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Whitewater-Area League of Women Voters October 2011 Newsletter

The Whitewater-Area League of Women Voters’ October 2011 Newsletter is out, with articles and a calendar of upcoming LWV events.

The latest copy of the LWV newsletter is available as a link on my blogroll, and is embedded below, with coding through Google.

Upcoming events:

Date: November 1st (Tuesday)
Event: LWV on-campus program “Impact of the Voter ID Law on Students”
Where: 12 Noon in the Hamilton Room of UWW University Center

Date: November 5th (Saturday)
Event: Whitewater Area LWV Board Meeting
Where: 10 AM Whitewater Public Library

Date: November 17th (Thursday)
Event: Whitewater-Area LWV Public Program “Budget Repair Bill Update: Impact on Local Schools”
Where: 7 PM Municipal Building, Council Chambers

Date: December 11th (Sunday)
Event: League Holiday Dinner
Where: Whitewater Country Club

Monday Music: Ben Sommer’s Count to Twelve

Here’s our Monday music feature, today from Ben Sommer. Ben writes about his latest track, Count to Twelve, from his latest album, Super Brain:

Here’s track #9 off the new album: Count To Twelve.

This is another old one – written and largely recorded in the winter of 2002. Though it probably sounds like straight-up prog to most ears, it represented a big shift toward simplicity for me at the time. I was still getting over the intellectual hump – learned in graduate school – that my mission was to write rhythmically obtuse music, with lots of strange twists and turns. This song – though it does employ a metric modulation (look THAT one up!), and some darn funky rhythms – its still based all around a strong 4-beat groove. Very rock, and very simple.

Rabid fans of my last album americad, with its petulant, political & social sturm und drang – may be disappointing with the nonsensical and tad pretentious lyrics in Count to Twelve. Still, I throw in a few potty words – so enjoy.

Also enjoy the video here: http://bensommer.com/news/count-to-twelve.

Stay tuned for track #10 in a few days

Daily Bread for 10.17.11

It’s a mostly sunny day, with a high temperature of sixty-one, but a freeze risk tonight, awaiting us.

You may have wondered if piranhas make sounds, and if they do, what sounds they make.  Scientists in Belgium have your answer:

….according to Sandie Millot, Pierre Vandewalle and Eric Parmentier from the University of Liège, Belgium, the piranha barks more than it bites.

The team of biologists plunged a hydrophone (an underwater microphone) into a tank of captive red-bellied piranhas and listened in to the different sounds they make in different situations.

So far, the team registered three distinct noises. When piranhas enter into a confrontation they’ll make a barking noise. When they’re fighting for food or circling an opponent, a piranha will make short percussive drum-like sounds. And when their jaws snap at each other, a softer croaking sound is produced.

more >>

Recent Tweets, 10.9 – 10.15

Joe Lieberman on Romney and America’s promise of religious freedom – Washington Post wapo.st/oAk6UF
14 Oct

Yes: Does Romney’s Survival Show The Tea Party’s Limitations? Atlantic Wire bit.ly/qvf4Hd
14 Oct

Not the conservatives’ favorite, but probably GOP’s strongest: Romney the Inexorable nyti.ms/pE0QUv
13 Oct

Editor: Story’s that they’re *Chinese* laptops Council moves toward new laptops; not yet paperless bit.ly/nncM2C
13 Oct

Scaremongering story offers no odds on scenario: Online gun training could be option in Wisconsin – 620 WTMJ bit.ly/nUHV6A
13 Oct

Bear v. Man, Woman, Police: teeth, knife, arrow, gun. bit.ly/of7Q6s
12 Oct

Circling the drain: All the Ways BlackBerry Is Pushing Itself Towards Extinction – Atlantic Wire bit.ly/n9SKve
12 Oct

The right assumption: Barrett budget assumes no pay raises for elected officials – bit.ly/pf6A0J
10 Oct

Starts on 11.15.11 Democrats outline Walker recall plans bit.ly/q3Qdif
10 Oct

Title implies callow excitability – All fired up: Gun enthusiasts looking forward to new concealed carry law bit.ly/p2H0En
10 Oct

Citizen Dave complains of skimpy local coverage in State Journal He’s right Flea market stories no substitute bit.ly/pR8P4g
10 Oct

Power, Judgment, Success

There’s a false but persistent notion that a powerful person must, after all, have good judgment: how could he or she be so well-situated without discernment of the highest order? One often hears this expressed as an assertion of flawless understanding: “You don’t really think someone as successful as X could possibly be wrong about A, B, or C? He’s too sharp, clever, wise for that!”

False, yet oft-repeated with passion and insistence from among the toads of the status quo: “How could you doubt me, seeing all these things I have, and all these things I have done? Trust me, I am sure to be a success yet again.”

It’s a false notion, as even established people and institutions often meet reversals. If this were not so, there would have been no Pickett’s Charge, no tragedy of the Titanic, no Edsel, no failure of the Space Shuttle’s o-rings, etc. Yet, despite vast supplies of men and equipment, all these things did go wrong. Tragically so.

Why this should be true is not the subject of this post. From among a hundred reasons one could find the causes of these failures, despite every seeming advantage. My concern is simpler: that power neither assures judgment nor enduring success.

People are free to choose, and sometimes they choose poorly, despite every advantage and every assertion of certainty. Choice involves an element of risk, of a plan or scheme, of a planner or schemer, coming undone.

It’s also true in politics, as it is in war, business, and science: not everyone ends as a success. We’ve seen so many heralded as sages, infallible men, but much of this is puffery, and all of it subject to forces greater than press releases and campaign speeches.

Quite a few incumbents are likely to fare poorly next year, in Wisconsin and beyond, and their poor showings will refute the idea that mere power confirmed their wisdom and assured their success.

Friday Poll and Comment Forum: What’s Bucky’s mistake in an ESPN commercial?

Bucky Badger’s in a new ESPN commercial, embedded below (h/t Althouse).

Looking at the commercial, where do you think Bucky goes wrong (assuming you think he goes wrong at all)? Multiple answers are possible.


So, what do you think?

The post will remain open until Sunday morning. Comments will be moderated against profanity and trolls; otherwise, have at it.

Rats Cause Broadband Outage In Scotland

The loss of service was due to rodent damage to some underground cabling,” it said. “On Monday morning our engineers were on site as soon as possible and worked at the highest priority to repair the damage, with service restored early evening on Monday….

“Further damage was incurred on Tuesday afternoon and our engineers returned to repair the damage,” said Virgin Media. “We’ve now put additional measures in place to prevent further damage to our cables to avoid further disruption for our customers. We’re extremely sorry for any inconvenience caused.

Via eWEEK Europe UK.

They should have seen this coming.

Daily Bread for 10.14.11

Good morning.

A windy day with a high temperature of sixty-one awaits Whitewater.

Ninety-nine years ago,

On the night of October 14, 1912, Theodore Roosevelt was shot in Milwaukee. Roosevelt was in Wisconsin stumping as the presidential candidate of the new, independent Progressive Party, which had split from the Republican Party earlier that year. Roosevelt already had served two terms as chief executive (1901-1909), but was seeking the office again as the champion of progressive reform. Unbeknownst to Roosevelt, a New York bartender named John Schrank had been stalking him for three weeks through eight states. As Roosevelt left Milwaukee’s Hotel Gilpatrick for a speaking engagement at the Milwaukee Auditorium and stood waving to the gathered crowd, Schrank fired a .38-caliber revolver that he had hidden in his coat.

Roosevelt was hit in the right side of the chest and the bullet lodged in his chest wall. Seeing the blood on his shirt, vest, and coat, his aides pleaded with him to seek medical help, but Roosevelt trivialized the wound and insisted on keeping his commitment. His life was probably saved by the speech, since the contents of his coat pocket — his metal spectacle case and the thick, folded manuscript of his talk — had absorbed much of the force of the bullet. Throughout the evening he made light of the wound, declaring at one point, “It takes more than one bullet to kill a Bull Moose,” but the candidate spend the next week in the hospital and carried the bullet inside him the rest of his life.

Schrank, the would-be assassin, was examined by psychiatrists, who recommended that he be committed to an asylum. A judge concurred and Schrank spent the remainder of his life incarcerated, first at the Northern Hospital for the Insane in Oshkosh, then at Central State Hospital for the criminally insane at the state prison at Waupun. The glass Roosevelt drank from on stage that night was acquired by the Wisconsin Historical Museum. You can read more about the assassination attempt on their Museum Object of Week pages.

Source: Wisconsin Historical Society.

Daily Bread for 10.13.11

Good morning.

It’s a rainy day in store for Whitewater, with thunderstorms and a high temperature of sixty-three.

Today’s a better day than yesterday: we’re closer to free trade with friendly countries than we were before.  Bloomberg reports the good news:

The U.S. Congress approved free- trade agreements with South Korea, Colombia and Panama, bringing an end to years of stalemate and offering what supporters said was the biggest opportunity for exporters in decades.

The bills go to President Barack Obama, who spent two years seeking to broaden Democratic support for pacts revised from initial agreements reached by his predecessor. The South Korea deal, the biggest for the U.S. since the North American Free Trade Agreement in 1994, removes duties on almost two-thirds of American farm exports, and phases out tariffs on more than 95 percent of industrial and consumer exports within five years.

See, Biggest U.S. Free-Trade Accord Since ’94 Passed – Bloomberg.

From Africa, there’s a happy story about the rescue of a poached baby gorilla:

As part of an undercover operation, five rangers from DRC’s Virunga National Park posed as buyers after receiving a tip that a baby gorilla was for sale.

The park’s spokeswoman LuAnne Cadd told MSNBCthe culprits could be linked to zoos in India and Russia, along with independent private owners looking for pet baby gorillas.

With only 786 mountain gorillas left on Earth due to poaching, hunting and disease, rangers and park officials fear there could be more they aren’t saving.

Update 4: On Edgerton, Wisconsin’s Former Police Dog

There was a follow-up story in the Janesville Gazette about Edgerton’s former police dog, an animal that bit two people (one a police officer from another department, the other an office worker) before it was finally sent away. The cost of settling injuries to the police officer (apparently the lesser of the two injuries) was $39,000. That’s only a settlement cost: the injury to the officer and the community is greater, of course (lost time, lost community reputation, etc.).

The story notes that the canine was a washout as police dog, but that’s only part of the problem. Reading though earlier stories, there’s a human problem in all this: a chief’s desire for a dog that small-town Edgerton didn’t need, the obvious inability of the department to handle the dog properly (they’re not pets or toys, and they don’t belong in administrative offices), and the failure of police commissioners and others to reject a bad idea like this one in the first place.

That’s part of this story, too: when police commissioners go along with every dumb idea, supporting for the sake of supporting, and grinning along the way like so many Cheshire Cats, they fail other people and their community.

Help like that’s no help at all, but they can’t see that.

For more on this story, see prior posts (with links to news coverage): On Edgerton, Wisconsin’s Police Dog, Update: On Edgerton, Wisconsin’s Police Dog (Goodbye to the Biter), Update 2: On Edgerton, Wisconsin’s Police Dog (Return to Service?), Update 3: On Edgerton, Wisconsin’s Police Dog (Doggone and Dog Gone!), and Small-town Bureaucratic Persistence in Edgerton, Wisconsin.