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Daily Bread for 2.10.12

Good morning.

Whitewater will have a high temperature of about twenty-nine, with a good chance of snow, amounting to less than an inch.  In Portland, Oregon, it will be a day of showers, with a high of fifty-one.

The Wisconsin Historical Society marks today as one of changing ownership: “on this day in 1773, “the Treaty of Paris ceded formerly French-controlled land, including the Wisconsin region, to England. [Source: Avalon Project at Yale University].”

Something more about France, from Google’s daily puzzle: “What was the Allied code name for the evacuation of 338,000 troops from a French port during World War II?”

Valentine’s Day draws close, and the Journal Sentinel‘s OnTap writes to help: “Looking for love? Bartenders pour some dating tips.”  If there are those who know the ins-and-outs of a bar, they would be bartenders, I wouldn’t wonder.  You may judge for yourself how sound the suggestions seem, but it’s impossible to argue with the idea that a man shouldn’t ridicule a woman’s drink-choice.  If even that’s a problem, it’s sure to de downhill thereafter.

 

Know Your Rights: Photographers | American Civil Liberties Union

Here’s a link to photographer’s rights from the ACLU. These are the rights of citizens, rights (among so many others) that they have as citizens.

The linked page includes information on (1) general rights, (2) what to do if one is stopped for taking lawful pictures, (3) special considerations for video recording, (4) taking photographs at the  airport, and (5) other links for information on lawfully photographing and filming authorities during the course of their ordinary duties.

SeeKnow Your Rights: Photographers | American Civil Liberties Union.

Whitewater-Area League of Women Voters February 2012 Newsletter

The Whitewater-Area League of Women Voters’ February 2012 Newsletter is out, featuring both articles and a calendar of upcoming LWV events.

This latest edition is available as a link on my blogroll, and is embedded below, with coding through Google.

Upcoming events:

Whitewater League Website Now Live

www.lwvwhitewater.org

Have you checked out the League’s new website? Do you have ideas on how to improve what is offered? Do you have content to contribute? We hope so. Some ideas might include recommended reading and viewing titles, or testimonials to help personalize the membership page on why you are a member of the League and value its mission. Please send your ideas and suggestions to our webmistress, Stacey Lunsford at Stacey_lunsford@yahoo.com.

Date: February 18th (Saturday)
Event: Membership Meeting –Privatization Study Discussion.
Where: 10 AM Fairhaven Fellowship Hall

Date: February 21st (Tuesday)
Event: Primary Election affecting only Ward 10 in the City of Whitewater, Old Armory

Date: March 3 (Saturday)
Event:  LWV Board Meeting
Where:   10 AM, Public Library

Date: March 10 (Saturday)
Event:   Candidate Forum, Municipal Elections
Where:  10-11:30 AM, City Hall Council Chambers

Date: March 15 (Thursday)
Event:  “Judicial Independence and Impartiality,” Speaker to be announced
Where:   7 PM City Hall Council Chambers

Ten down, forty to go

Wisconsin’s still stuck:

The Associated Press has learned that President Barack Obama on Thursday will free 10 states from the strict requirements of the Bush-era No Child Left Behind law. The move gives long-sought leeway to states that promise to improve how they prepare and evaluate students.

A White House official says the states are Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, Oklahoma and Tennessee.

Via WEAU.

Wisconsin: Obama, Catholic vote, and contraception mandate

Craig Gilbert crunches the numbers.  This is bad and overreaching policy, and it’s surely bad politics.  It’s is an unforced error, and never should  have happened this year.  Many who  support a contraception requirement were already going to vote for Pres. Obama; it’s some of those who don’t support a requirement who were in play, and who make a difference on the margins:

If requiring Catholic universities and hospitals to cover contraception for employees ends up hurting President Obama with Catholic voters, then Wisconsin is one place to keep an eye on.

That’s because it’s one of the most Catholic of the presidential swing states.

Among this year’s likely electoral battlegrounds, only New Hampshire (38%) and New Mexico (36%) had a higher percentage of Catholic voters than Wisconsin (33%) in 2008, according to exit polls….

Via Obama, the Catholic vote, and the contraception mandate – JSOnline.

Daily Bread for 2.9.12

Good morning.

In Whitewater, it’s more like winter again: sunny and thirty-five.  In Maui, it’s nothing like winter: sunny and seventy-five.

Whitewater’s Police Commission meets today, at 6 PM.

On this day in 1943, the Battle of Guadalcanal ended with an American victory over Japan. A New York Times headline nicely described the result: “Guadalcanal Is Ours.”

The Wisconsin Historical Society describes a Wisconsin connection to the birth of the National Weather Service, on this day in 1870:

On this date President Ulysses S. Grant signed a joint resolution authorizing a National Weather Service, which had long been a dream of Milwaukee scientist Increase Lapham. Lapham, 19th-century Wisconsin’s premier natural scientist, proposed a national weather service after he mapped data contributed over telegraph lines in the Upper Midwest and realized that weather might be predicted in advance. He was concerned about avoiding potential disasters to Great Lakes shipping and Wisconsin farming, and his proposal was approved by Congress and authorized on this date. [Source: History Just Ahead: A Guide to Wisconsin’s Historical Markers, edited by Sarah Davis McBride]

Wired offers a collection of Award-Winning Microscope Videos. They’ve fourteen; here are two from that collection —

 

Google’s puzzle for today is for astronomers: “If you live to be 110, how many times will you be able to see Uranus orbit the sun?”

Is there a libertarian case for Rick Santorum?

No.

John Samples (writing in the Daily Caller) doesn’t really  think so, either.  He thinks if Santorum won the nomination and then lost to Pres. Obama, that would be good for libertarians:

….Rick Santorum could be the George McGovern of his party.

Such a disaster might open the door for a different kind of GOP along lines indicated earlier, a party of free markets, moral pluralism, and realism in foreign affairs. Ron Paul has taken some steps this year toward creating such a party. He has attracted votes and inspired activism. His son or another candidate might take up the cause in 2016 and build on Paul’s achievements. Fanciful thinking? Perhaps, but it may take an electoral disaster to free the GOP from the ideas and forces that Rick Santorum represents.

Santorum’s nomination might someday lead to a GOP-libertarian alliance; much more likely, it would just lead to a Democratic victory in November.

Via Is there a libertarian case for Rick Santorum? | The Daily Caller.

Whitewater’s 2.7.12 Common Council Meeting

Update: links fixed.

Whitewater’s Common Council met last night, and here are assorted observations on the meeting.

Scads of Objectives. Whitewater’s city manager lists 133 major city objectives, of which 85.7% were ‘completed or achieved.’ What should one say? It would have been better to achieve a few meaningful goals, than to list over a hundred, many of them routine.

There’s a false precision to all this, using a percentage (87.5%!) as though NASA were calculating odds on achieving a flight trajectory, or even the CIA assessing the risk of unrest in rural China.

There are a few, simple facts that matter; the rest is diversion and distraction.

The city’s poorer than it was at the beginning of City Manager Brunner’s administration — that’s one truth that really matters. (See, Whitewater’s Decade of Child Poverty.)

Whitewater’s Downtown. When I first started writing (2007), I wasn’t sure what would happen to our downtown. Even after a Great Recession, many downtown merchants (and other areas of the city with determined, plucky merchants) have survived. That’s no small thing — that’s a fine accomplishment, especially as underlying citywide conditions have been so difficult.

The presentation of the downtown’s annual report reflects a quiet confidence that comes through resilience and perseverance — clear, direct, succinct, informative. (Solid supporting materials are available in the Common Council documents posted online.)

A solid presentation doesn’t always suggest a solid product, but in this case it really does. There’s reason to be optimistic on this front.

Tourism. Tourism’s a captive of a town’s politics, culture, economy – people go to hip and fun destinations. Allow the town to grow organically, and she’ll develop a vibrant culture interesting and attractive to others. Fuss over everything, prohibit many things, inhibit many more, and we’ll not attract people. We’ll satisfy a few people who are here, at the expense of many more already here, and at the cost of newcomers so valuable to growth. (Along these lines, see How to Make Whitewater Hip and Prosperous.)

Memorandum of Understanding. There was an odd moment during the meeting when Council reviewed a memorandum of understanding between parties (including the city) on Whitewater’s Tech Park and Innovation Center. It’s odd and sad, as a play on words: there’s been no real understanding of good policy in this.

One of the leading players talked about the memorandum in response to questions from another, as though they had created something other than a wasteful shell of a project.

Millions in public funds and debt for something that only Babbitt or Gatsby could admire.

Fences, Preserves. Here in this city, there is an archaeological preserve of Native American effigy mounds, created long before European settlement. The mounds are close to a housing development, and some homeowners’ fences run across the preserve. These homeowners may not have known their fences ran across the boundaries of the preserve (especially since original fence lines were themselves older than some on the current homeowners).

Whatever the case, and despite the considerable acrimony involved, Whitewater’s city government should be able to manage the preserve and protect the mounds well enough. Whitewater’s misfortune — self-inflicted — is that even simple tasks take forever, and come with fussing and fighting along the way.

[Note, 2.10.2012: These remarks do not imply a lack of prior obligation of the city. Rather, whatever has transpired, the city should be able to handle these obligations, if it should handle anything at all. At the same time, the Landmarks Commission’s role and importance to the city remains as it was.]

Lawn Grass, Prairie Grass. Connected to the discussion of the archaeological preserve was talk about the kinds of plants within it. They’ll be prairie grasses, as one might expect for a preserve.

We’re a rural community, and it’s puzzling that there’s confusion about mowing lawn grass as against prairie grass (or conventional lawns, natural lawns, and weeds, for that matter).

It’s not as though people here grew up in a concrete jungle, devoid of plants. Even people in New York (a place that actually has many plants) would be able to tell the difference between grass that needs mowing and prairie grass.

I’m sure that if New Yorker Mona Lisa Vito (a character from My Cousin Vinny) came to Whitewater, she’d be able to tell the difference between regular grass and prairie grass. (As ably, I’d guess, as she could tell a Buick Skylark from a Pontiac Tempest.)

The greatest beauty in our city is a natural beauty, followed closely only by the earliest human efforts of Native Americans and settlers. We should preserve so much of it as we can. more >>

Eric Sanders on ‘The Beautiful Optimism of Libertarianism’

Eric Sanders has begun a new blog, Action in Action, at Big Think.

His first post discusses ‘The Beautiful Optimism of Libertarianism.’

Sanders writes that

I am now starting to believe that libertarianism — at least for those who espouse it honestly — stems from incredible optimism, an unshakable belief in human dignity, honesty, and generosity….

true libertarianism stems from the belief that people, left to their own devices, will eventually act in a manner that is beneficial to both themselves and to their society. It is this optimism that I find beautiful — this belief in the inherent goodness of others, if only they were given the opportunity to demonstrate it — and this is where I think those who generally look at libertarianism as a cynical, purely selfish world view can begin to engage and at least consider some typically ‘libertarian’ ways of thinking.

He’s right, of course: libertarians are the people who believe in these hopeful things, in opposition to the machinations of so many self-serving politicians, bureaucrats, and their particular, coddled friends in industry.