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Lou Dobbs, American Hypocrite | The Nation

The Nation has a fine story exposing the hypocrisy of Lou Dobbs, an immigrant-bashing television commentator and former CNN anchor:

In Lou Dobbs’s heyday at CNN, when he commanded more than 800,000 viewers and a reported $6 million a year for “his fearless reporting and commentary” in the words of former CNN president Jonathan Klein, the host became notorious for his angry rants against “illegal aliens.” But Dobbs reserved a special venom for the employers who hire them, railing against “the employer who is so shamelessly exploiting the illegal alien and so shamelessly flouting US law,” and even proposing, on one April 2006 show, that “illegal employers who hire illegal aliens” should face felony charges….

But with his relentless diatribes against “illegals” and their employers, Dobbs is casting stones from a house—make that an estate—of glass. Based on a yearlong investigation, including interviews with five immigrants who worked without papers on his properties, The Nation and the Investigative Fund at The Nation Institute have found that Dobbs has relied for years on undocumented labor for the upkeep of his multimillion-dollar estates and the horses he keeps for his 22-year-old daughter, Hillary, a champion show jumper….

Restrictions on immigration are both economically and socially foolish; prosperity and harmony depend on a policy of openness that welcomes people who wish to live and work in America.

See, Lou Dobbs, American Hypocrite | The Nation.

Update: Here’s how Reason reported on the Dobbs story:



Note: That chihuahua should look for a better companion.

Libertarian Terry Virgil Runs for Lt. Governor (and Governor!) of Wisconsin

Could a libertarian a become governor of Wisconsin this year? Dr. Terry Virgil, Libertarian Party candidate for lieutenant governor, thinks it’s possible. See, Third-party candidate Terry Virgil hopes to win Wisconsin’s gubernatorial election.

The candidates for governor and lieutenant governor in Wisconsin run as a ticket, but the LP candidate for the governor’s slot is empty, and merely says ‘No Candidate,’ since the LP didn’t field a candidate. Virgil theorizes that if the LP’s ‘No Candidate’ entry on the ballot for governor wins, then he, Virgil, would also win, and he’d become governor.

Yes, I know — it’s a dubious theory. (“Milwaukee Election Commission Rep Sue Edman says, “The law allows for a Lt. Governor to become governor if the governor is removed upon death or vacates the office for some other reason, but this is very unusual.” Edman believes the legislature would meet to deal with the situation before it got to that point.”)

The best chance the Wisconsin LP has to elect a candidate for governor is actually to run one. This would be a second best option. It’s creative, though, and I wish Virgil well in his campaign for lieutenant governor (and governor) of Wisconsin.

Here’s an embedded video of the story:



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Municipal Openness and Transparency, and Their Alternatives (Update)

There was a second reading, and subsequent passage, of an ordinance before Whitewater’s Common Council on Tuesday, providing for greater openness and transparency in government. I’ve written in support of reform along these lines before. See, Municipal Openness and Transparency, and Their Alternatives.

This was the right step for Whitewater, a non-partisan effort to make the proceedings of meetings more accessible, to more people, as agendas, as minutes, and through consistent television recording of principal city meetings. There’s no left, right, or center in transparency — it’s simply a sound idea.

Here’s the text of the ordinance:

WHITEWATER TRANSPARENCY ENHANCEMENT ORDINANCE

The Common Council of the City of Whitewater, Walworth and Jefferson Counties, Wisconsin, do hereby ordain as follows:

Section I. Whitewater Municipal Code, Chapter 2.62, Whitewater Transparency Enhancement Ordinance, is hereby created to read as follows:

2.62.010 Purpose.
(a) The purpose of this ordinance is to maximize public awareness and participation in City of Whitewater government.
2.62.020 Posting Requirements.
(a) Agenda notices for all council, committee, commission and board meetings, requiring legal notice, shall be posted 72 hours in advance. If an agenda item is added between 24 and 72 hours prior to the meeting, it shall require an affirmative vote of a majority of the members voting to take up the matter.
(b) All council, committee, commission and board agendas shall be posted online on the City website 72 hours in advance of the meeting.
(c) All council, committee, commission and board packet materials, that can be reasonably scanned, shall be posted online 24 hours in advance of the meeting. The City shall provide an electronic notification feed alert, indicating that new information is available regarding an upcoming council, committee, commission or board meeting, to any party that has subscribed to the feed (requested notice from the City of the updated information).
(d) All requests for proposals and requests for bids shall be posted online as soon as is practicable.
(e) The council and all committee, commission and board meeting minutes shall be posted online within 30 days of the meeting. If the body does not meet within 30 days of the meeting, the minutes shall be posted within 14 days of the next meeting.

2.62.030 Information Technology Requirements.
(a) Beginning December I, 2010, City Council, Community Development Authority, Plan Commission and Police Commission meetings shall be videotaped, and the video shall be posted online.
2.62.040 Meeting Procedures.
(a) All council, committee, commission and board meetings shall have a public input agenda item to allow citizens to make statements on matters that are not on the agenda.
(b) All council, committee, commission and boards shall allow the public an opportunity to comment on substantive items on the meeting agenda. The council, committee, commission or board shall have the discretion to impose time limits and other reasonable procedural rules concerning the public comment.
(c) If the agenda for a council, committee, commission or board meeting includes staff reports or other reports, a specific description of the item to be reported on shall be listed on the agenda and said report(s) shall be limited to the specific items listed in the agenda.

2.62.050 Failure to Abide by Chapter Provisions Does Not Cause Actions to be Invalid.
(a) The failure by any council, committee, commission or board to adhere to the provisions of this chapter shall not cause any action by said council, committee, commission or board to be invalid.

Along with RSS feeds that the city offers to keep track of the municipal meeting schedule, or other changes to the City of Whitewater website, adherence to the provisions of this ordinance will give residents more information about their government. (I well understand that consistent adherence to these provisions is necessary for the ordinance to have value.)

There are a few other points worth mentioning —

Police Commission Meetings. It was predictable that at the September 21st first reading of the transparency ordinance, the chairwoman of the Police Commission spoke against television recording of meetings for her commission. If anyone in Whitewater found her position surprising, he’s not really in Whitewater, so to speak.

The idea that the PC meetings are a legitimate substitute for a grievance process is worse than mistaken; it’s utterly foolish. Whitewater lacks a legitimate and clear grievance procedure, and thinking that complainants will walk into a cramped room, with people they probably don’t know, with no certain and accurate recording of their remarks, and trust that process, is absurd. Suggesting that television will reduce the opportunity to register a complaint is false. In the recent history of our city, of over fourteen-thousand people, almost no one has walked up those steps, under the current arrangement, to that small, out-of-the way room, to attend that meeting, and complain about anything.

The current meeting ‘process’ is inadequate.

That cramped and out-of the-way room is not a place where an injured person is likely to feel comfortable. That can only come through a separate, professional grievance procedure. For others, there’s more security in attending a meeting where their remarks will be heard and seen accurately by their fellow residents.

One cannot be more out of one’s depth than someone who suggests otherwise.

(For a sound and sensible set of ideas for true leadership integrity, see Principles for Promoting Police Integrity. I have mentioned these ideas before — they’re from the Clinton years — and yet Whitewater’s leaders haven’t met many of these these years-old, federal Justice Department recommendations.)

I might have referred to the chairwoman’s remarks as a siren’s call, but they’re not in the least beguiling. No one will be enticed toward the rocks on account of her song; it’s easily, and sensibly, ignored.

It’s odd, though, because neither the chairwoman of the PC nor the remaining few who share her view seem to understand that these arguments for a more closed process (especially regarding the PC) are no longer credible in the city.

Conditions have changed; they’ll not be going back.

Audio or No Audio. Also during the first reading of this ordinance, on September 21st, there was discussion of whether audio recording might be too unwieldy, and so it was omitted from the final ordinance. One heard that that audio was, in fact, a “problem in search of a solution.”

It’s not.

Audio recordings would not happen in isolation; they would be a supplement to increase overall meeting details, as a supplement of already-required (and sometimes spotty) municipal minutes. The possibility was never one or the other — combined, audio and written notes would work a true synergy, rather than represent confusion. As audio recordings of all meetings would not work a repeal of written minutes, objections that audio would create confusion are mistaken; audio would enhance understanding of discussions where written notes are spotty and ambiguous.

A Community Calendar on the City’s Website. The City of Whitewater now offers a community calendar on its website. The calendar — like an ordinance on transparency — works if one follows the provisions for it. I’ve wrote about the calendar before, with a bit of surprise at its possibility, because I had doubts about whether Whitewater’s municipal administration would be able to develop and enforce fair guidelines for possible calendar notices.

The guidelines, themselves, are sound and reasonable. Now it’s up to leaders to make sure that they’re enforced fairly. These guidelines are a welcome start, one of many that will help the city’s residents.

A fair, impartial policy, defended zealously, is important to a fair and well-ordered Whitewater.

If anything, I would suggest that the community calendar appear immediately and prominently on the city’s main webpage, as a “what’s happening in town” feature.

There’s much reform yet ahead; each step in that direction deserves acknowledgement.

Secret Places: Wisconsin Historical Society’s Treasure Trove

Gena Kittner writes about the collection of the Wisconsin Historical Society:

Deep in a basement on the UW-Madison campus lies the story of our entire state:

The cheesehead hat signed last year by President Barack Obama on his visit to Wright Middle School in Madison.

The 1 millionth aluminum wheel cover cast at the Reynolds Metal Co. in Beloit in 1996 and signed by the employees.

A wild rice threshing machine used on the Lac du Flambeau Reservation.

They’re among the 98,000 historical objects and thousands more archaeological artifacts found in the storage of the Wisconsin Historical Society.

See, Secret Places: Wisconsin Historical Society’s Treasure Trove.

Update: Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism: For-Profit College Accused of Operating Illegally in Wisconsin

There’s an update on an August story from the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism about a for-profit college in Wisconsin. Reporter Kate Golden, in For-profit college accused of operating illegally in Wisconsin, described the shady practices of Westwood College. (See, Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism: For-Profit College Accused of Operating Illegally in Wisconsin.)

In Westwood temporarily halts Wisconsin enrollments, reporter Kate Golden reports on new details about Westwood:

Westwood College Online has temporarily stopped enrolling Wisconsin students, but maintains it doesn’t need approval from the Wisconsin agency that sent it a cease-and-desist letter.

Westwood College Senior Vice President William Ojile said in his Sept. 30 response to the Wisconsin Educational Approval Board that Wisconsin has no authority over Westwood, which is owned by Denver-based Alta College Inc.

Despite Westwood’s position, the school has stopped enrolling new students anyway as “purely a good-faith precautionary measure,” Ojile wrote.

The EAB said in a Sept. 16 letter to Westwood that an article in the Wisconsin State Journal and the complaint of a Westwood student who withdrew after reading the article “make clear that the risk exposure to Wisconsin residents warrants our attention,” and ordered the school to stop enrolling Wisconsin students. The article was produced by the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism.

With the letter, the EAB entered the national fray over for-profit higher education and became the second state to act against Westwood College Online.

There are sure to be additional developments about Westwood’s practices.

Lewis Black on the Education Crisis in America

From The Daily Show, here’s a clip of Lewis Black remarking on the education crisis in America. It’s all very bristly, of course, but that’s the style of Black’s sharp humor. For it all, the brief scenes that Black includes about students’ desperation to attend a charter school (from the film Waiting for Superman) are poignant.



(h/t to the Huffington Post for the link.) more >>

Daily Bread for Whitewater, Wisconsin: 10-6-10

Good morning,

Whitewater’s forecast is for a sunny day with a high temperature of seventy-three degrees.

Whitewater’s Landmarks Commission will meet tonight from 5 to 6:30 p.m. The agenda is available online.

It’s Homecoming Week here in the Whippet City, and today’s activities include a Canned Food Drive this morning, a Lip Sync competition tonight at 7 p.m. at the high school, and the traditional Burning of the W outside the high school tonight at 8:30 p.m.

The Wisconsin Historical Society recalls a famous defense of free speech from our past, from this day in 1917:

1917 – Robert La Follette Supports Free Speech in Wartime

On this date Senator Robert La Follette gave what may have been the most famous speech of his Senate career when he responded to charges of treason with a three hour defense of free speech in wartime.

La Follette had voted against a declaration of war as well as several initiatives seen as essential to the war effort by those that supported U.S. involvement in the first World War. His resistance was met with a petition to the Committee on Privileges and Elections that called for La Follette’s expulsion from the Senate. The charges were investigated, but La Follette was cleared of any wrong doing by the committee on January 16, 1919. [Source: United States Senate]

Camp Politics: Training the Next Generation of Censors Since 1974!

The Institute for Justice has a very sharp parody of incumbents’ tricks to retain office, entitled, Camp Politics: Training the Next Generation of Censors.

Here’s a description of the summer camp, where young people can learn how to stifle free expression, and retain power:

An Important Message From The Staff of Camp Politics:

Our mission is to train your son or daughter to win political office and then stay there – mainly by using campaign finance laws to suppress political speech that threatens their reelection.

But, unfortunately, many in the public have the absurd idea that free speech should receive the full protection of the First Amendment. One of the chief proponents of this view is the Institute for Justice. It just launched its “Citizen Speech Campaign,” which it calls “a multi-state effort to restore full protection to political speech about candidates and ballot issues.” If you truly care about your children’s future as successful incumbent politicians, please do not allow the Institute to dissuade you from sending them to Camp Politics.

Learn more about the Institute for Justice’s Citizen Speech Campaign.

http://www.CampPolitics.org.

Buy your Camp Politics T-shirt today: http://iam.ij.org/bTNbXY.

Cast:
Narrator: Steve Izant
Counselor: Nick Hanson
Kids: Sophia Cabana, Zachary Cabana, Nicky McBroom, Sam McBroom, Julia
Simpson, Kate Simpson, Natalie Simpson

Enjoy a clever, and sadly true, description of America’s contemporary political culture:


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Official’s Misconduct: Calumet County District Attorney Ken Kratz’s Treatment of a Crime Victim (Update 7)

There’s a story in the Post Crescent about the aftermath of Calumet County D.A. Ken Kratz’s resignation, entitled, Resignation may not be the end of Calumet County District Attorney Ken Kratz’s woes.

The resignation put an end to Gov. Jim Doyle’s efforts to remove him from office….

Kratz’s resignation followed more than two weeks of pressure that swelled after news reports detailed 30 text messages Kratz. 50, sent to domestic violence victim Stephanie Van Groll, who was 25 at the time. Kratz was prosecuting Van Groll’s ex-boyfriend at the time.

Van Groll’s attorney, Michael Fox, said last week he’s weighing whether to file a civil lawsuit seeking damages from Kratz….

The state Office of Lawyer Regulation, meanwhile, re-opened its file on Kratz after other women came forward with reports of inappropriate advances….

….Spokesman Bill Cosh confirmed Monday that the Department of Justice continues to seek information from anyone who knows of misconduct by Kratz.

And on Monday, the Calumet County District Attorney’s Office declined a Post-Crescent request for information under the state’s Open Records laws citing an exemption for open cases. “This office has confirmed with the State Attorney General’s Office that there is an ongoing investigation concerning Mr. Kratz,” wrote Assistant Dist. Atty. Jeffrey Froehlich, who is running the prosecutor’s office.

For prior posts, see Official’s Misconduct: Calumet County District Attorney Ken Kratz’s Treatment of a Crime Victim, Official’s Misconduct: Calumet County District Attorney Ken Kratz’s Treatment of a Crime Victim (Update), Update 2, Update 3, Update 4, Update 5, and Update 6.

Daily Bread for Whitewater, Wisconsin: 10-5-10

Good morning,

Whitewater’s forecast for Tuesday calls for a sunny day with a high temperature of sixty-seven degrees.

There will be a meeting of Whitewater’s Common Council tonight at 6:30 p.m. The meeting agenda is available online.

At Lakeview School, there will be a 6 p.m. P.T.A. Meeting.

The Wisconsin Historical Society recalls that on this day in 1846,

First State Constitutional Convention Meets

On this date Wisconsin’s first state Constitutional Convention met in Madison. The Convention sat until December 16,1846. The Convention was attended by 103 Democrats and 18 Whigs. The proposed constitution failed when voters refused to accept several controversial issues: an anti-banking article, a homestead exemption (which gave $1000 exemption to any debtor), providing women with property rights, and black suffrage. The following convention, the Second Constitutional Convention of Wisconsin in 1847-48, produced and passed a constitution that Wisconsin still very much follows today. [Source: The Convention of 1846 edited Milo M. Quaife]

Reason.tv: Nanny of the Month for September 2010 – Busted for Growing Veggies!

Reason presents the Nanny of the Month for September 2010. While America thinks of new ways to live a truly green lifestyle, including eating locally-grown produce, in DeKalb County, Georgia officials want to fine a man for growing too many vegetables.



Here’s the description accompanying the video:

Nanny of the Month turns one-year-old this month, and it seems that public officials’ obsession with minding other people’s business has only intensified over the past 12 months.

We’ve exposed meddlers who want to squash other people’s right to do everything from sing karaoke, to drink raw milk, and bust a move at ladies night.

What could possibly top all that? How about the “Greenest County in America” suing a man for growing too many vegetables in his garden?

Presenting Reason.tv’s Nanny of the Month for September 2010: DeKalb County, Georgia CEO Burrell Ellis!

Approximately 1:20 minutes. more >>