FREE WHITEWATER

Recent Tweets, 7.24-7.30

Sheboygan mayor crows public calls 10-1 favorable since bar scuffle Doesn’t say how many calls from liquor stores http://bit.ly/pvNOe6

Contrasts: GOP Sen. Alberta Darling on her state website http://bit.ly/rljJtH & what she really looks like http://bit.ly/pRXNxP

No true recovery: Data show deeper recession, sharper slowdown http://reut.rs/rcDKQy Only .4% in Q1, only 1.3% in Q2
Months of whining of balloons’ harm before simple fix: Net installed in Capitol rotunda to catch stray balloons http://bit.ly/qi1emI
Risk aplenty: Surveying the Electoral Damage of the Debt Debate – NYTimes.com http://bit.ly/qAyABl
Debunked RT @PolitiFactWisc: Testing state GOP claim that Wisconsin led the nation in job growth in June. tinyurl.com/3bda9qt
Politician’s Least-Welcome Headline of the Day™ “Sheboygan Mayor Bob Ryan scandal timeline” Sheboygan Press http://bit.ly/nc7UZV
Does anyone at flailing Wisconsin Reporter know how to spell? Latest: Broadcast email reads ‘Decit or Intent?’
Fewer fries, too: Under Pressure, McDonald’s Adds Apples to Kids Meals – WSJ.com http://on.wsj.com/okZyGF
Whitewater’s Concealed Carry Debate « FREE WHITEWATER http://bit.ly/qcQy9X
State worker stabs himself while trying to pop a protester’s balloon WMTV Madison http://bit.ly/njOgoX
Simple, effective, ingenious: Wisconsin soldier invents device to foil bombs – http://bit.ly/mOJgSY
25 Jul
more >>

Now Montello Children Get in on America’s Latest Craze

Of course they do – they’ve seen the future, and that future is in Mysterious Creatures.

Last week, a Juneau County man claimed he found a hairless, mysterious looking creature along side a highway just outside Elroy. A debate ensued — was it just a sick animal, the legendary goat-sucking Chupacabra, or something else?

Whatever it is, a group of children in Montello said they have one living in their neighborhood. They claim they saw the same creature — alive — roaming around last week.

“The head looked like a rat, and then the body looked like a fox. It had fangs and it had really long toes,” said Shane Turner, who said he came within five feet of the creature.

EarlierWhy Can’t Whitewater Publicize Its Own Chupacabra, Lake Monster, Giant Ape, Etc.? and See What Happens When You Delay!?! Why Can’t Whitewater Publicize Its Own Chupacabra, Lake Monster, Giant Ape, Etc.? more >>

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Friday Comment Forum: So, How Concerned Are You About the Debt-Ceiling Debate?

Washington, America (and much of the world beyond) have been transfixed as Congress and Pres. Obama negotiate spending cuts and revenue increases (if any) in exchange for an increase in the federal debt-ceiling. (Along the way, there have even been suggestions to ignore the ceiling entirely, and act under a Fourteenth Amendment theory accepted only by a few.)

How important do you think all this is?

Here’s a poll, for those who’d like to participate by voting, and below is a comment forum for opinions expressed that way.

My take: it’s very important, and any of the Congressional proposals is better than doing nothing, or trying to act under the dubious Constitutional theory that one may borrow without raising the ceiling. August 2nd won’t bring the end of the federal government, America, or world, but a deal before then is preferable to tempting the Fates markets.

Comments will be moderated against profanity and trolls; otherwise have at it. This post will be open until Sunday morning, and stay at the top of the page. Other posts may appear during that time, but they’ll be below this one until Sunday.

Mark Grannis on Federal Debt

Here’s libertarian Mark Grannis on the national debt. He thinks it more important than other issues facing America. By contrast, I would not place its importance ahead of the defense of fundamental liberties, but would agree that it’s certainly among the most troublesome threats to our future.



Daily Bread for 7.29.11

Good morning.

Whitewater’s Friday will be mostly sunny, with a high temperature of eighty-nine.

Today — July 29, 2011 — is that day for which movie-goers, and perhaps all Americans, have been waiting: it’s the opening-day of Cowboys & Aliens. I know of no other people that would make a film like this — it’s an American creation. Roger Ebert, by the way, gives it three stars out of four.

I’ve yet to admit anyone who admitted to planning to see it, but I bet it’s a big hit.



Daily Bread for 7.28.11

Good morning.

It’s thunderstorms ahead for Whitewater, with a high temperature of eighty-three degrees.

There’s a meeting of the Police Commission tonight, at 6:00 p.m., in both a closed and later an open-session.  The agenda is available online.

On this day in 1934, labor strife left two dead in Kohler:

Two killed, 40 hurt in Kohler riot; National Guard occupies town

On this day, the “model industrial village” of Kohler became an armed camp of National Guard cavalrymen after deadly strike-related rioting. The July 27th violence, which killed two Sheboygan men and injured 40 others, prompted the summoning of 250 Guardsmen to join the 200 special deputy village marshals already present. After striking workers became agitated and began to destroy company property, deputies turned to tear gas, rifles, and shotguns to quell the stone-throwing crowd, resulting in the deaths and injuries. Owner Walter Kohler blamed Communists and outside agitators for the violence, while union leaders blamed Kohler exclusively. Workers at the Kohler plant were demanding better hours, higher wages, and recognition of the American Federation of Labor as their collective bargaining agent. Not settled until 1941, the strike marked the beginning of what was to become a prolonged struggle between the Kohler Company and organized labor in Wisconsin; a second Kohler strike lasted from 1954 to 1965. [Source: Capital Times 7/28/1934, p.1]

(Item from the Wisconsin Historical Society.)

 

Innovation in Whitewater

There’s so much talk about innovation in Whitewater, but an example of it will be found in an old institution, not a new building. It’s not a center, but a school district, that holds innovative promise for our city.

Here’s why:

A Solid Record. Looking at the last two years, one sees quickly that the school district has done better than Whitewater’s city manager’s big-ticket approach. I’ve noted before that the last two years

…have been, overall, very good ones for Whitewater’s public schools: a renewed interest in the curriculum, including the creative option of a charter school, the preservation via agreement of workers’ bargaining rights for another two years, the cancellation of an expensive plan to go to referendum, and significant budget cuts that saved hundreds of thousands while still preserving key services.

Whitewater had a fine administrator in Suzanne Zentner, and has a fine successor in Eric Runez. See, Zentner and Afterward and The Whitewater Schools’ Next Administrator: A Wise and Sound Choice.

(I received a note recently from someone defending the record of Dr. Steinhaus, but have yet to reply to it directly. I’m sure it’s genuine, but it’s the only one anyone has ever sent. A brief reply, now, would be to observe that there was nothing in her dull and referendum-soaked years that was half as accomplished as in the last two.)

There’s no big-ticket project that has been as beneficial to the city as recent district accomplishments. Among them, Whitewater’s new charter school. It’s nearly impossible to imagine that school developing here several years earlier. It didn’t come about through a commitment to conventionality, but by those who crafted something different.

(Even some of the biggest defenders of status-quo politics have come to embrace the idea. About that school, see Kevin Hoffman’s Whitewater charter school offers different atmosphere.)

How the District Can Lead the City (more easily than the city can lead the district). There’s much that can be done in city government, but advances in the district will become known even faster than necessary changes to municipal policy — it’s simply faster to implement curriculum and policy changes in a school district. Word spreads rapidly.

One of the repeated justifications for municipal zoning restrictions in the Starin Park neighborhood has been the possibility of attracting young families to Whitewater, and thereby boosting school enrollment. It’s a dubious policy, as restricting sales in the market will boost prices at the expense of new buyers (it will cause a decline in values overall even later on, but that’s not what restriction-loving homeowners either want or understand will happen).

The theory’s backwards, anyway — it’s not the city that can quickly boost the district, it’s the district that can more quickly boost the city. An attractive school system will become known farther and faster than many municipal changes.

(That’s not to say that municipal changes aren’t important – for the long-term health of the city, to prevent stagnation and a permanent underclass, those reforms are critical. It’s just that municipal reform is a longer slog than gains in district achievement and attractiveness. Of course, if municipal reform does not take place, district accomplishments will be overshadowed, and vitiated. A city’s reform is a bigger task, and those who undertake it are admirable.)

That’s why the last two years have been good for the district, and will likely continue to be good — a charter school is only part of a broader discussion about competitiveness and twenty-first century achievement. You know, and I know, too — that there’s more than one dull person, or dull teacher, or dull administrator, who’d like the teaching of the same tired lessons year in, year out, forever. It’s easier on adults that way — they have less to do. It’s simultaneously harder on students, and Whitewater’s next generation. American is a dynamic place, and if Whitewater will not try to adjust, adapt, and change — each day — she’ll fall behind places that will do so.

I have no doubt that this focus on competitiveness seemed brusque, demanding to sticks-in-the-mud, but it’s just what Whitewater, and America, need now. It’s not new to us, either: other generations have been genuinely innovative, with far fewer resources than we have now. They were creative because they were ambitious not merely for themselves, but for their society’s enrichment. They were scornful of sloth and indolence because they were energetic, and knew others could be, too. They rejected sham awards in favor of real gains.

More than two years ago, after nearly seven years of stagnation and relative decline, Whitewater’s schools had a dimmer future than they do today. These are difficult times for Wisconsin, with more class warfare than our community ever deserved, but still our schools have managed better than others, and better than one might have hoped. We have come through a hard time — with other hard times yet ahead — in better educational shape than we would have been without a competitive, dedicated focus.

We have every reason to believe that we can continue to do well.

Daily Bread for 7.27.11

Good morning.

It’s a rainy day, of thunderstorms, ahead for Whitewater. The high temperature for the day should be in the upper eighties.

From the Wisconsin Historical Society, a reminder of a late-nineteenth-century tragedy, but also of resiliency:

1894 – Forest Fire Destroys Phillips

On the afternoon of this day, a forest fire swept over the Price Co. town of Phillips from the west, destroying nearly all the buildings and forcing 2,000 people to flee for their lives. When the sun came up the next morning, 13 people had been killed, the entire downtown was in ashes, and exhausted survivors were wandering through the ruins in a daze. The fire ultimately consumed more than 100,000 acres in Price County. Much of the town was rebuilt within a year.

Wondering where all this heat came from? Brian Keim at Wired Science has the answer in a post entitled, How the Heat Wave Started. (Image courtesy of NOAA.)