FREE WHITEWATER

Ben Sommer’s Video of Foster the People’s Pumped up Kicks

A treat today — Ben Sommer’s cover of Pumped up Kicks. Enjoy — I’m very sure you will.

Ben describes his recording of the song —

Pumped Up Kicks

If you haven’t heard “Pumped up Kicks” yet then you don’t listen to radio. That makes two of us.

Yes the song is catchy but insufferable. I spent a few hours going through various Billboard lists before I landed on this one. All the other tunes in the top 20 – Katy Perry, LMFAO, Evanescense – gave me un-suppressible d-chills, so I chose this one. It also seems to still have legs popularity-wise, having crept up the charts for a long time.

I’m planning on the next album to be a compilation of Other People’s Music. I’m taking a queue here from web-famous indie pop band Pomplamoose who coldly calculated their way to fame by picking similarly wretched hit songs with the highest view count on YouTube, and posting their own re-arranged cover versions.

The video documents most of the recording sessions.

Its a pretty economical way to produce video.

Daily Bread for 11.17.11

Good morning.

It’s a perfect November day ahead: sunny with a high of thirty-six.

Whitewater will see demonstration and counter-demonstration this afternoon.

Demonstration:

On Thurs. Nov. 17 to 18th, the American Dream movement, along with three University of Wisconsin-Whitewater student groups, including Forward Whitewater, the Peace Group, and the College Dems, will be sponsoring an Occupy Whitewater event the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater’s South Library Mall, just off Main Street, (between Hyer Hall, the Anderson Library, and the University Center) (800 W. Main Street, Whitewater). We are the 99%, and we will recall Walker and other corporate-owned politicians who have forgotten to do the will of the people.

• We’ll have a booth to sign petitions to Recall Walker.

• There will be a teach-in starting at 3 p.m.

• The rally will begin at 5:15 p.m., with Representative Andy Jorgensen, Representative Peter Barca, and Senator Erpenbach stopping by.

• At 6:30pm we will march as a group (or you can drive) to UW-Whitewater’s Hyland Hall (Room 1000, Timmerman Auditorium), where Erpenbach will be speaking at 7 p.m.

• If you wish to stay overnight, tents can be set up after 2 p.m. We’re hopeful that a significant group will stay overnight in solidarity with the international Occupy Movement. Even if you don’t stay overnight, please come and join the rally.

Counter-demonstration:

“For too long conservatives have ignored college campuses and allowed one point of view to dominate. No longer on our campus. In a peaceful, respectful, clear and concise way we will show our solidarity with Governor Walker and conservative reforms,” read a posting on the group’s Facebook page.

The counter rally is planned to run from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. on the South Library Mall, just off Main Street, in front of the Anderson Library.

On this day in 1973, Pres. Nixon offered assurances to the American people:

President Nixon told an Associated Press managing editors meeting in Orlando, Fla., that “people have got to know whether or not their president is a crook. Well, I’m not a crook.”

Very few non-crooks feel a need to offer the denial.

Here’s today’s Google a Day puzzle:

You invite a chromotherapist over for dinner, but while fixing the meal you cut your hand. Would your guest treat you with hex triplet #0000FF or hex triplet #FF0000?

Eleven Fifty-Nine for 11.16.11 (Bigger Walmart Edition)

Good evening.

I mentioned that today was the grand opening of a new Walmart for Whitewater, larger than previously and with a proper grocery section.  A Walmart here or there isn’t a big deal; what Walmart does each day, in so many stores, is a big deal. Thousands of items, in thousands of stores, stocked and replenished each day.  You know, and I know, that it’s not the most sophisticated store in America; it’s not even the most sophisticated store in our small town. I wouldn’t buy a car from Walmart, but then they’re not selling cars, either.

Yet, whatever its deficiencies, it has the advantage of offering consumers a choice, where they might otherwise have lacked for one. Why would fewer choices be preferable to more choices?   The new store is clean, brightly lighted, and has aisle upon aisle of food and other goods.

I once heard the last Alistair Cooke say that one of the pleasures of growing up in the British Empire was the array of foods, from so many distant, exotic places, one could purchase.  I’m sure that was a pleasure, to eat bananas from faraway places (especially when other peoples ate none).

America’s Walmart offers more than the British Empire’s mercantilism ever did. Common men and women can buy goods in a Walmart the like of which an Edwardian aristocrat could only have dreamed (if he even had so much imagination as those dreams would require).

All and all, a good day, indeed.

On Whitewater, Wisconsin’s 2012 Municipal Budget

It’s mid-November, and on schedule, Whitewater (pop. 14,622) has a budget for 2012. There’s some good in this year’s result, but other challenges lie ahead.

(A pdf copy of the budget is available online. For my remarks on the 2011 budget, see Whitewater, Wisconsin’s Next Municipal Budget.)

A few remarks on the ‘12 budget:

With Council’s Guidance. As with last year’s budget, Common Council’s guidance to the city manager was to craft a municipal budget without an aggregate tax levy increase. That’s unquestionably the right course, and the single most important aspect of this budget is that it doesn’t further burden people in a struggling city.

The last-minute additional of a part-time Community Service Officer is both predictable and poor planning, but a leader’s taste for skirting rules applied to others only encourages second and third helpings.

Next year, if you choose, you’ll be able to set your watch to a similar last-minute request, so predictable are they.

In any event, keeping spending down only matters if residents feel an overall reduction in their net taxes.

Although the private National Bureau of Economic Research may have declared the Great Recession over, that’s hardly comforting for many in our city (or beyond).

There’s considerable risk that our economy may get worse before it gets better. A patient may recover quickly from a high fever, and bounce back after only few days. If, however, a lingering low-grade fever persists for weeks longer, that’s less than a mediocre recovery: it’s a sign of something worse, lying beneath the surface. These last few years of high unemployment and slow growth are that low-grade fever.

Without Council’s Guidance. The risk for Whitewater — as it was last year until Council intervened — is that her city manager likely wouldn’t have hit upon a no-increase budget without Council’s restraint. At every opportunity, one hears how very much city services are needed, how important city services are, and how much demand keeps rising. Given that view, there’s sure to be a proposal to expand yet again, through taxes upon residents, at the first opportunity. The gains from restraint may quickly be lost.

Had it not been for Council’s guidance this year, we’d probably already be back to business as usual (where business as usual is bad for business).

Now, about that persistent demand for more services: Which services, and for what purpose? It’s not that Whitewater doesn’t have enough money – it’s that this municipal administration has wasted money on grand but empty projects while simple and basic needs are neglected. This is not merely a matter of finding grant money or floating municipal debt, but (1) only taking grant money and municipal debt actually suited to our needs, and (2) recognizing that for every dollar of we spend, there will be huge costs in employee time and effort not enumerated on a project’s budget.

There are so many hours in a day; they shouldn’t be wasted on pyramid-building.

A Better Allocation. As with my remarks last year, we could reduce spending still more by cutting a few leadership positions, returning most of that to taxpayers in savings, and still have money left for food aid, for example, for our many poor.

Whitewater’s city administration should provide basic municipal services, not write grants, hatch unsuccessful development schemes, or commit time and effort to those projects. In this city of fewer than 15,000 people, the city’s manager doesn’t need an assistant, a panel of directors, etc. I’m sure those things make one feel grand, but they’re not needed. A municipal budget should be more than an exercise in bureaucratic ego-building and resume-crafting.

Anyone who wants a financier’s life should seek private employment, on Wall Street or elsewhere. (I don’t think there’s anything wrong with those jobs, so long as they’re without hidden public support or special deals.) Whitewater’s residents owe no one — no one at all — that thrill.

When Whitewater’s city manager declared that the city manager’s principal role should be development (as against provision of basic services), he wasn’t merely wrong, or even infuriatingly wrong, but absurdly, infuriatingly wrong.

See, transcription my own, from the Joint CDA & Common Council meeting on 7.11.11 beginning at 54:08:

BRUNNER: When it comes to economic development, I think, I don’t care, any, whoever is the city manager, it doesn’t have to be me, that’s that’s got to be their job number one. You’re trying to sell the city, we’re trying to develop the city, right? Whether it’s it’s it’s a full-time or it’s a part-time job, it’s it’s it’s something that I think the city manager’s going to be actively engaged in.

You know, in the last week and a half since we haven’t had a Neighborhood Services Director, things have not stopped. I’ve I’ve done three or four three retention visits in the last week, I’ve met with WHEDA [Wisconsin Housing and Economic Development Authority] on potential being a potential lender for WHEDA, it’s just something we have to continue to do now. We can’t do that, you know, we can’t do that for five, or six, or ten months, we have to make some decisions on on how we’re going to do things with these positions, but, but in the interim we’re all going to pitch in we’re all going to do what it takes to get the job done.

Right? Wrong.

Here one sees the problem plainly: it is more than enough for the city manager to oversee basic services and their delivery equitably and efficiently. Development should never be his or her principal concern.

A city that allows the transformation of a good and simple public role into a mediocre and grandiose one fails her residents. Development is foremost a private matter, where government refrains from meddling.

(Listen earlier, beginning around 4:00, and you’ll hear what a hash has been made of tax incremental district 4, and how long it will take to pay it off. So much for skillful managerial development.)

The Hardest Lies Ahead. By the municipal administration’s own account, Whitewater’s fiscal future is uncertain. See, from only thirteen months ago, Whitewater’s Fiscal Trend Analysis. That analysis reveals serious problems with the City of Whitewater’s revenues per capita, and her net direct debt service.

Needless to say, America’s condition as not grown markedly better in that time.

There will be deeper cuts yet to come, and the longer one waits, the more painful they’ll be. There’s also a need for a different allocation, for vital services to the poor, although acknowledging that need will hurt the pride of one aged town squire or another.

So be it — better an injury to a man’s pride than a child’s health.

In any event, this Council will find, I think, that they’ll have to do yet more, over the next few years.

84-Year-Old Woman Becomes the Pepper-Sprayed Face of Occupy Seattle


Photo: Joshua Trujillo / Seattle Post-Intelligencer

Worse than outrageous:

Seattle photographer Joshua Trujillo captured what may become the defining image of this week of Occupy unrest — an elderly woman being led away from the mayhem, her face covered with pepper spray. A pregnant woman and a preist were also hit with pepper spray during a march on Tuesdy night….

The woman in the picture is not just any elderly woman, however, as she is well known to Seattle residents. Dorli Rainey is a former school teacher who has been active in local politics since the 1960s. In 2009, she ran for mayor, but eventually dropped out by saying, “I am old and should learn to be old, stay home, watch TV and sit still.” We guess she didn’t learn.

Rainey emailed The Stranger, Seattle’s alternative paper, to say she stopped by the march to see what was happening when her group got pinned in by police and nearly trampled in the chaos.

Via The Atlantic Wire.

Daily Bread for 11.16.11

Good morning.

If you’re reading from faraway, and you’ve awakened to a day of sunny skies and seventy-five degrees, then you’ve missed out on a crisp Whitewater day with a high temperature of thirty-eight. Our November is as November should be.

It’s a grand opening for Whitewater’s new, expanded Walmart today. I walked through last night, and I’ll write more about Walmart later tonight. It’s an inviting sight to walk into the store and see — as one walks in — so much produce on display. Walmart may do a hundred small things wrong, but they do one thing very well (as well as any retailer on Earth: they offer lots of products to people in lots of places.

The New York TImes recalls that on this day in 1933, The United States and the Soviet Union established diplomatic relations:

On Nov. 16, 1933, the United States and the Soviet Union established diplomatic relations. President Roosevelt sent a telegram to Soviet leader Maxim Litvinov, expressing hope that United States-Soviet relations would “forever remain normal and friendly.”

It was the right practical step to establish relations, but ‘normal and friendly’ (or at least their approximation) were only possible with Russia after the collapse of the Soviet Union.

There’s a story at Wired that describes, and offers an explanation, for da Vinci’s observation that a tree typically grows so that the total thickness of the branches at a given height is equal to the thickness of the trunk. Kim Kreiger writes that

The rule says that when a tree’s trunk splits into two branches, the total cross section of those secondary branches will equal the cross section of the trunk. If those two branches in turn each split into two branches, the area of the cross sections of the four additional branches together will equal the area of the cross section of the trunk. And so on.

Expressed mathematically, Leonardo’s rule says that if a branch with diameter (D) splits into an arbitrary number (n) of secondary branches of diameters (d1, d2, et cetera), the sum of the secondary branches’ diameters squared equals the square of the original branch’s diameter. Or, in formula terms: D2 =Sigma di2, where i = 1, 2, … n.

But, why? Botanists had speculated that trees’ shapes followed the rule to allow for the pumping of water from the ground. There’s likely a very different reason:

But this didn’t sound right to Christophe Eloy, a visiting physicist at the University of California, San Diego, who is also affiliated with University of Provence in France. Eloy, a specialist in fluid mechanics, agreed that the equation had something to do with a tree’s leaves, not in how they took up water, and the force of the wind caught by the leaves as it blew.

Eloy used some insightful mathematics to find the wind-force connection. He modeled a tree as cantilevered beams assembled to form a fractal network. A cantilevered beam is anchored at only one end; a fractal is a shape that can be split into parts, each of which is a smaller, though sometimes not exact, copy of the larger structure. For Eloy’s model, this meant that every time a larger branch split into smaller branches, it split into the same number of branches, at approximately the same angles and orientations. Most natural trees grow in a fairly fractal fashion.

Leonardo was right about the relationship of branches to trunk, and now centuries later we know why: it’s all about endurance and resistance.

The War on Immigrants

Over at Reason’s blog, libertarian Shikha Dalmia writes on Alabama’s War on Immigrants. The essay is solid from beginning to end. I’d recommend readers to consider her full essay, but I’ll quote now from a few key passages.

Overview:

Conservatives are resorting to ever more draconian measures to take back the country from “illegal immigrants.” The latest state to declare an all-out jihad is Alabama. But as with slavery and segregation, they are using the government to commit sins that will eventually require even more government to undo.

Consequences of Alabama’s law:

But the provision that has struck terror in Alabama’s Hispanic community is that schools will now be required to collect information about the residency status of students and share it—albeit minus the names—with state authorities. Thousands of Hispanic kids have reportedly dropped out of school, fearing that this is a set up for future deportation.

The way these immigration restrictions are like segregation:

But there are parallels galore between the restrictionist and the segregationist crusades.

The most obvious is that they both invoke a grand American principle to justify a dubious cause.

Racists justified slavery and Jim Crow in the name of states’ rights then and restrictionists are justifying their attack on illegals in the name of the “rule of law” now. But rule of law in the service of bad laws is a form of tyranny….

But a bigger similarity between restrictionists and segregationists is their total blindness to what they are doing to a minority community. If restrictionists have their way, undocumented kids will have a hard time attending school, going to college, or ever gaining citizenship.

Emphasis in red my own.

The further consequence of these immoral restrictions:

Closing off economic opportunities and tearing apart families will ghettoize a subset of Hispanics just as segregation and Jim Crow ghettoized southern blacks. Right now, a country caught up in a restrictionist fury might not care.

But a civilized society doesn’t forever tolerate such blatant inhumanity. Ultimately, some triggering event forces it to confront its turpitudes.

The real question for the Right:

So the question is what do conservatives hate more: big government [to enforce a war on peaceful people] or undocumented workers? If it is the former, then they should stop drinking any more restrictionist poison. And if it is the latter, then they should stop pretending to be the party of limited government.

I’ve referred critically to similar policies before, either expressly or implicitly. See, Wisconsin Assembly Bill 173 and Eight Steps for Responding to Political Wrongs.

Politics is a matter of compromise, in almost all things. Yet you know, and I know, that there are legislators in Wisconsin — some so very close at hand — who support restrictions like those of Alabama.

Their support of these measures is beneath a normal American politics, and so there can be no compromise with them. If they were thoughtful they would renounce these views, and return to America’s principled, compassionate, beneficial support of free exchange in capital and labor.

If they were, they would; likely they are not, and so will not. Their embrace of these un-American proposals threatens to sew individual abuses and social discord across Wisconsin.

As with segregation, there can only be ceaseless, diligent, peaceful opposition to these restrictions. (Dr. King is an enduring example of principled American activism.) I wish it were otherwise, but one sometimes responds to conditions not of one’s choosing.

This is one of those times.

Daily Bread for 11.15.11

Good morning,

A mostly sunny, balmy fifty-six degree day lies ahead for Whitewater.

Two public meetings await, too: the Urban Forestry Commission meets at 4:15 PM, and Common Council meets at 6:30 PM. The Common Council session features a public hearing on Whitewater’s 2012 municipal budget. I’ll offer fuller remarks on the 2012 budget tomorrow, after the hearing.

I earlier posted about the plans for an Occupy Whitewater protest on 11.17.11, and here’s more detail from the organizers’ press release, as published @ CSI Media:

On Thurs. Nov. 17 to 18th, the American Dream movement, along with three University of Wisconsin-Whitewater student groups, including Forward Whitewater, the Peace Group, and the College Dems, will be sponsoring an Occupy Whitewater event the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater’s South Library Mall, just off Main Street, (between Hyer Hall, the Anderson Library, and the University Center) (800 W. Main Street, Whitewater). We are the 99%, and we will recall Walker and other corporate-owned politicians who have forgotten to do the will of the people.

• We’ll have a booth to sign petitions to Recall Walker.

• There will be a teach-in starting at 3 p.m.

• The rally will begin at 5:15 p.m., with Representative Andy Jorgensen, Representative Peter Barca, and Senator Erpenbach stopping by.

• At 6:30pm we will march as a group (or you can drive) to UW-Whitewater’s Hyland Hall (Room 1000, Timmerman Auditorium), where Erpenbach will be speaking at 7 p.m.

• After the talk, please return to the UWW South Library Mall for hot chocolate and more protest fun.

• If you wish to stay overnight, tents can be set up after 2 p.m. We’re hopeful that a significant group will stay overnight in solidarity with the international Occupy Movement. Even if you don’t stay overnight, please come and join the rally.

I’m more than curious to see how this event unfolds, as it’s not characteristic of the city.  Protests like these — of all stripes — are more common in other places, and there’s no reason they can’t transpire as smoothly in Whitewater.

 

 

Daily Bread for 11.14.11

Good morning,

For Whitewater today, it’s a slight chance of showers, and a high temperature of fifty-five.

The Wisconsin Historical Society notes the birth of a famous, Wisconsin-born historian on this day in 1861:

1861 – Frederick Jackson Turner Born

On this date Frederick Jackson Turner was born in Portage. Turner spent most of his academic career at the University of Wisconsin. He published his first article in 1883, received his B.A. in 1884, then his M.A. in History in 1888. After a year of study at Johns Hopkins (Ph.D., 1890), he returned to join the History faculty at Wisconsin, where he taught for the next 21 years. He later taught at Harvard from 1910 to 1924 before retiring. In 1893, Turner presented his famous address, “The Significance of the Frontier in American History,” at the Chicago World’s Fair. Turner died in 1932. [Source: Bowling Green State University]

Today is also the anniversary of the day in 1971 when the Dow first broke 1,000:

It finished at 1,003.16 for a gain of 6.09 points in what many Wall Streeters consider the equivalent of the initial breaking of the four-minute mile.

“This thing has an obvious psychological effect,” declared one brokerage-house partner. “It’s a hell of a news item. As for the perminence of it — well, I just don’t know.”

It’s all relative, really.  (Too funny, also that the New York TImes offered the brokerage-house partner’s quote as without specific attribution, as though no one wanted to be known for speculation on the topic.)

With a hat tip to the Huffington Post, here a dog proves he’s not just man’s, but also children’s, best friend: