FREE WHITEWATER

How Politicians, Bureaucrats Pretend They’re Offering Competitive Solutions

A cunning bureaucrat, or a Texas politician, may tell his constituents that he’ll propose charging user fees, rather than using general tax funds, for basic services. He’s sure to contend that this approach makes the services offered more competitive.

That’s nonsense, of course. The same government monopoly would exist as before, with the same lack of private competitive alternatives, and so with the same inefficiency and mediocrity. Different people may pay different amounts for government services, but they’re still paying for a government monopoly.

Over at the national Libertarian Party, Wes Benedict writes about how Texas Gov. Rick Perry tried to dupe his fellow Texans this way, over a toll-road plan. Benedict explains:

Last week I issued a statement that included a criticism of Texas Governor Rick Perry’s support for toll roads. Several people asked for an explanation about my stance on toll roads and I can understand why.

The Libertarian Party platform says “We seek to divest government of all functions that can be provided by non-governmental organizations or private individuals.” Private toll roads could fit that bill. Some free-market think tanks have promoted toll roads as a positive option.

Don’t privately-run toll roads sound more libertarian than government roads?

So what’s up? Why am I opposed to toll roads?

If we were talking about an open system where private companies compete with each other to build roads, buying their own right-of-way, taking the risks and earning the profits, I’d be a supporter.

But that’s absolutely not what we’re talking about. In almost every case, “toll roads” are a mechanism where government remains in charge, but manages to take more of your money.

It’s a slick sales job to fool people.

In Texas, the plan was for a single private monopoly company to get the concession to build and maintain roads. No competition allowed. Even the government couldn’t compete. That meant that the government would intentionally allow the traditional non-toll roads to decay, and they would lower the non-toll speed limits, in order to fulfill their agreement. But don’t think for a minute they would lower the gas taxes and other taxes used for those roads. You’d be paying just as much tax, and the government would intentionally be delivering less.

You might end up having to drive on the toll road, where the owning company (thanks to its government-guaranteed monopoly) could charge you however much it wanted.

I’m all for corporate profits — but not when it’s a government-guaranteed monopoly.

It was also very questionable how much the private company was “taking the risks.” If things didn’t work out, it was very likely that the government would bail out the private company with tax dollars, and then take over the road. (While continuing to levy both taxes and tolls.)

I don’t want our state and federal governments to have more revenue and more debt. I want them to have less of both. I also don’t want them picking out their cronies’ companies to be the big beneficiaries of monopoly concessions. I hate it when politicians dictate winners and losers.

I don’t want the government to increase the financial burden on citizens, in order to create an illusion of privatization. Tolled highways can cost twice as much to build per added lane-mile as non-tolled roads, and ten times more than ground-level thoroughfares.

In the northeast, many people have listened to politicians talk about how tolls were only going to be charged until the road was paid for, and then the tolls would be removed. Yet somehow, the road never quite got paid for, or they changed the rules, and the tolls remained indefinitely.

One more thing: In Texas, Rick Perry planned to use eminent domain to seize huge amounts of private land for the toll road network. I strongly disagree with eminent domain seizures.

Unfortunately, the government almost completely controls the building and maintenance of roads in America. And it’s really hard, if not impossible, to privatize it “a little bit.” That just ends up making it more complicated, corrupt, and expensive.

Maybe someday, someone will come up with a toll road plan that really makes sense from a Libertarian point of view. Rick Perry absolutely failed to do that in Texas.

Wisconsin Reporter: Incredible, Ignorant Enthusiasm

I wrote yesterday about a new group of sham news sites, and mentioned the Wisconsin Reporter as among them. (If I had a dime for every time that website misspelled something, and later claimed the misspelling was just a typo, I’d have…lot and lots of dimes.)

That’s not their big problem, of course: the big problem is that it’s a political website pretending to offer original, conventional reporting. Actually, the site is a collection of political talking points dressed as news. There’s an embarrassing and ignorant boosterism to it all. Consider this tweet from the site’s Twitter account, while reviewing early returns of the Wirch-Steitz recall race:

Now 17% of SD 22 polls reporting and Steitz isn’t just hanging around, he’s building a commanding lead – 55% to 45% over entrenched Wirch.

As widely expected, Wirch won in a landslide; when all votes were counted, he defeated Steitz 58%-42%.

Wisconsin Reporter tweeted on a ‘commanding lead’ after only 17% of the votes were in, and before (as was evident) Wirch’s large base of Kenosha had reported any votes. There are people, having arrived in the state only a day or two before, who would have had better sense.

This tweet isn’t sound analysis, it’s silly, incredible cheerleading. I’m not bothered by the political leanings of a website, if it provides sound, reliable analysis. I’ve no reason to think Wisconsin Reporter understands, let alone offers, that analysis.

Nonetheless, the Franklin Center’s free to spend a lot of money in Wisconsin for a lot of nothing. They’re foolish, though, to think serious men and women will rely on the object of their patronage.

Alzheimer’s Association Memory Walk Schedule

Please see a press release from the Alzheimer’s Association:



Walk to End Alzheimer’s to be Hosted throughout Southeastern Wisconsin

-Local Walks to Attract Thousands-

The Alzheimer’s Association is pleased to announce that the Walk to End Alzheimer’s will be hosted in six locations throughout Southeastern Wisconsin this fall.

The Alzheimer’s Association Walk to End Alzheimers is the nation’s largest event to raise awareness and funds for Alzheimer’s care, support and research. In 2010, the Alzheimer’s Association raised more than $200 million nationally to help support the mission. The six walks hosted locally raised over $675,000 and involved over 14,000 people: 4,870 Walkers backed by 8,511 supporters and 619 walk volunteers.

Held annually in hundreds of communities across the country, this inspiring event calls on all ages to become Champions in the fight against Alzheimer’s. Champions include people living with the disease, friends, families, neighbors, caregivers, and business and community leaders, all getting involved in Walk to End Alzheimer’s.

SCHEDULE FOR WALK TO END ALZHEIMER’S

09/10/11. Frame Park in Waukesha
Celebrity Walker: Bonnie Blair Cruikshank, Olympic Gold Medalist

09/17/11. Library Park in Lake Geneva
Honorary Chair: Dr. Britton Kolar, MD

09/24/11. Sports Core in Kohler
Honorary Chair: State Senator Joe Leibham

10/01/11. Moraine Park Technical College
Honorary Chair: Allen Buechel, Fond du Lac County Executive

10/1/11. UW-Parkside in Kenosha
Celebrity Walker: Aaron Sims, Manager of Broadcast & Outreach, Milwaukee Admirals

10/01/11. Mount Mary College in Milwaukee
Celebrity Walker: Shawn Patrick, FOX6 Wakeup News

NEW THIS YEAR

New this year is the promise garden made possible by the family of Loretta Shipway. Each participant will receive a pinwheel-style flower to place in the garden in honor of a loved one with Alzheimer’s disease or in support of the cause.

HOW TO REGISTER

Participants can register, support another walker and get information online at www.alz.org/sewi. For a brochure, please call 800-272-3900. Registration can be done the day of the walks, beginning at 9:00 a.m. All walks begin at 10:00 a.m.

SPONSORS

The Alzheimer’s Association thanks the numerous volunteers and sponsors, including The Cordon Family Foundation, ProHealth Care, Brookdale Senior Living, Talmer Bank and Trust, the family of Virginia A. Meyer. Local media partners include FOX 6 News, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 89.7 WUWM, 91.3 WSTM, 96.1 WLKG, 96.5 WKLH, AM1420 WJUB, AM1450 KFIZ and Freeman Newspapers.

About the Alzheimer’s Association

The Alzheimer’s Association is the leading voluntary health organization in Alzheimer care, support and research whose mission is to eliminate Alzheimer’s disease through the advancement of research; to provide and enhance care and support for all affected; and to reduce the risk of dementia through the promotion of brain health.

For more information about Alzheimer’s disease and local services visit www.alz.org/sewi or call the Alzheimer’s Association 24/7 Helpline at 800-272-3900.

Daily Bread for 8.17.11

Good morning.

Scattered thunderstorms await Whitewater today, with a high temperature of eighty-two.

Wisconsin’s history includes a first-in-the nation moment, from 1936:

On this date the state of Wisconsin issued the first Unemployment Compensation Check in the United States for the amount of $15. The recipient was Neils N, Ruud who then sold it to Paul Raushenbush for $25 for its historical value. The check is now at the Wisconsin Historical Society. Wisconsin was the first state to establish an Unemployment Compensation program. [Source: Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development]

Via Wisconsin Historical Society.



Press Series: Part Three (State Newspapers)

Across the state, four major newspaper concerns exert significant influence over news and opinion: Lee’s Wisconsin State Journal, Journal Communications’ Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Gannett’s local papers scattered mostly across central Wisconsin, and the Capital Newspapers (publishers of The Capital Times and now WisPolitics, WisOpinion, etc.)

Capital Newspapers may seem a surprising inclusion, as their afternoon daily went under years ago, but they’re a present (and perhaps will be an even greater future) influence on news and opinion here. Their relationship to the ailing Lee gives them a chance to expand, should Lee pull out of our state. (See, along these lines, Blaska’s speculation about Lee’s future, and that of Capital Newspapers – denials for now).

Editorials or reporting?

What’s more important to a reader: editorials or reporting? There’s no certain answer. For me, it’s reporting — independent, multi-sided, unbowed to political authority. Although their editorial positions differ, each of these statewide (or national) chains has independent, solid reporting.

No matter how important editorials are, they’re less important than they used to be — editorial boards now compete with opinions published on readers’ websites, blogs, Facebook pages, etc. The voice-from-on-high authority they once had, amplified by the exclusivity being one of few publications, is gone forever. Owning a newspaper to advance an opinion just isn’t as effective as a generation ago.

Some publishers still haven’t seen the power of other, new media, and have kept their editorials offline. It may seem sensible (to drive readership to the print publications), but it’s a significant mistake. Opinion that’s not online misses too many eyes, and leaves its publisher less far less influential than it otherwise would be. Losing out on email, websites, blogs, Twitter, and especially Facebook leaves print-only editorials merely phantoms of their potential.

For editorials, you’re online, or you’re lost.

But in the end, I’d read a paper with great reporters regardless of its editorial outlook. For the State Journal or Journal Sentinel, there’s a gap between reporting and editorials that’s evident in politics and quality: the reporters are stronger than their papers’ editorial boards. Hall, Spicuzza, Stein: very fine reporters, who probably don’t share their editorial boards’ views on many issues. In politics, I can guess that I’d disagree with them, but it doesn’t matter: good reporting is good reporting.

Where are these papers going?

The last election tells most of the tale.



A paper surrounded by red will head right, I’d guess, at least for editorials. Democrats have told me that they think the generally supportive editorial stance of the Journal Sentinel toward Scott Walker is a matter of temporary political expediency. I disagree — I think it’s a permanent adjustment to the deep red belt that surrounds Milwaukee County. Lee in Madison, always to the right of the Cap Times, won’t stay that way much longer: they’ll either tack left into a sea of blue, or the next sole owners of the State Journal will.

Sham Newspapers.

Finally, it’s worth noting the rise of sham newspapers, too dishonest to admit that they’re political activists first, reporters or journalists not at all. Among them, one finds the Wisconsin Reporter, but there are others (MacIver Institute’s News Service). For a bit about them, see Dan Bice’s Conservative outlets write all the news that fits their tilt.

Bice has a follow up about funding for the generally liberal Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism, but WisconsinWatch is a genuine news organization, with conventional journalistic standards. See, also from Bice, Liberal billionaire helping fund media groups in Wisconsin.

(Note: both my sites are easily recognized as commentary sites, and neither have nor need funding from political parties or billionaires of any kind.)

Wisconsin Reporter (with a blogger now onboard to boost interest), isn’t a newspaper: it’s a series of campaign talking points masquerading as news. Bloggers aren’t reporters, they have no reason to try to be, and would fail at conventional reporting if they tried. Wisconsin Reporter offer their content for free, but the only newspaper that would run it would be one of the ‘community relations’ model. The Daily Union has gone down this path, on the front page, and it may make sense for them, but it’s no better than running an editorial on the front page. Actually, it’s worse: these stories don’t make clear that they are, ultimately, political talking points in search of a political agenda.

News from a politician is his news, advancing his agenda, and protestations of high-principles and impartiality are either disingenuous, or self-deluding. Insisting otherwise does not make it so.

Not all of these sham sites will survive – there is only so much political funding to go around. One or two will make it, the others will likely fold.

Yet, afterward, there will still be traditional newspapers in Wisconsin, along with Twitter, Facebook, blogs, and personal websites.

Previously: Press Series: Part One (Why Newspapers?) and Press Series: Part Two (Whitewater-Area Newspapers).

Daily Bread for 8.16.11

Good morning.

It’s a sunny day, with high temperatures in the eighties ahead for Whitewater.

There are three public meetings in the city today.  At 8 a.m. the Tech Park Board meets. In the afternoon, at 4:15 p.m., the Urban Forestry Commission meets. In the early evening, Common Council meets at 6:30 p.m.

So is a possible third round of quantitative easing by the Federal Reserve a good idea? Libertarian Peter Suderman says no, resting principally on the contention that rounds one and two were failures. Still, that may be where we’re headed, effective or not:



Daily Bread for 8.15.11

Good morning.

Whitewater has two public meetings scheduled for today.  At 6 p.m., the Police Commission meets, with an agenda available online.  At 6:30 p.m., the library board meets, also with an agenda available online.

In a brief video, NASA offers a guide to solar flares, including those that might noticeably affect communications on each. It’s a concise summary, well-illustrated. Even without a human spaceflight program, there’s good research NASA can accomplish.




 

Press Series: Part Two (Whitewater-Area Newspapers)

There are three traditional newspapers in these parts: the Whitewater Register, the Daily Union, and the Janesville Gazette (online as the GazetteXtra and a Walworth County edition, WalworthCountyToday).

I’ve written about these papers before, most recently last fall. (See, Whitewater-Area Newspapers, Fall 2010.) They’re not the only news, the only papers, or the only websites; they’re the three traditional print publications in the immediate area. For FREE WHITEWATER posts under the category of press, here’s a category link.

I write about the press as a reader, without any professional journalism background.  Many people are interested in the press as lay readers. One approaches newspapers the way a person drinks water: not with any particular expertise or training, but as a natural inclination (perhaps intensified by upbringing).

What’s traditional reporting? That’s quite a question, but here’s a simple, plain answer that defines well enough.  Traditional reporting often has these two aspects: news stories (unlike editorials or op-ed essays) present more than one side of an issue, and those stories solicit differing statements (if possible) about that issue.

That’s one reason, among others, that neither FREE WHITEWATER nor Daily Wisconsin are traditional news sites; they’re opinion sites that offer commentary on the news. Both are blogs, offering differing amounts of commentary, but commentary nonetheless. They’re recognizably new media, and until the advent of the Web, America hadn’t seen a form like blogs since the end of pamphleteering.

So, do all three approach these aspects the same way? But looking at the Whitewater Register, Daily Union, and Janesville Gazette, one quickly discerns a divide between the first two and the third. The Register and Daily Union come closer to a ‘community consensus,’ ‘community relations’ form of news than the Janesville Gazette.  The Register and DU (when covering Whitewater) are less likely to offer diverse or contradictory opinion to a community consensus, or insiders’ point of view.

For the Register and DU, a difference of opinion typically means quoting one officeholder’s view in contradiction to another’s (if there’s even that level of diverse opinion).  There’s almost no effort to quote an expert in opposition to a bureaucrat’s or politician’s opinion.

By contrast, the Gazette‘s reporters will report information in contradiction to an officeholder’s views, or even those of several insiders collectively.  This gives the paper a level of independence that the other two lack.  In a small town, writing unfavorably of a politician is difficult, as there’s sure to be a concerted effort to freeze an ‘uncooperative’ reporter from access to information, interviews, etc. (Every paper writes a few beat sweeteners; it’s when most stories sound that way that there’s a shift away from independence to sycophancy.)

But from the point of view of those insiders who expect cheerleading from the press, it’s not a shift away from treasured independence, but a defense of press-political cooperation.  They’re convinced a close connection is better for a community, and they’ll not be dissuaded. (It may also be momentarily useful to retain readership, especially if that readership is skewed to an older audience that wants to be reassured.)

I’d say that cooperation comes at a high price: politicians will roll fawning reporters, and leave their papers looking supine.  Newspapers don’t have a problem with blogs, of all things; they have a problem with looking servile toward smarmy, fast-talking politicians. The problem results in reduced newspaper readership.  An aging demographic that prefers reassuring news isn’t a good longterm investment; our younger generations are more ironic, skeptical, independent. In  these ways, the future is a return to Americans’ traditional independence from, and skepticism of, political authority.

Yet, it’s not just image, or circulation, that suffers: the kind of consensus that manipulative politicians want is destructive to the community: their unchecked opinion produces dull, less-exacting policies. They get their way, but their way is less effective for the city than it would be in a more critical, competitive environment. They get their way, but in an environment where their own striving for a monopoly on opinion leaves that very way open to contempt and ridicule from an alienated constituency.

Virtually no ordinary person is fooled by a party-line, or booster’s view: the average person is more than a match for those politicians who try to manipulate opinion.  I think ‘opinion-making’ is futile; Americans come to their own conclusions. (See,  The Impossibility of ‘Opinion-Making’.)  One may reinforce an existing opinion, but there’s very little ‘creation’ going on.  One writes to express one’s opinion; believing one is making opinion in the community is a conceit.

If people are alienated from the press and politicians (and many are), then the press and politicians have only their own patronizing, none-too-subtle schemes to blame.

Style. Of the three papers, I’d also say that the Gazette sounds most like a tradition paper, written in a  style that comes closest to the tradition tone of journalism — often punchy, written concisely, throwing as much as possible in the lede, or at least the first two paragraphs. I like that style, when reading a paper, but that’s simply a matter of tastes.

Content. The DU, when covering Whitewater, offers much longer stories, often spanning several topics from a public meeting, and listing considerable detail.  Not concise, but detailed.  One would almost think that the stories were as lengthy as … certain blog posts.  On the Web, where electrons cost nothing, length doesn’t involve the expense that newsprint does, and that newsprint always will.

The DU‘s approach doesn’t seem space-limited.  That’s neither good nor bad, but merely different (and, I think, noticeable).  It leaves me wondering, as with my observation about having a readership that may want the reassurance of a community-consensus approach, whether the DU has an older demographic than the Gazette.  Being an afternoon paper, a rare bird these days, may also be a reflection of a different demographic (or lead to a different one). (About the filling-up-of-pages, I’ll have more in a subsequent post.)

The Register has been through a great many shifts and changes, but it has survived, and may continue to do so.  I’ve begun to follow it again, after a lapse, having once followed it intently.  (I’ve been critical of it in the past, but I have no personal connection to, let alone dislike of, anyone at any of these papers.  I am contented as a reader.)

I see the value of lengthy detail in a newspaper, but it’s hardly a secret that I wish our local newspapers were more independent, and examining, of political authority.  Hard is the plucky way in a small town.

PreviouslyPress Series: Part One (Why Newspapers?)

Next: Press Series: Part Three (Statewide Press)

Press Series: Part One (Why Newspapers?)

Like millions of others, I grew up in a newspaper-reading family.

A family would have several papers, morning or afternoon, at a time when afternoon dailies were still common (and commonly profitable). One read almost every part of the paper, and the names of reporters, editors, and publishers were well-known to readers. So one would talk about what a reporter or editorial board wrote, using the names of the respective authors.

Beyond the newspapers of the household, one could read still more papers, from across America and around the globe, at a proper library. It was one of the routines of life to augment the reading of one’s household papers with these others.

There was no luxury in this; it was part of a larger routine, and nearly as important in emphasis as meals, work, academics, or active pursuits.

Nor was there adulation of newspapers, but rather respect when they reported well, and criticism when they did not.

I publish two blogs, both of which are of commentary, but not the distinctive reporting that characterizes a fit newspaper. The difference between these forms is vast.

There was no call to journalism in families as I’ve described; they were readers, not would-be reporters. I have never had the desire to be a reporter or journalist, and never the foolish opinion that I would be good at it, in any event.

And yet, for it all, blogs of politics and commentary took off simply because they were possible for individual expression (through the Web) and seemingly necessary (through the often uncritical reporting and commentary of complacent papers). The relationship between mediocre reporters and politicians was too close, too cozy, too condescending of readers’ judgment.

Bloggers are the beneficiaries of a stronger and healthier newspaper era, where critical readers expected, and often received, solid information.

Much has been said about the death of the newspaper industry, and many papers have gone under, but that industry will go on, and find even a renaissance, of sorts. The decline is a trend that’s been evident for decades, and long before bloggers emerged on the scene.

Some who have announced the death of newspapers have done so in circumstances of unwitting irony. The video clip below is from Wallstrip, a video podcast. The photogenic host, in 2008, proclaims the death of newspapers. The irony: she was soon thereafter replaced by a more attractive woman, and soon after the replacement the podcast, itself, went under.

Newspapers – YouTube.

Like blogs (electronic versions of pamphlets), some newspapers will go on. I certainly hope they do; I hope just as much that those papers that survive new trends and the Great Recession will return to an independent stance unbowed to politicians, bureaucrats, and government-subsidy-hungry corporations.

I’m yet an optimist. America will come through these hard years stronger than even before, and so will hard-charging, plucky, watchdog newspapers.

Next, in Part Two, tonight: Local Newspapers. more >>

Friday Comment Forum and Poll: Which Newspapers Do You Read for Whitewater News?

FREEWHITEWATER published a poll previously about readers’ favorite newspapers for Whitewater news, with choices from among the Daily Union, Whitewater Register, and Janesville Gazette. Today’s poll is a version of that one, asking not for favorites, but simply for those newspapers one reads (like them or not). Multiple answers are possible, too. The poll’s focus is only on traditional newspapers (so new media websites, blogs, or Facebook pages aren’t included).

Results of that previous poll of favorites, from March 2009, are available here.


Comments will be moderated against profanity and trolls; otherwise have at it. This post will be open until Sunday morning, and the posts on the press series will appear Saturday and Sunday. Those posts will be below this one until Sunday morning.

Daily Bread for 8.12.11

Good morning.

Ahead for Whitewater today is a day in the low eighties, with a chance of rain this afternoon.

This weekend, on Saturday and Sunday, I’ll post a series on newspapers, in our area, and farther away in the state. Today’s poll and comment forum will ask which papers you read, whether you like them or like to dislike them.

Today’s a memorable day for film in Wisconsin: on this day in 1939, the Wizard of Oz premiered in Oconomowoc (of all places). The Wisconsin Historical Society reports that

…according to the fan site, thewizardofoz.info, “The first publicized showing of the final, edited film was at the Strand Theatre in Oconomowoc, Wisconsin on August 12, 1939. No one is sure exactly why a small town in the Midwest received that honor.” It showed the next day in Sheboygan, Appleton and Rhinelander, according to local newspapers. “The official premiere was at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre in Hollywood on August 15, attended by most of the cast and crew and a number of Hollywood celebrities.” [Source:thewizardofoz.info].

Update, 6:57 PM. The Phantom Stranger passes along a persuasive theory (many thanks, as always!) for the Oconomowoc showing:

One theory is that the film premiered in Oconomowoc due to fact that one of the midgets in the film, Meinhardt Raabe, was a native of Farmington, neraby. He passed away a few years ago, and was buried in Farmington. The Daily Union, Watertown Times, and Oconomowoc Enterprise all had stories about this passing. Oconomowoc had a big street showing of the film in 2009.

I’ve posted this short video before, about the film’s casting of the Wicked Witch of the West.  Enjoy.

more >>