FREE WHITEWATER

Daily Bread for 5.17.11

Good morning.

Today’s forecast calls for a sunny day, with a high temperature of sixty-two degrees.

There’s a Common Council meeting tonight, at 6:30 p.m.  The session agenda is available online.

The Wisconsin Historical Society recalls that about three-hundred fifty years ago,

1673 – Jolliet and Marquette Expedition Gets Underway

On this date Louis Jolliet, Father Jacques Marquette, and five French voyageurs departed from the mission of St. Ignace, at the head of Lake Michigan, to reconnoitre the Mississippi River. The party traveled in two canoes throughout the summer of 1673, traveling across Wisconsin, down the Mississippi to the Arkansas River, and back again. [Source: Historic Diaries: Marquette & Joliet, 1673]

Impediments to Second Amendment Rights

There a story over at the Janesville Gazette that catalogs the objections that some police leaders have to concealed carry rights (and probably to many other gun rights). See, Law enforcement against concealed-carry legislation.

I doubt that opposition to gun rights is nearly so strong among field officers as it is among administrators.

In any event, opposition to these rights is opposition to an existing constitutional right; impediments to the Second Amendment are no more legitimate than impediments to Fifth Amendment rights, for example. The Second Amendment has been treated as a second-class amendment, contrary to any plain meaning of the constitution or reasonable principle of interpretation.

Those who oppose Second Amendment rights are free to contend for an amendment to the constitution. They’re unpersuasive and mistaken, however, to try simply to wish or interpret existing, express rights away.

Walter Russell Mead: “Establishment Blues”

WRM writes of the gap between a highly competent citizenry and the mediocrity of the Establishment.  There’s great talent of some in power, but of the broader Establishment, there’s never been a more disgraceful lack of ability.  This is true of both political parties’ supporters, and is true, also,  of imitative statewide elites in many parts of the country.

….The American people aren’t perfect yet and never will be — but by the standards that matter to the Establishment, this is the best prepared, most open minded and most socially liberal generation in history.  Unsatisfactory as the American people may be from the standpoints of Georgetown and Manhattan, this is as good as it gets.  Abraham Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt and Harry Truman could only dream of the kind of sophisticated and cosmopolitan understanding that folks in Peoria have now compared to the old days.

The American people are less prejudiced, more globally aware and more willing to meet other cultures and societies halfway than ever before.  Minorities today are better protected in law and more fairly treated by the public than ever in our history.  No previous generation has been as determined to give women a fair chance in life, or to attack the foul legacy of racism.  The American people have never been as religiously tolerant as they are today, as concerned about the environment, or more willing to make sacrifices around the world to promote the peace and well being of humanity as a whole.

By contrast, we have never had an Establishment that was so ill-equipped to lead.  It is the Establishment, not the people, that is falling down on the job.

Here in the early years of the twenty-first century, the American elite is a walking disaster and is in every way less capable than its predecessors.  It is less in touch with American history and culture, less personally honest, less productive, less forward looking, less effective at and less committed to child rearing, less freedom loving, less sacrificially patriotic and less entrepreneurial than predecessor generations.  Its sense of entitlement and snobbery is greater than at any time since the American Revolution; its addiction to privilege is greater than during the Gilded Age and its ability to raise its young to be productive and courageous leaders of society has largely collapsed….

From Establishment Blues | Via Meadia.

Daily Bread for 5.16.11

Good morning.

It’s a sunny day ahead for Whitewater, with a high temperature of fifty-seven forecast fro the afternoon.

There’s a school board meeting tonight, in open session beginning at 7 p.m.

There are two Wisconsin birthdays for today on which the Wisconsin Historical Society remarks:

1913 – Big Band Leader Woody Herman Born
On this date Woody Herman was born in Milwaukee. A child prodigy, Herman sang and tap-danced in local clubs before touring as a singer on the vaudeville circuit. He played in various dance bands throughout the 20s and 30s and by 1944 was leading a band eventually known as the First Herd. In 1946, the band played an acclaimed concert at Carnegie Hall but disbanded at the end of the year. The following year, Herman returned to performing with the Second Herd that included a powerful saxophone section comprised of Herbie Steward, Stan Getz, Zoot Sims, and Serge Chaloff. He died in 1987. [Source: WoodyHerman.com].

1919 – Liberace Born
On this date Wladziu Valentino Liberace was born in West Allis. Liberace’s father played the French horn and was a member of the Milwaukee Philharmonic Orchestra and his mother played the piano. Liberace debuted as a soloist with the Chicago Symphony at the age of 14 and received a scholarship to attend the Wisconsin College of Music. In 1952, The Liberace Show, a syndicated television program, made Liberace a musical icon. Best remembered for his extravagant costumes and trademark candelabra placed on the lids of flashy pianos, Liberace was loved by his audiences for his musical talent and unique showmanship. He received two Emmy Awards, six gold albums, and two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame before he died on February 4, 1987. [Source: The Liberace Foundation].

Recent Tweets, 5.8 – 5.14

Explaining the harm of Rep. Wynn’s votes will prove an important test for those who respect individual rights and liberties
12 May

Few could have done more, in less time, against ordinary people than Rep. Wynn has done in these last five months
12 May

43rd’s Rep. Wynn has voted both to limit right of association for public employees & to restrict franchise for thousands of legal voters
12 May

RT @radleybalko: Um, what the hell? http://www.wrex.com/Global/story.asp?S=14603700
11 May

Whitewater loses a creative, dynamic leader Zentner and Afterward | FREE WHITEWATER https://freewhitewater.com/?p=16249
10 May

WisconsinWatch.org: Lawmakers shouldn’t meet in secret

Town, village, city, school district and county governments are prohibited from having such closed-door meetings, except in very limited circumstances, to discuss sensitive matters such as employee discipline or negotiating purchases of property. And even then the public must be notified of the general topics to be discussed.

In contrast, the Wisconsin Legislature routinely passes sweeping bills after little public discussion because the thorny details and disagreements have been hammered out beforehand in private partisan caucuses.

Rep. Cory Mason wants to change that. The Racine Democrat has re-introduced a bill, Assembly Bill 89, requiring lawmakers to follow the same rules as other public officials.

“For me, the hypocrisy of it is that, at the state level, we mandate openness for lower levels of government,” Mason says. “We ask everybody else to live up to these rules, then we exempt ourselves from them at the state level”….

”In the end, the public is almost completely shut out of the real debate and instead hears mainly partisan talking points.“We are no longer a deliberative body,” says Mason.

“We break into our respective caucuses. We have all of our debate behind closed doors. We come out in public and make speeches. It’s very important for the public to see these debates.”

Via WisconsinWatch.org.

Liberal or Conservative? Neither

I had a spirited discussion with a conservative the other day, who seemed to think that I was drifting too far to the left. From her point of view, I probably do seem too far to the left.

She was mistaken, though, on two counts. First, libertarians aren’t naturally more right or left. Second, in my case, there’s no drifting involved. If what I believe seems more or less inclined to one politics, it’s not that I’ve changed (to my knowledge, anyway) — it’s that the political world shifts all the time, and most people simply respond to those shifts. Bloggers are no different from anyone else.

The Libertarian Republicans

There are two GOP presidential candidates with libertarian views: the well-known Ron Paul and the not-so-well-known Gary Johnson. Neither has much of a chance to be the GOP nominee. Really, neither has any chance at all.

Still, here’s a profile for each of them, from Reason.Their presence will still shape the race in ways that big-government Republicans won’t like, but that will benefit the rest of America. One does not have to be a Republican to wish these libertarian-leaning candidates good luck.

Congressman Ron Paul, who gave this interview just before he declared his intention to run:

Ron Paul Explores the 2012 Presidential Race.

Former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson:

A Pragmatic Champion of Liberty.

Daily Bread for 5.13.11

Good morning.

Whitewater’s forecast calls for a day of isolated thunderstorms, with a high temperature of sixty-six.

Quick note, for those who’ve asked: Returning next week — an updated Comment Forum, including a weekly poll.

From Wired, a view of nature — an amazing bird-cam:



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