FREE WHITEWATER

Small Business Saturday

It’s Small Business Saturday in America on 11.26.11. I’ve been critical of government’s intervention in the marketplace (between chains and local stores), but there’s much to recommend local merchants who find success through their own, private efforts. Shoppers don’t need a politician or bureaucrat’s guidance. (“Consumers should be able to decide for themselves without the misuse of government’s imprimatur.”)

In my own case, I’ve come to rely on those local merchants who offer specialized products and services, delivered with expert guidance. I was out and about today, and I will be out again tomorrow, visiting those very merchants.

Friday Catblogging: Thanksgiving Turkey for Cats

Below is a video from someone who makes an entire turkey for his cats. (Alternatively, he makes the turkey for himself, claims it’s for the felines, and merely lets the cats lick it. The former and professed motivation is the more desirable and hygienic one.)

Daily Bread for 11.25.11

Good morning.

I hope that your Black Friday (which is now expanding into a Black Thursday, Black Friday deals week, etc.) is a good one. The poll and comment forum will be on hiatus this week, recognizing that readers will likely be out and about.  If the year has been good to you (and I very much hope that it has been), it might not be a bad day to venture out, to find a deal here or there, boost a merchant or two, and generally observe the consumer frenzy. Enjoy.

There will be posts up throughout the weekend, patiently awaiting readers’ return from shopping expeditions.

If you venture out today, or if you’re returning from overnight shopping (!), you’ll find in Whitewater a breezy day with a high temperature of fifty-six.

Saturday is the date for the launch of NASA’s Mars rover, and embedded below is a live-stream window for tomorrow’s launch:

After eight years of planning, more than $600 million in cost overruns, and a two-year delay, NASA’sMars Science Laboratory is finally ready to launch.

Now you can watch the nuclear-powered, 1-ton rover — currently the largest machine that can feasibly land on the Red Planet — take off from Cape Canaveral and begin its journey to Mars.

Liftoff is currently scheduled for 10:02 a.m. EST on Saturday, Nov. 26. NASA TV offers HD streaming of the launch (above). But if acronym-filled technobabble is hard on your ears, tune in to one of our other favorite video streams on Spaceflight Now or Spacevidcast .

Camera Trap App Sends Wild Animals to Your iPhone

The Instant Wild app, free and newly released by the Zoological Society of London, streams images to your iPhone or iPad from camera traps in Kenya, Sri Lanka, Mongolia and England’s Whipsnade Zoo. Images can also be seen via browser.

“It’s amazing for people to just be sitting in their office or walking in the street and have these images pop up,” said Jonathan Baillie, conservation program director at EDGE of Existence, a ZSL program. “I find myself in board rooms and conferences and hotels a lot, and I’d rather be in the field.”

Via Camera Trap App Sends Wild Animals to Your iPhone | Wired Science | Wired.com.

President’s Thanksgiving Proclamation 2011

From the White House, following annual tradition, this year’s Thanksgiving proclamation:

THANKSGIVING DAY, 2011

– – – – – – –

BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

A PROCLAMATION

       One of our Nation’s oldest and most cherished traditions, Thanksgiving Day brings us closer to our loved ones and invites us to reflect on the blessings that enrich our lives.  The observance recalls the celebration of an autumn harvest centuries ago, when the Wampanoag tribe joined the Pilgrims at Plymouth Colony to share in the fruits of a bountiful season.  The feast honored the Wampanoag for generously extending their knowledge of local game and agriculture to the Pilgrims, and today we renew our gratitude to all American Indians and Alaska Natives.  We take this time to remember the ways that the First Americans have enriched our Nation’s heritage, from their generosity centuries ago to the everyday contributions they make to all facets of American life.  As we come together with friends, family, and neighbors to celebrate, let us set aside our daily concerns and give thanks for the providence bestowed upon us.

Though our traditions have evolved, the spirit of grace and humility at the heart of Thanksgiving has persisted through every chapter of our story.  When President George Washington proclaimed our country’s first Thanksgiving, he praised a generous and knowing God for shepherding our young Republic through its uncertain beginnings.  Decades later, President Abraham Lincoln looked to the divine to protect those who had known the worst of civil war, and to restore the Nation “to the full enjoyment of peace, harmony, tranquility, and union.”

In times of adversity and times of plenty, we have lifted our hearts by giving humble thanks for the blessings we have received and for those who bring meaning to our lives.  Today, let us offer gratitude to our men and women in uniform for their many sacrifices, and keep in our thoughts the families who save an empty seat at the table for a loved one stationed in harm’s way.  And as members of our American family make do with less, let us rededicate ourselves to our friends and fellow citizens in need of a helping hand.

As we gather in our communities and in our homes, around the table or near the hearth, we give thanks to each other and to God for the many kindnesses and comforts that grace our lives.  Let us pause to recount the simple gifts that sustain us, and resolve to pay them forward in the year to come.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, BARACK OBAMA, President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim Thursday, November 24, 2011, as a National Day of Thanksgiving.  I encourage the people of the United States to come together    whether in our homes, places of worship, community centers, or any place of fellowship for friends and neighbors    to give thanks for all we have received in the past year, to express appreciation to those whose lives enrich our own, and to share our bounty with others.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this sixteenth day of November, in the year of our Lord two thousand eleven, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and thirty-sixth.

BARACK OBAMA

The Pilgrims’ Thanksgiving Lesson

A change in rights offered a path from starvation to dependable sustenance:

Faced with potential starvation in the spring of 1623, the colony decided to implement a new economic system. Every family was assigned a private parcel of land. They could then keep all they grew for themselves, but now they alone were responsible for feeding themselves. While not a complete private property system, the move away from communal ownership had dramatic results.

Via LP.org

“The Next Best Thing to Herding Cats”

From the New York Times comes a story of the next great animal competition: feline agility contests. Consider the nature of the competition, and be intrigued:

Feline agility competitions, in which cats run through a miniature obstacle course full of hurdles and tunnels, have become fixtures on the cat show scene. Modeled after canine agility competitions, the tournaments feature a ring in which cat owners — some of whom have trained their pets from kittenhood — brandish a feather or sparkly wand to try to coax a cat to climb stairs, weave around poles and leap through hoops in as little time as possible.

Via New York Times (h/t The Atlantic Wire).

Daily Bread for 11.23.11

Good morning.

Whitewater’s Wednesday looks to be mostly sunny, with a high temperature of forty-six.

Margarine’s not just a butter (but not better) substitute — it was once a serious crime in America’s Dairyland, as the Wisconsin Historical Society recalls:

1909 – Janesville Man Convicted for Selling Oleo

On this date A.E. Graham of Janesville was put on trial for selling oleo as butter. Oleo, an early form of margarine, was outlawed in the dairy state of Wisconsin. On January 27, 1910, he was found guilty in federal court and sentenced to 18 months in Fort Leavenworth Prison. [Source: Janesville Gazette]

Not just a crime, but a federal one, and time in a federal prison, for A.E. Graham.

Daily Bread for 11.22.11

Good morning.

It’s drizzle and a high temperature of forty-one ahead for Whitewater today.

About a half-century later, America naturally still recalls the assassination of Pres. Kennedy on this day in 1963, and also remains transfixed by Abraham Zapruder’s 8mm film from that day.  Memorable, but for tragedy.

Here’s Google’s puzzle for today: “You’re standing on the beach soaking up some rays at the Earth’s 2011 aphelion. What day of the week is it?”

Thanksgiving News Update from the Institute for Justice

Here’s a holiday recap of projects ongoing at the Institute for Justice:

Happy Thanksgiving! We wanted to send you a quick update on what the Institute for Justice has been up to over the past month.

Live in Connecticut? Want brighter teeth? It’s a felony for anyone but a licensed dentist to offer teeth-whitening services. Watch our entertaining video about our lawsuit here.

Sorry, Governor Haley Barbour – in response to your veto in 2009, voters overwhelmingly approved eminent domain reform, making Mississippi the 44th state to pass legislation in response to Kelo. (Arkansas, Hawaii, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, and Oklahoma – we’re looking at you!)

Hello, Sunshine State! IJ launched its new Florida chapter with a lawsuit challenging Hialeah’s anti-competitive street vendor laws.

Check out IJ’s first historical mini-documentary about how the 14th Amendment protects your liberties from government tyranny.

Daily Bread for 11.21.11

Good morning.

Awaiting Whitewater is a partly sunny day with a high temperature  of forty-five.

We’ve any number of protests in Wisconsin these days, but there’s nothing new about protests among us, as the Wisconsin Historical Society recalls a notable campus protest in 1968:

On this date, 96 African-American students were arrested for occupying the university president’s office to protest the University administration’s refusal to commit to adding more black teachers, classes in African-American history, black speakers on campus, and a black cultural center. Although the students were jailed and suspended from the University, within a year many of their ideas were implemented, including adding black literature and history classes and opening an Interracial Cultural Center. View more information in the Dictionary of Wisconsin History. [Source: UW-Oshkosh Web site, “Do Your Thing,” http://www.uwosh.edu/archives/bt/about.htm]

I know only a little about Singapore, but apparently chicken rice is a famous national dish in that country.  Whatever limitations that nation may have, the food does look wonderful —

more >>

Recent Tweets, 11.13 – 11.19

Too funny (because too predictable) EU bans claim that water can prevent dehydration – Telegraph tgr.ph/tVOKaQ
19 Nov

Supercommittee at impasse as deadline approaches Washington Post wapo.st/rR2foK
19 Nov

‘Near Poor’ – Not Quite in Poverty, but Still Struggling – t.co/Pu5j9Bv9 nyti.ms/rTVhsx
19 Nov

Answer: No @jackshafer: Justices to Decide if Lying Journalist [Stephen Glass] Fit to Practice Law bit.ly/sAr6GD
18 Nov

Oh, brother: Ryan Gosling fans protest People’s decision to name Bradley Cooper the Sexiest Man Alive bit.ly/v6bJJl
18 Nov

On Occupy Whitewater, Wisconsin 11.17.11 #occupy freewhitewater.com/?p=18928
18 Nov

About 200 gather at UW-Whitewater’s Hyland Hall for speakers at #occupywhitewater
17 Nov

Someone was bound to find a way – Has Apple Made Programmers Cool? – Slashdot bit.ly/rUezx4
17 Nov

Of course they are: TSA Declares Banned-in-Europe Airport X-Rays ‘Completely Safe’ bit.ly/sQOpx7
16 Nov

Oh, brother Gingrich Said to Be Paid at Least $1.6 Million by Freddie Mac- Bloomberg bit.ly/rAMLTA
16 Nov

No to public money for private project: Madison council votes down $16 million in TIF for Edgewater bit.ly/rraTpr
16 Nov

The War on Immigrants » FREE WHITEWATER bit.ly/vGXWKW
15 Nov

Chance of 2012 U.S. recession tops 50 percent: Fed Reserve paper reut.rs/tLk7mH
14 Nov