FREE WHITEWATER

Recent Tweets, 11.27 to 12.3

Tommy Thompson as Wisconsin’s Mitt Romney | Waukesha Wonk bit.ly/s0m2gY
2 Dec

Favoring well-funded groups: Walker Admin would charge protesters for police, cleanup – JSOnline bit.ly/s5D0Gp
1 Dec

“@BorowitzReport: In a sign that he is losing focus, today Herman Cain could not remember the last number of his 9-9-9 plan.”
1 Dec

DAILY WISCONSIN » GOP Sens. Jim DeMint and Rand Paul tell Wisconsin’s Conservative Bloggers to Go to Hell bit.ly/vFO2AH
29 Nov

Certain trend: Gannett’s Sheboygan Press story comments switching to Facebook shebpr.es/u5ClJO
29 Nov

Trees die for this: @ChrisRickertWSJ: Everyone must participate for lake cleaning effort to succeed dlvr.it/yB3W1
29 Nov

On Herman Cain’s Campaign

Sadly, yes:

Steve Schmidt, who managed Arizona Sen. John McCain’s 2008 presidential race, offered a far harsher assessment of the Cain moment.

“That Cain’s candidacy was taken seriously for longer than a nano-second in a time of genuine crisis for the country raises fundamental questions about the health of the political process and the Republican party,” Schmidt said.

Via The Washington Post.

Disability rights advocates warn of special education cuts

Balancing the budget on the backs of the vulnerable:

The Survival Coalition of Wisconsin Disability Group sent a letter this week to federal education officials and members of the states congressional delegation, urging them to stick with federal rules requiring school districts not to reduce the amount of money they spend on special education.

Via Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

See, also CESA 1 letter in favor of waiving federal safeguards for the disabled and Survival Coalition of Wisconsin Disability Group letter supporting existing safeguards.

Cross-posted at Daily Wisconsin.

Weekend Poll & Comment Forum: What’s your favorite holiday song?

It’s December — already — and Thanksgiving’s just a pleasant memory. However enjoyable that day (and it is), there are (to my knowledge) no popular Thanksgiving songs. Thanksgiving is a quiet holiday. The same cannot be said of Christmas (a naturally more exuberant holiday), or anything in December, for that matter. This is not a quiet month.

What’s your favorite holiday song? I’ve a poll with a few possibilities (from a list of popular radio songs), and space for comments to this post.


Comments will be moderated against profanity or trolls, but otherwise have at it.

My favorite: O Holy Night.

Daily Bread for 12.2.11

Good morning.

Whitewater’s Christmas parade is tonight at 6 PM, and the day beforehand will be sunny with a high temperature of thirty-six.

The Wisconsin Historical Society remembers one of Wisconsin’s lowest moments:

1954 – McCarthy Censured by Senate

On December 2, 1954, the United States Senate voted to censure Wisconsin Senator Joseph McCarthy. Declaring his behavior “contrary to senatorial traditions,” the 1954 Senate resolution officially condemned McCarthy’s reign of anti-communist terror.

I wouldn’t call his conduct a reign of terror, but an abuse of political power worthy of censure, surely.

 

Gingrich: Poor Children Have “No Habits of Working”

Somewhere tonight, Gov. Romney’s smiling:

“Really poor children, in really poor neighborhoods have no habits of working and have nobody around them who works so they have no habit of showing up on Monday,” Gingrich claimed.

“They have no habit of staying all day, they have no habit of I do this and you give me cash unless it is illegal,” he added.

Via Fox News

F.L.O.S.S: Protecting You from Low-Cost Teeth-Whitening Services

It’s not health, but favoring some businesses over others (and over consumers) that’s the concern of Connecticut’s regulators:

Here’s the description of the Institute for Justice’s video:

Teeth-whitening services are popular and increasingly available at spas, salons and shopping malls. This has been a boon for consumers because these businesses offer whitening services at a much lower cost than dentists do, often charging less than 25 percent of what a dentist would charge for similar results.

There is one group that is not smiling about these new, low-cost teeth-whitening services: the Connecticut Dental Commission. In June, the Commission ruled it is a crime punishable by up to five years in jail or $25,000 in civil penalties for anyone but a licensed dentist to offer teeth-whitening services, even if the customers apply the product to their own teeth.

Teeth-whitening products are regulated by the FDA as cosmetics, which mean anyone—even a child—can purchase them and apply them to his or her own teeth without a prescription and without supervision or instruction.

The Dental Commission’s ruling has nothing to do with public health or safety and everything to do with protecting licensed dentists from honest competition. more >>

Ben Sommer’s Latest Album: Super Brain

I’ve featured songs from Ben Sommer’s latest album, Super Brain, but a proper review of the entire album is in order. I liked and favorably reviewed Ben’s first album, america’d, and so was disposed to expect another solid effort. And yet, earlier-album familiarity nothwithstanding, Super Brain surprises and impresses, exceeding Sommer’s earlier work.

First, for those who liked america’d, the key difference in Super Brain’s dozen songs: the former album was more political than Sommer’s new one. Where america’d offered commentary on the state of the nation, Super Brain casts a wider glance, including one backward, in topics less uniquely American, but more universal.

There’s still political commentary here (Militarism could not be otherwise), but there’s a broader collection of themes.

There’s no right or wrong in the political or apolitical approach: each has its place.

Still, that’s neither here nor there compared with Super Brain’s deepest strength: this is an impressively and astutely eclectic mix of songs and topics. Ben may be, by his own account, an edgy, prog rock musician, but (it is to be hoped) no one is just one thing, spontaneously generated and waiting at the microphone. Sommer’s clearly isn’t one thing, but is instead a sharp and profoundly knowledgeable musician.

That’s the strength and fun of Super Brain: it’s a tour, making its mark rather than making a particular statement.

How could anyone — anyone not pinched and narrow — not enjoy, for example, I Married a Prostitute? It’s just wonderful, and I’ll not call it a guilty pleasure as it’s simply a pleasure. Melodically and lyrically, it’s a treat.

On this same album, just a few tracks later, one finds Deo Gracias Anglia, previously premiered here at FREE WHITEWATER. That’s an astonishing range for a musician, and evidence that Super Brain’s not just a title, but a description. A quick note about this Sommer’s version of Deo Gracias Anglia – it says much and says much favorably that when Sommers offered a track to premiere at FW, he chose so wisely and fittingly. Behind this eclectic album lies real intuition.

Then, back to the lead track Young Turks, for something unlike either of these two:

Happily and easily recommended —

Adams’s rating, out of four stars: