Charity, Walworth County
Walworth County Today: Farmers market vouchers available in Walworth County
by JOHN ADAMS •
There will be (first-come, first-served) vouchers available for low-income senior citizens of Walworth County to use at farmers’ markets. Details of the program appear in the story to which I’ve linked, below.
In a world of many programs, government or otherwise, efforts like these are particularly admirable.
See, Farmers market vouchers available in Walworth County — Walworth County Today.
Economy, Poverty, Walworth County
Whitewater Among Top Six Walworth County Communities for Foreclosures
by JOHN ADAMS •
Although Whitewater is a larger city than some others in the county, nothing about her presence on a foreclosure list is auspicious.
If there’s even the slightest doubt that these last several years have been unfavorable for countless thousands in the county, perhaps another disappointing statistic will overturn years of empty boosterism.
See, Top Six Walworth County Communities for Foreclosures.
Whatever their errors (and they made many), at least the New Dealers cared about ordinary people, and described conditions honestly and starkly, to convey the seriousness of the problems ordinary people faced.
Better to see conditions as they are, so as to spur effective solutions, than to pretend all is well, while people languish unnoticed.
Charity
Alzheimer’s Association: Free Dementia Caregivers Conference June 7th, Lake Geneva, Wisconsin
by JOHN ADAMS •
Every 69 Seconds Someone Develops Alzheimer’s
-Free Dementia Caregivers Conference June 7th-
An estimated 5.4 million Americans are living with Alzheimer’s disease, and in 2010 over 14.9 million family and friends were responsible for their care.
The Alzheimer’s Association, in conjunction with A Day In Time Adult Day Care, Inc. in Lake Geneva, Home Helpers, and Mercy Hospital and Medical Center in Lake Geneva, are providing a free seminar for caregivers on Tuesday, June 7 from 9 a.m. – 1 p.m. at the Monte Carlo Room in Elkhorn, Wisconsin.
Conference topics will include:
- Obtaining a thorough diagnosis
- Planning meaningful activities
- Making a home safe for caregiving
- Communication techniques and behavioral approaches
- Self-care for the caregiver
- Available support services
Guest speaker, James McCoy, MD, a family and geriatric medicine physician at Mercy Walworth Hospital and Medical Center in Lake Geneva, will provide insights on the diagnostic process as well as physician-caregiver relationships and treatment.
Free onsite respite will be available for caregivers who would like to attend this program and need care for their loved one. Registration is required; please call 920-728-4088 or 262-248-2922.
For information about the Alzheimer’s Association, Southeastern Wisconsin chapter, please visit www.alz.org/sewi. For information about Mercy Health System, visitwww.mercyhealthsystem.org.
Daily Bread
Daily Bread for 5.31.11
by JOHN ADAMS •
Good morning.
It’s a warm day ahead for Whitewater, with a high temperature of eighty-four degrees.
The Wisconsin Historical Society recalls that on this day in 1899, the
Gideons Got Going
On this night two salesmen, John H. Nicholson and Samuel E. Hill, crossed paths a second time, in Beaver Dam. The pair had first met eight months before in the Central Hotel in Boscobel and discussed the need for some way to provide Christian support to traveling businessmen. During this second meeting in Beaver Dam the two decided to “get right at it. Start the ball rolling and follow it up.” They invited their professional contacts to an organizational meeting to be held in Janesville on July 1, 1899, at which the organization was formally named and chartered. By 1948, The Gideons had distributed over 15 million bibles world-wide. View more information about the founding of the Gideons elsewhere at wisconsinhistory.org [Source: Wisconsin Local History & Biography Articles]
Holiday
Memorial Day 2011
by JOHN ADAMS •
Recent Tweets, 5.22 – 5.28
by JOHN ADAMS •
Weekend Comment Forum: Arizona-Style Immigration Restrictions | FREE WHITEWATER http://bit.ly/jDWruf
27 May
Restricting freedom of bargaining, making it harder to vote, now an Arizona-style immigration bill Outrageous http://bit.ly/joXT70
24 May
A good start – On Whitewater Schools’ Proposed Budget Cuts | FREE WHITEWATER http://bit.ly/jmI8va
24 May
Once and future king? RT @Reuters: IBM overtakes Microsoft’s market cap
23 May
Cartoons & Comics
Sunday Morning Comic: Pearls Before Swine
by JOHN ADAMS •
City, Freedom of Speech, Law, Laws/Regulations, Liberty, Police
The Government’s War on Cameras
by JOHN ADAMS •
Photography and recordings do much to safeguard citizens’ rights and protect honest officers against false accusations. Places in which officials discourage lawful, constitutional photography are ones in which officials not only act outside the law but also imprudently. There will be fewer injustices, and better policing, in a word of expansive photographers’ rights.
By the way, there have been encounters in Whitewater, Wisconsin at least as far back as the eighties in which citizens photographing buildings were told — falsely — that photographing public property was a crime in Wisconsin. (I know of no one who, having challenged this false claim of illegality, was then actually arrested.)
There are no guarantees, of course; someone who levels a false charge may be convinced of his position, and act on a wrong view. Those who challenge an official should be prepared for a protracted legal process. (Officials who badger lawful citizens count on a cumbersome process of appeal, of course, to dissuade legitimate conduct they don’t like.) That’s a choice wrongly imposed on harmless photographers; we’d be far better off in a world without these impositions on liberty.
Here’s the text accompanying the video:
Who will watch the watchers? In a world of ubiquitous, hand-held digital cameras, that’s not an abstract philosophical question. Police everywhere are cracking down on citizens using cameras to capture breaking news and law enforcement in action.
In 2009, police arrested blogger and freelance photographer Antonio Musumeci on the steps of a New York federal courthouse. His alleged crime? Unauthorized photography on federal property.
Police cuffed and arrested Musumeci, ultimately issuing him a citation. With the help of the New York Civil Liberties Union, he forced a settlement in which the federal government agreed to issue a memo acknowledging that it is totally legal to film or photograph on federal property.
Although the legal right to film on federal property now seems to be firmly established, many other questions about public photography still remain and place journalists and citizens in harm’s way. Can you record a police encounter? Can you film on city or state property? What are a photographer’s rights in so-called public spaces?
These questions will remain unanswered until a case reaches the Supreme Court, says UCLA Law Professor Eugene Volokh, founder of the popular law blog The Volokh Conspiracy. Until then, it’s up to people to know their rights and test the limits of free speech, even at the risk of harassment and arrest.
Who will watch the watchers? All of us, it turns out, but only if we’re willing to fight for our rights.
Produced by Hawk Jensen and Zach Weissmueller. Camera by Jim Epstein and Jensen. About 7.30 minutes.
Go to http://reason.com/blog/2011/05/26/reasontv-the-governments-warfor links and more articles. more >>
Comment Forum
Weekend Comment Forum: Arizona-Style Immigration Restrictions
by JOHN ADAMS •
Rep. Don Pridemore of Hartford has introduced a bill backing Arizona-style immigration legislation.
Here’s how Pridemore describes his legislation:
An individual who has first broken the law, and then fails to prove his or her lawful presence in the U.S., may be held for up to 48 hours. During that time the person will be allowed to obtain appropriate documentation. If the person cannot produce the required documents, the matter will be referred to federal immigration services.
Note how Pridemore disingenuously or ignorantly describes his bill: he falsely contends that it applies only to those who have broken the law. No, and no again. His legislation would trigger a request for immigration status upon a mere arrest, with no conviction for any crime. This legislation would require that those detained prove their immigration status within forty-eight hours on mere accusation of a crime.
Pridemore must be able to see the difference between accusation (arrest) and guilt (conviction). When he says his legislation applies to those who break the law, but when the legislation demands immigration status simply when one is accused of breaking the law, one sees that Pridemore describes his own legislation falsely.
The best economic and social policy for America will always be free markets in capital, goods, and labor. The fewer restrictions, the better, for America’s prosperity and social harmony. Yet even among those who doubt the truth of that contention, one might expect an honest description of the Arizona-style immigration proposal they offer.
One more point: Pridemore shamelessly contends that his legislation would spare illegal immigrants from the stress and anxiety of staying in America. He says this only in the way a fox would suggest that he could spare hens the stress and anxiety of walking around uneaten.
Those who are here now, whatever their status, by their continuing presence indicate that they prefer being here, in Wisconsin, to whatever stress they might experience. If it were not so, they would go somewhere else.
On the contrary, it’s this legislation that puts a man or woman — and perhaps a whole family — on razor’s edge that otherwise peaceful lives might be turned upside down through a mere accusation.
I’m sure that there are some, in Whitewater, elsewhere in Wisconsin, or places even father beyond, who support legislation like Pridemore’s. Here’s a chance to comment in favor of that legislation. If not, then not (though you’ll support and vote for it just the same).
I’ll reply, though, so best as I am able, to arguments supporters might venture for Rep. Pridemore’s bill.
There’s a poll, below, for those who’d like to participate that way.
The use of pseudonyms and anonymous postings is, of course, fine. Although the comments template has a space for a name, email address, and website, those who want to leave a field blank can do so. Comments will be moderated, against profanity or trolls. Otherwise, have at it.
The forum will be open until Sunday morning, and this post will stay at the top of the website during that time.
Cats
Friday Catblogging: Orange Tabby as Lion
by JOHN ADAMS •
Daily Bread
Daily Bread for 5.27.11
by JOHN ADAMS •
Good morning.
Today’s Whitewater forecast calls for a mostly sunny day, with a high temperature of sixty-three degrees.
From the Wisconsin Historical Society, a reminder that there are no terrestrial utopias, the trying for one notwithstanding:
1844 – Utopian Community Founded Near Ripon
On this date the first settler moved to the Fourierite utopian community in what is now Ripon. This communal society was based upon the teachings of Charles Fourier, a French Socialist, who urged the rebuilding of society from its foundation as the only cure for economic hardship. This especially appealed to those suffering from the 1837 Depression. The communal village was named Ceresco after the goddess of agriculture, Ceres. Also known as the Wisconsin Phalanx, the community thrived for six years, with membership reaching 180 in 1845.
The community officially disbanded in 1850 after many members decided to farm for their own profit. Families gradually left the commune to work and live on their own property. The center of the commune, the “Long House,” remained vacant until the 1930s when people suffering from the Great Depression found shelter and comfort there. Community founder Warren Chase said of the failed community “It was prematurely born, and tried to live before its proper time, and of course, must die and be born again. So it did and here it lies.” [Source: Wisconsin Saints and Sinners by Fred L. Holmes, pg. 94-104]
Economy
Economy: Signs of a Slowdown
by JOHN ADAMS •
Business Insider has a story online entitled, The Economy: Signs of a Slowdown. The economy is slow; it may be slowing still more. It’s hardly a high-octane magazine, but then stating the obvious doesn’t require high octane.
If our economy were strong, we’d have less reason to think about it. It’s weak, so it compels notice. For every person who merely writes that he’s concerned about the economy, there are dozens who are afflicted and suffer for its poor performance.
One could try to ignore the topic, but ignorance will bring recovery no sooner.
There’s much talk about austerity and balanced budgets, but we need more than a balanced budget (however hard that is to achieve) — we need cuts sufficient to reduce taxes on productive enterprises (to spur growth) and also cuts elsewhere to assure additional emergency assistance for those now destitute. When status-quo Republicans or Democrats talk about a balanced budget, as though that were enough, they’re doing Wisconsin a disservice.
In Whitewater, in Wisconsin, and in America, we should cut significantly on corporate welfare (subsidies), empty publicly-financed ‘development’ schemes, loans to business cronies, and supposedly ‘necessary’ services to able-bodied, middle-class people. While looking for wasted spending, America could do without dozens of amphibious warships to land on distant shores lacking any genuine and lasting interest for us.
Government should support principally (and respectively by jurisdiction) a reasonable police, fire, or national defense, and those services to prevent suffering among the unemployed, destitute, ill, or disabled.
When one hears that our economy is weak, one should be thinking about more — much more — than balancing a budget.
Now would be the time to try something different.
Daily Bread
Daily Bread for 5.26.11
by JOHN ADAMS •
Good morning.
Today’s forecast calls for a windy day, with a high temperature of fifty-six degrees.
Whitewater Schools will hold a public listening session tonight, at 7 p.m., about proposed budget cuts. (For commentary on those cuts, see On Whitewater Schools’ Proposed Budget Cuts.)
I posted earlier on how cats drink (Friday Catblogging: How Cats Drink), and it turns out dogs drink the same way, only sloppily. X-Ray Video Shows Dogs Drink Like Cats, Just Sloppier has the details, and an x-ray video for proof:



