1994.

On 7.22.1864, Wisconsinites participate in the Battle of Atlanta:

1864 – (Civil War) Battle of Atlanta, Georgia
The Atlanta Campaign had begun two months earlier, in May, but a decisive battle was fought on July 22. Union forces met 37,000 Confederate troops in a battle that some historians consider one of the most desperate and bloody of the war. Although 20 percent of Confederate forces were killed, wounded, or missing at the end of the day, the South still controlled the city. The 1st, 12th, 16th, 17th, 22nd, 25th, 26th, 31st Wisconsin Infantry regiments and the 5th Wisconsin Light Artillery were engaged in the Battle of Atlanta.

Puzzability’s new puzzle series (7.22 to 7.26) is called Sun Screens:

Sun Screens
If you can’t stand the heat, we’ve got just the ticket. For each day this week, we’ll give a three-by-three letter grid in which we’ve hidden the title of a movie that’s set during the summer. Each has 10 or more letters and any number of words. To find the title, start at any letter and move from letter to letter by traveling to any adjacent letter—across, up and down, or diagonally. You may come back to a letter you’ve used previously, but may not stay in the same spot twice in a row. You will not always need all nine letters in the grid.

Example:
F S U
O M A
R E M

Answer:
Summer of Sam

Here’s Monday’s puzzle:

Y G A
T D N
R I C

Recent Tweets, 7.14 to 7.20

Daily Bread for 7.21.13

Good morning.

We’ll have a high of seventy-nine with an even chance of thunderstorms in the late afternoon.

A quick reminder from an earlier post a several days ago – Film: Free Showing of Honor Flight, Sunday, July 21st at 2:30 p.m.

20130716-123252.jpg

This Sunday, July 21st, there will be a showing of the film Honor Flight at 2:30 p.m. at Mulberry Glen, 1255 W. Main Street, Whitewater. It is being shown courtesy of Mulberry Glen and Capri Senior Communities.

The showing is free and open to the public.

It’s Hemingway’s birthday:

On this day in 1899, Ernest Miller Hemingway, author of such novels as “For Whom the Bell Tolls” and “The Old Man and the Sea,” is born in Oak Park, Illinois. The influential American literary icon became known for his straightforward prose and use of understatement. Hemingway, who tackled topics such as bullfighting and war in his work, also became famous for his own macho, hard-drinking persona.

On this day in Wisconsin history, Gen. Mitchell conducts a demonstration:

1921 – General Billy Mitchell Proves Theory of Air Power
On this date Milwaukee’s General William “Billy” Mitchell proved to the world that development of military air power was not outlandish. He flew his De Havilland DH-4B fighter, leading a bombing demonstration that proved a naval ship could be sunk by air bombardment. Mitchell’s ideas for developing military air power were innovative but largely ignored by those who favored development of military sea power. Mitchell zealously advocated his views and was eventually court martialed for speaking out against the United States’ organization of its forces. [Source: University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Division of Archives & Special Collections]