One of America’s greatest civil libertarians, so very often a critic of government overreach, talks about what the federal government had to say about him.
Daily Bread
Daily Bread for 8.3.11
by JOHN ADAMS •
Good morning.
It’s a partly cloudy day for Whitewater today, with only a small chance of rain, and a high temperature of eighty-six.
There’s a meeting of Whitewater’s Landmarks Commission this afternoon, at 5 p.m., in the city manager’s conference room at the municipal building. The agenda is available online.
Danielle Venton, writing at Wired Science, asks “Can Planting Vegetables in Vacant Lots Save Cleveland?” Cleveland needs help, as
Ten percent of Clevelanders have been diagnosed with diabetes, as compared to the national average of 8 percent, and more than a third are obese. Among cities with a population between 100,000 and 500,000, it is the seventh most dangerous, according to one crime ranking. Growing tomatoes and beans, and keeping bees and chickens, would change all this, [Parwinder] Grewal said. Studies have shown that gardens improve community health, reduce crime and increase property values.
Grewal is
….co-author of a study ?Can cities become self-reliant in food?? published July 20 in Cities.
?I was motivated to show how much food a city could actually produce by using this land,? he said. ?We could address global problems through this way of gardening.?
Urban gardening improves health, reduces pollution, and creates local businesses, Grewal said. The population of Cleveland, what Grewal considers a typical post-industrial city, peaked near one million in 1950, and has been declining since. Today scarcely half a million people call Cleveland home.
Previously, Drew Carey proposed libertarian solutions to help spark a renaissance in Cleveland. See the series, Reason Saves Cleveland with Drew Carey.
Gardens, including vegetable gardens, will always be an improvement over vacant, junk-filled lots, and can be an improvement over ordinary lawns, too. That’s why the war against gardens, or natural lawns, is more than just dull, middle-class bureaucrats trying to impose their ill-developed, uncreative sensibilities on others – that war holds down a city’s health and prosperity in proportion to its restrictions on liberty.

English garden via Wikimedia Commons.
Animals
Baby Hippo Ballet
by JOHN ADAMS •
It’s a rainy Wisconsin day, but here’s someone who doesn’t mind getting wet.
H/t Huffington Post.
Daily Bread
Daily Bread for 8.2.11
by JOHN ADAMS •
It’s thunderstorms ahead for Whitewater today, with a high temperature in the lower nineties.
There’s a Common Council meeting tonight, at 6:30 p.m. The meeting agenda is available online.
The Wisconsin Historical Society marks this day in 1832 as the end of the Black Hawk War:
On this date the defeat of Black Hawk and his followers at the Battle of Bad Axe, ended the Black Hawk War. Black Hawk led the American troops northward while the rest of the Indians constructed rafts and canoes to facilitate an escape over the Mississippi river. The plan was successful initially but eventually General Atkinson realized the ruse. In the battle, women, children and the elderly hid behind rocks and logs and American soldiers often could not or did not differentiate between warriors and the women and children. Atkinson sent Wabasha and his Sioux warriors, enemies of the Sauk, after the approximately 150 members of the British Band that made it to the Western bank of the Mississippi. The Sauk, “escaped the best they could, and dispersed“, but only 22 women and childern were spared. Black Hawk escaped, but the Battle of Bad Axe marked the end of the war. [Source: Along the Black Hawk Trail by William F. Stark, p.142-153]
Public Meetings
Landmarks Commission
by JOHN ADAMS •
Laws/Regulations, Liberty, Planning
Plant a Garden, Go to Jail for 93-Days?! Reason’s Nanny of the Month for July 2011
by JOHN ADAMS •
Food trucks, baggy pants, but the winner involves trying to ban vegetables in a front yard. Oak Park, Michigan’s city planner, Kevin Rulkowski, tried (but ultimately failed) to ban a front-yard vegetable garden on private property.
What’s funny-sad is his attempt to justify the ban through his limited understanding of the word ‘suitable,’ coupled with a dimwit’s confidence that a dictionary definition (even if correctly understood) settles a public policy debate. It’s a telltale sign of not being able to see the forest for the trees, and it’s just about every mediocre bureaucrat’s recourse at one time or another.
Beautiful Whitewater
Beautiful Whitewater
by JOHN ADAMS •
Music
Monday Music: Miles Davis – New Rhumba from Birth of the Cool
by JOHN ADAMS •
Daily Bread
Daily Bread for 8.1.11
by JOHN ADAMS •
Good morning.
It’s a warm and humid Monday for Whitewater, with a chance of afternoon thunderstorms, and a high of ninety.
There’s a meeting of the Park & Rec Board today at 4 p.m. The meeting agenda is available online. At 4:30 p.m., there’s a meeting of the Community Development Authority, with that meeting agenda also available online.
In news of the Black Hawk War, the Wisconsin Historical Society writes that on this day in 1832
On this date the armed steamboat the Warrior reached the British Band on the Mississippi where they hoped to cross the river and escape the American troops. After being guided by a Sioux Indian, the ship which held an artillery piece, dropped anchor, making the Sauk escape virtually impossible. Black Hawk attempted to surrender to the Warrior, waving a white cloth, but the crew either did not understand or did not accept the message. The ship and its men opened fire, killing a number of unprepared Indians. [Source: Along the Black Hawk Trail by William F. Stark, p. 140-141]
Cartoons & Comics
Sunday Comics and Cartoons
by JOHN ADAMS •
The new GoComics website unfortunately no longer supports embeddable cartoons, but over at RingTale’s YouTube site, there are animations of popular cartoons. Here’s an episode with two New Yorker cartoons.
Recent Tweets, 7.24-7.30
by JOHN ADAMS •
25 Jul
Animals, Weird Tales
Now Montello Children Get in on America’s Latest Craze
by JOHN ADAMS •
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.
Earlier: Why 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 >>

