Wednesday, May 31, 2006

Popes Rule

In January I smacked down a now dormant blog for ripping on the City of Milwaukee. In several posts I blogged that while my hometown has its share of problems (see 28 shootings in 96 hours), it has some tremendous assets as well.

Specifically, I highlighted the Vatican Exhibit at the Milwaukee Public Museum.

A reminder that the City of Milwaukee has a lot to offer and is just a short drive from Lake Koshkonong...

The Milwaukee Public Museum invites you to explore the Vatican's extraordinary collections of art and historical objects, many never publicly displayed. Trace 2,000 years of church leadership from Saint Peter to Pope John Paul II in Saint Peter and the Vatican: The Legacy of the Popes, presented by The Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, Feb. 4-May 7, 2006.

Well the exhibit has closed after an extended run, the results are in, and it was a huge success.
The Milwaukee Public Museum's exhibit "Saint Peter and the Vatican: The Legacy of the Popes" drew more than 144,000 visitors, exceeding the museum's attendance goal of 121,000, according to museum officials.
Here's hoping the MPM continues to build on this success and brings in other exhibits people actually want to see.

Milwaukee Memorial Day Shooting Fugitive


America's Most Wanted is on the case.

A park filled with families and Memorial Day picnickers turned into a scene of chaos and horror on May 29th, 2006. Police say Octaviano Juarez-Corro opened fire into a crowd, killing two people.

With little regard for the children at play in a nearby playground, Juarez-Corro allegedly fired shots into the South Shore Park in Milwaukee. Police say Juarez-Corro shot and killed two men -- 31-year-old Raymundo Munoz-Silva and 17-year-old Julio Diaz-Guillen. But the encounter wasn't random.

Investigators believe the victims knew the suspect.

...

Police say Juarez-Corro was living in the U.S. illegally and believe he's headed straight for the Mexican border.

Juarez-Corro was last seen jumping into a red 2003 Pontiac Grand Am. He's 5 feet 6 nches tall and weighs 200 pounds. Juarez-Corro has brown eyes and black hair.

Police say everyone from the Midwest to the Southwest needs to be on the lookout.

The suspect could be in a number of states as he rushes to get to the border, but investigators hope to stop him in his tracks.

Hurricanes and Man

In the wake of the latest environmental whacko stunt mentioned in the post below, I thought I'd post a column I cam across a while back. I personally believe man should not take a callous approach to the environment, but I also believe we need to question reports of our ability to impact hurricanes. Cato and Heartland are good sources for more information:



Real-World Data Contradict Hurricane Alarmism
By Patrick Michaels

Given the recent claims that hurricanes are getting dramatically worse because of global warming, it's too bad we've already exhausted the letter "G" for this hurricane season. "Gasbag" would have been a pretty good moniker for the next storm.

Alarmist Paper Sparks Controversy
In case you've missed the hype, MIT's Kerry Emanuel has a paper in the online version of Nature magazine saying hurricanes are becoming dramatically more powerful as a result of global warming.

Merely venturing into the discussion of hurricanes and global warming is more dangerous than most tropical cyclones. About Emanuel's article, William Gray of Colorado State University--the guy who issues the annual hurricane forecast that grabs headlines every summer--told the Boston Globe, "It's a terrible paper, one of the worst I've ever looked at."

There's also nastiness if you say hurricanes aren't getting worse. A month ago, the University of Colorado's Roger Pielke Jr. posted a paper that was accepted in the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society concluding there is little if any sign of global warming in hurricane patterns. In a pre-emptive strike, Kevin Trenberth, from the federally funded National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado, told the local newspaper, "I think he [Pielke] should withdraw his article. This is a shameful article."

Six months earlier, Christopher Landsea of the National Hurricane Research Laboratory, another federal entity, quit the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Landsea is probably the world's most respected hurricane scientist. He was furious that Rajenda Pauchari, director of the panel, condoned Trenberth's earlier statements that hurricanes were worsening because of global warming.

What is going on here? Nothing unusual. Behavior like this takes place every day at faculty meetings across academia. But global warming and hurricanes are hot topics right now, so the bickering spills over into the press.

Data Refute Hurricane Claims
What is unusual is the especially shoddy nature of the current scientific review process on global warming papers.

Consider the recent Nature article. If hurricanes had doubled in power in the last few decades as Emanuel claims, the change would be obvious. You wouldn't need a weatherman to know which way this wind was blowing. All of these feuding scientists would have agreed on the facts long ago.

Damages caused by doubling the strength of hurricanes would be massive and increasing dramatically. Figures on this are pretty easy to come by, at least in the United States. The insured value of property from Brownsville, Texas to Eastport, Maine--our hurricane-prone Atlantic Coast --is greater than a year of our entire Gross Domestic Product. If hurricanes had actually doubled in power, the losses in the insurance industry would be catastrophic.

Pielke has studied this, and his work is well known. Hurricanes are causing greater dollar damages because more and more people are building increasingly expensive beachfront monstrosities that have financially appreciated during the recent real-estate bubble.
Account for these and there is no significant change in hurricane expenses along our coasts. Illinois climatologist Stanley Changnon has also studied this for non-hurricane weather damage over the entire country, with similar results.

Pielke told me, "analysis of hurricane damage over the past century shows no trend in hurricane destructiveness, once the data are adjusted to account for the dramatic growth along the nation's coasts."

Misinformation Makes Money
You would think reviewers of Emanuel's paper at Nature would have thought to ask whether, in fact, there was evidence of increasingly powerful storms.

But they didn't. There is just no incentive in the scientific community to kill the remarkably fertile global warming goose, a beast that feeds on public fears.

The federal outlay on climate research is now $4.2 billion per year, roughly the same amount given to the National Cancer Institute.

As a result, the climate research community sees a grave threat when research shows there's no threat from the climate. So papers that hawk climate disaster get superficial reviews and uncritical headlines, while those that argue otherwise are called "shameful."

Patrick Michaels, who received his PhD in ecological climatology from the University of Wisconsin, is the former president of the American Association of State Climatologists and is currently a senior fellow for environmental studies at the Cato Institute. This article appeared on http://www.cato.org.

Environmental Whacko Alert

From Drudge:
'GLOBAL WARMING' PROTESTERS CALL FOR RESIGNATION OF HURRICANE ENTER DIRECTOR

Hundreds of concerned citizens and leaders from across the nation will join Hurricane Katrina survivors Wednesday to call for the resignation of the heads of the National Hurricane Center (NHC) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) at the NOAA Headquarters just outside of Washington, D.C.

During an 11 a.m. demonstration, advocates will demand that NOAA stop covering up the growing scientific link between severe hurricanes and global warming while insisting on real solutions to the problem of global warming.

The protest comes at the start of the 2006 Hurricane season, which officials at the NHC predict will be “a hectic, above-normal tropical storm season.” Speeches begin at 11 a.m. EDT and protestors will carry dramatic props and photographs of Hurricane Katrina. A 37-hour demonstration will follow, lasting until midnight on June 1st, with picketing during the day and a candlelight vigil by night.

Van Hollen's Take on Lautenschlager's Performance in Milwaukee

Former US Attorney JB Van Hollen, a candidate for attorney general and a client of mine, issued a strong statement today regarding Peg Lautenschlager's response to the ongoing violence in Milwaukee.

The Attorney General’s response to the violence in Milwaukee this past weekend has been disgustingly quiet.

She's AWOL on fighting violent gun crime in Wisconsin's largest city.

Apparently, Peg Lautenschlager is too busy suing law abiding farmers in northern Wisconsin and fighting the EPA, Department of Education and FDA to actually focus on fighting crime in the highest crime area of the state.

We need more than a long-term action plan, though; we need to do something now.

Ten point plans, blue ribbon panels and study committees won’t deter the thugs, punks and gang bangers.

Hassling law abiding gun shops won’t get illegal guns off the streets.

Peace rallies won’t keep the peace.

Last month when I outlined my approach to fighting crime in Wisconsin I proposed the deployment of Multi-jurisdictional Action Teams, or MATs, to leverage federal, state and local law enforcement agencies to tackle the state’s most pressing problems.

Clearly, the gun violence in Milwaukee is one of the state’s most pressing problems.

The attorney general should be taking the lead here.

Read the rest.

Van Hollen introduced his MAT proposals last month. It's based on his experience as a district attorney and as the chief federal law enforcement officer for 2/3rds of Wisconsin.

Lautenschlager's been too busy handing out fifty grand in state settlement money to her political cronies to pay attention to Milwaukee's problem.

To his credit, JB's primary opponent, long time neighboring district attorney Paul Bucher is holding a media event on this issue today.

Falk? Lautenschlager?

They're too busy trying to out-liberal each other to focus on fighting real crime.

Typical Reaction to Violence

In the wake of the weekend violence in Milwaukee, yesterday I wrote:

I haven't seen all the coverage yet, but am sure it is a mere matter of time before we hear the following:

  1. A plea for more funding for social services in the inner city (Pork)
  2. A plan for a huge anti-violence rally (Group Hug)
  3. Blame placed on the gun-culture cultivated by the NRA, which recently had
    its convention here (Scapegoating)
This editorial from the Journal Sentinel was the typical response. All that was missing was the promotion of an anti-violence rally.

But what do I know. I should fire George and search my soul and hire a gang banger.

Tuesday, May 30, 2006

Doyle Donor Troubles Update

Courtesy of WisPolitics.com

-- Gov. Jim Doyle's campaign says it will return $10,000 in 2004 contributions from lawyers at a New York firm after a watchdog group pointed out the firm had been indicted in federal court this month.

"We have reviewed them, and we have elected to return these contributions," Doyle campaign spokeswoman Melanie Fonder said.

A report issued by the Wisconsin Democracy Campaign shows Doyle accepted $10,000 in campaign contributions in 2004 from lawyers at a New York law firm indicted by a federal grand jury for illegally paying people to participate in class-action lawsuits.

Reader Mail

READER MAIL

Anonymous said:

Why do you permit anonymous posting if all you do when you hit some meaningful criticism is essentially say "your post requires no response because its anonymous."

Dear Anonymous,

I permit anonymous posting because several readers who wish to comment feel the need to do so anonymously. I personally think folks should have the courage of their conviction to put their name on their comments, especially when they are critical of others who comment here (not criticisms of yours truly, I could give a rip). Nonetheless, if people wish to remain anonymous, so be it.

However, merely allowing others to take that route does not exempt them from commentary, which at times includes ridicule from me and others for their choice to remain anonymous.

-Fraley

Anonymous said...

Investment in the central city is pork? Are you high?

Dear Anonymous,

Knee jerk calls for increased spending on failed social service programs as a means to combat the violent gang clture in Milwaukee are not solutions, and yes are merely pork. Like it or not, “anti-poverty” and “anti-violence” programs have become a cottage industry.

And, no, I am not high. But thanks for asking.

-Fraley


(Finally, one answer to a whole group of recent emails)

Anonymous said...

What intrigues me about Fraley's blog, and so many of the other conservatives' blogs - - McBride, Sykes, Wagner, Wigdeson, etc, et al - - is how many angry or sarcastic posts are about Black or other minority people or leaders.

These are racist in that they either reflect disproportionate negativity towards minorities, or that they stir the pot in the community against minority leaders or issues.

Deal with it, Brian.

Anonymous said...

Seems to me that you are protesting a bit too much, Brian. You DO post a lot of angry rants about black officials. Maybe you don't realize how that appears.

Anonymous said...

Also, Fraley seems to jump all over petty, meaningless stuff to belittle black elected officials. He can be aggressive with the white folks too but usually over actual issues.

Anonymous said...

The point that people are making is that you hold them to a different standard and treat them differently.

Dear Anonymous (not sure if this is one or several people).

I select the targets of my commentary by the content of their character and by their actions, not by the color of their skin.

As Jim Doyle, Peg Lautenschlager, Kathy Falk, Mark Pocan, Tom Reynolds, Xoff, Teresa Estness and others can attest, I am an equal opportunity ‘ranter.’

I will not be intimidated or shamed into being silent on issues or actions of elected officials based on their skin color or ethnic or religious background. I don't believe in having a sliding scale of standards based on race, class, religion or creed.

-Fraley

May 30th Reminder--NOT

Remember, today is the last day Mark Pocan's blog will be apolitical.

Look for a fresh new political perspective tomorrow on the soon-to-be-political Pocan Blog.

*** UPDATE

Being my progressive self, I was a day ahead of Mr. Pocan.

Indeed, tomorrow is the last day he won't be political.

Cheers.

Memorial Day Mayhem in Milwaukee

I just got back from a long weekend away. I'm going over the news accounts of the 28 shootings in Milwaukee this weekend.

I haven't seen all the coverage yet, but am sure it is a mere matter of time before we hear the following:

  1. A plea for more funding for social services in the inner city (Pork)
  2. A plan for a huge anti-violence rally (Group Hug)
  3. Blame placed on the gun-culture cultivated by the NRA, which recently had its convention here (Scapegoating)

Doyle Donor Troubles

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel's JSOnline's DayWatch reports:

Indicted lawyers gave $10,000 to Doyle


Gov. Jim Doyle received $10,000 two years ago from lawyers at a firm that was recently indicted, a campaign watchdog group said today.

This month, a federal grand jury in Los Angeles indicted the firm Milberg Weiss Bershad & Schulman and two of its partners on charges of paying kickbacks to people for agreeing to be plaintiffs in class-action lawsuits.

Two years ago, 10 attorneys with the firm - including the two who were named personally in the indictments - gave Doyle a combined $10,000, according to the Wisconsin Democracy Campaign. The donations were made on June 29 and 30, 2004.

Partner David J. Bershad gave Doyle $2,100 and partner Steven G. Schulman gave him $1,800. The two were named in the indictment.

Other lawyers with the New York City-based firm gave Doyle between $300 and $2,700 each. None of the 10 gave money to Doyle or other candidates for statewide office before or since, the Democracy Campaign said.

The 20-count indictment charges the firm and partners with obstruction of justice, perjury, bribery and fraud. Prosecutors allege the firm and the partners secretly paid people off to be plaintiffs or have their relatives be plaintiffs in class-action lawsuits, and then lied about the arrangements in court documents.

Monday, May 29, 2006

Memorial Day

HEADQUARTERS GRAND ARMY OF THE REPUBLIC
General Orders No.11, WASHINGTON, D.C., May 5, 1868

The 30th day of May, 1868, is designated for the purpose of strewing with flowers or otherwise decorating the graves of comrades who died in defense of their country during the late rebellion, and whose bodies now lie in almost every city, village, and hamlet church-yard in the land. In this observance no form of ceremony is prescribed, but posts and comrades will in their own way arrange such fitting services and testimonials of respect as circumstances may permit.

We are organized, comrades, as our regulations tell us, for the purpose among other things, "of preserving and strengthening those kind and fraternal feelings which have bound together the soldiers, sailors, and marines who united to suppress the late rebellion." What can aid more to assure this result than cherishing tenderly the memory of our heroic dead, who made their breasts a barricade between our country and its foes? Their soldier lives were the reveille of freedom to a race in chains, and their deaths the tattoo of rebellious tyranny in arms. We should guard their graves with sacred vigilance. All that the consecrated wealth and taste of the nation can add to their adornment and security is but a fitting tribute to the memory of her slain defenders. Let no wanton foot tread rudely on such hallowed grounds. Let pleasant paths invite the coming and going of reverent visitors and fond mourners. Let no vandalism of avarice or neglect, no ravages of time testify to the present or to the coming generations that we have forgotten as a people the cost of a free and undivided republic.

If other eyes grow dull, other hands slack, and other hearts cold in the solemn trust, ours shall keep it well as long as the light and warmth of life remain to us.

Let us, then, at the time appointed gather around their sacred remains and garland the passionless mounds above them with the choicest flowers of spring-time; let us raise above them the dear old flag they saved from hishonor; let us in this solemn presence renew our pledges to aid and assist those whom they have left among us a sacred charge upon a nation's gratitude, the soldier's and sailor's widow and orphan.

It is the purpose of the Commander-in-Chief to inaugurate this observance with the hope that it will be kept up from year to year, while a survivor of the war remains to honor the memory of his departed comrades. He earnestly desires the public press to lend its friendly aid in bringing to the notice of comrades in all parts of the country in time for simultaneous compliance therewith.

Department commanders will use efforts to make this order effective.

By order of
JOHN A. LOGAN,Commander-in-Chief
N.P. CHIPMAN,Adjutant General
Official:WM. T. COLLINS, A.A.G.

Sunday, May 28, 2006

New York Yankees


Am enjoying Memorial Day out East with friends this weekend.

Went to the New York Yankees' Double A game in Trenton, NJ today.

Yes they actually have a farm system, and it's in not Cincy, KC, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, Baltimore, etc.

It's always nice to be reminded of how much fun Minor League baseball is.

I hope you and yours are enjoying your holiday weekend.

More on Memorial Day, tomorrow.

Saturday, May 27, 2006

Doyle Sides with Illegal Alien Advocates

My gut tells me this veto will bite Governor Doyle more than any other.

Governor Doyle today vetoed Senate Bill 567, which would create an unnecessary, expensive, and inefficient obstacle for Wisconsin citizens in need of public services under Chapter 49.

"I am vetoing this bill because it will create unnecessary confusion with federal law set to go into effect on July 1,2006 - and because it could deny needed services to many eligible American citizens," Governor Doyle said.


Unlike vetoes of the tax freeze or the right to carry, Doyle has no cover on this one. No way to obfuscate. As important, he has far less time to build his case.

As the battles rage over our borders, amnesty, guest workers, a fence, etc, Governor Doyle now finds himself at the center of this controversy.

And he's on the wrong side of the issue, to boot. He and Kathy Falk. Nice company.

For the most vulnerable Democrat governor in America, facing a tough reelect in just a few months, this is a formula for, well, defeat.

I would have loved to be a fly on the wall when the Governor finally told his political team he was indeed going to veto this.

Good luck Xoff.

Ok, not really.

Friday, May 26, 2006

More on the McGee/Jackson Story

Regarding Milwaukee's most notorious alderman, yesterday I opined:
Besides being weird, there is something not right here. He says he has no birth certificate listing his name as Michael Jackson. He says his driver's license and social security card refer to him as McGee.

So why the need for a name change?

There must be more to this story.

Stay tuned.
Well, today the Journal Sentinel reports:

But new questions arose after the Journal Sentinel reported Thursday that McGee had petitioned to legally change his name - to Michael I. McGee from Michael I. Jackson.

The name-change request stated that McGee, 36, had always been Michael Imanu Jackson, but now wants his last name legally switched to McGee, the name the petition says he has used his entire life.

In a statement issued late Thursday, McGee said he needs the name change to get a U.S. passport. The statement said Jackson is the name on his birth certificate because that is the birth name of his own father, the former alderman also known as Mike McGee.

In a search of public records and commercial databases, the newspaper has found several records of a Michael I. Jackson who shares the birth date and some common addresses with the alderman, but show a different Social Security number.

Among the records are those of a 1996 traffic accident involving a Michael I. Jackson. After civil lawsuits over the crash, that individual was ordered to pay more than $6,000 in judgments, most of which was never paid.

"Any issue regarding that name had to be a mistake," McGee said in a phone interview. "I don't have a record of consistently using that name."

I am sure there is yet even more to this story...

Jackson in Tokyo

Well, the Milwaukee alderman did say he needed a passport...
Michael Jackson plans to make his first public appearance since his trial acquittal last June at a ceremony in Tokyo to accept MTV Japan's "Legend Award," his spokesman said
.

Thursday, May 25, 2006

King Holloway Lives

Long Live the King

Lee Holloway has, for the most part, prevailed in his campaign to beat the ethics board into submission.

JSOnline reports:
Milwaukee County Board Chairman Lee Holloway this afternoon resolved his long-running ethics case by admitting to six civil counts of failing to comply with the county ethics code.

Under the agreement with the county Ethics Board, Holloway will pay a $3,000 fine.
Well done.

So, now that he's basically gotten off with accepting money for rent and sale transactions that never took place, and for failing to disclose ownership in the property, will he still claim the ethics board's findings are racially motivated?

And will the members of the County Board still retain this ethically challenged chairman?

And what of his tenants? Has he made the necessary repairs to his properties?

He has clearly dodged a bullet, but it will be up to the county board whether or not this saga is over.

A Look at Katrina

Jonah Goldberg has an excellent take over at National Review Online.

As I’ve written before, virtually all of the gripping stories from Katrina were untrue. All of those stories about, in Paula Zahn’s words, “bands of rapists, going block to block”? Not true. The tales of snipers firing on medevac helicopters? Bogus. The yarns, peddled on Oprah by New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin and the New Orleans police chief, that “little babies” were getting raped in the Superdome and that the bodies of the murdered were piling up? Completely false. The stories about poor blacks dying in comparatively huge numbers because American society “left them behind”? Nah-ah. While most outlets limited themselves to taking Nagin’s estimate of 10,000 dead at face value, Editor and Publisher—the watchdog of the media—ran the headline, “Mortuary Director Tells Local Paper 40,000 Could Be Lost in Hurricane.”

In all of Louisiana, not just New Orleans, the total dead from Katrina was roughly 1,500. Blacks did not die disproportionately, nor did the poor. The only group truly singled out in terms of mortality was the elderly

Doyle's Conundrum Solved


In February, I wrote:

What's a governor to do when his special interests are at odds?

Why, start a bidding war, of course!

Well, it looks like Troha and Kenosha interests won.

Gov. Jim Doyle said today he'll veto a bill that would deal the Legislature a hand in approval of off-reservation casinos.The move would keep Doyle as the sole state arbiter of casino deals. That would also follow the wishes of backers of a plan for new casinos in Kenosha and Beloit, who fear adding a legislative approval requirement would kill their plans.

Doyle's stance, however, runs counter to the urgings of the Forest County Potawatomi tribe, which has been advertising and heavily lobbying for Doyle to sign the measure into law.

"I intend to veto it," Doyle said in phone interview.

Lautenschlager's Gift

This story will have legs.

Enron

I hope these guys get the book thrown at them.

Former Enron Corp. chiefs Kenneth Lay and Jeffrey Skilling were convicted Thursday of conspiracy to commit securities and wire fraud in one of the biggest business scandals in U.S. history.

The verdict put the blame for the 2001 demise of the high-profile energy trader, once the nation's seventh-largest company, squarely on its top two executives. It came in the sixth day of deliberations following a trial that lasted nearly four months.

Lay was also convicted of bank fraud and making false statements to banks in a separate trial non-jury trial before U.S. District Judge Sim Lake related to Lay's personal banking.

Lay was convicted on all six counts against him in the trial with Skilling. Skilling was convicted on 19 of the 28 counts against him, including one count of insider trading, and acquitted on the remaining nine.

"Obviously, I'm disappointed," Skilling told reporters outside the courthouse. "But that's the way the system works."

Skilling's lawyer, Dan Petrocelli, said the verdict "doesn't change our view of what happened at Enron ... or Jeffrey Skilling's innocence."

Lay did not come outside the courthouse to speak with reporters immediately after the verdict.

Lake told jurors, "you have reflected on this evidence for the last few days and reached a very thorough verdict, and I thank you."

He set sentencing for Sept. 11.

Milwaukee Alderman McGee/Jackson
Not the First Politician to be Someone Other than Who He Claimed

The story of Milwaukee's most notorious alderman gets more and more strange.

McGee asks court for name change
Alderman asks court to change his name — to McGee

The latest news about Ald. Mike McGee is that he's not Mike McGee. According to a notarized petition filed Wednesday in the county Clerk of Courts office, the man elected to office as Michael Imanu McGee - and who identifies himself on his voice mail message as Mike McGee Jr. - has really been Michael Imanu Jackson for his 36 years.

The name-change petition, which cost $158.50 to file, asks that the alderman's name become, legally, Michael Imanu McGee.

It is the latest unusual situation in what has been an extraordinary few weeks for the outspoken politician. He was arrested last week in a Milwaukee County courtroom, accused of threatening a woman who has a restraining order against him and who says she is pregnant by him. In April, while trying to obtain a restraining order against the woman, Kimley Rucker, McGee told a court commissioner under oath he had never had an e-mail address that his wife later testified he had used for
years.


Besides being weird, there is something not right here. He says he has no birth certificate listing his name as Michael Jackson. He says his driver's license and social security card refer to him as McGee.

So why the need for a name change?

There must be more to this story.

Stay tuned.

Dailytakes to Become Political June 1

In the same spirit as the previously apolitical Mark Pocan, Dailytakes will become political beginning June 1.

As of June 1, I will unlink the blog to from any state website so that I can get political - talking about campaigns, electoral politics and the like.

I'll still keep you posted on state issues. But I will do it from my personal computer and not have it linked to any state web page. That way there are no "ethical" issues. Not that ethics seems to bother the Democrat governor or Democrat Attorney General.

So, Pocan's blog will 'become' political...

So, it wasn't political on April 25th when he posted:

A Marriage Made in Hell: TABOR and the GOP

Let's not forget his apolitical March 30th post:

Legislature for Sale, Governor Doyle Isn't

Or the day before that, when he urged his apolitical readers to apolitically

Tell Governor Doyle to Veto the Anti-Consumer Rent-to-Own Bill

Mark Pocan has a good sense of humor. His latest claim that his blog hasn't been political is only further proof that he's a funny guy.

I think what he meant to say is that he's going to be more of a shill for Dem challengers in the next few months and feels more comfortable linking to their sites off a blog not connected with his state office.

I have a hunch he'll still refer to himself as State Representative Pocan on the site.

Is that mixing government and politics?

Oh, my!

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Wisconsin: Life's So Good...For Illegal Aliens


If Jim Doyle vetoes Senate Bill 567, the Department of Tourism will be passing these out at county fairs all summer.

The bill prohibits government aid from being distributed to illegal aliens.

From the LRB analysis:
This bill provides that, to the extent permitted under federal law if there are any conflicting federal provisions, only a person who is a U.S. citizen or an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence, or otherwise permanently residing inthe United States under color of law, is eligible for any program that is administered by DHFS or DWD under the public assistance chapter of the statutes and that provides services, benefits, or other assistance (public assistance program). The bill requires that any person who applies for a public assistance program must, as acondition of eligibility for that program, provide documentary proof of citizenship or satisfactory immigration status. Besides Wisconsin Works, Medical Assistance, and the food stamp program, public assistance programs include relief block grants, with which counties provide health care services to eligible persons; the Badger Care health care program, which provides health care services to certain low-income children and families; the program that provides prescription drug assistance for elderly persons (commonly known as SeniorCare); the program that provides eligible persons with assistance in establishing the paternity of a child, establishing or modifying child support obligations, enforcing child support or maintenance(alimony) obligations, and locating persons who owe child support or children taken by parents in violation of court orders; the programs that provide state supplemental payments to persons receiving federal supplemental security income; the program that pays funeral, burial, and cemetery expenses for persons whose estates are insufficient to pay those expenses; and the disease aids program that provide sassistance in paying the costs of medical treatment for eligible persons with cysticfibrosis, hemophilia, or chronic renal (kidney) disease.

I predict Doyle will sign this bill, however.

If not, I'm taking orders for this bumper sticker.

MATC's Outrageous Budget

News Item:

A budget endorsed Tuesday by the Milwaukee Area Technical College Board would increase the school's tax levy 5% in the coming fiscal year, outpacing inflation and contradicting the growing anti-tax sentiment in the state.

Facts from the story:

  • The average pay for a full-time teacher at MATC is $90,845
  • Some full-time faculty earn more than $140,425 by taking on additional teaching duties
  • Roughly $1.3 million would cover staff pay raises
  • The college would set aside $2.2 million in its contingency fund to cover any pay increases that result from ongoing bargaining with teachers
  • $939,000 would finance an increase in fringe benefits
  • $1.6 million would help maintain operations of Milwaukee Public Television
More facts:

  • The Budget would increase spending about 6.3%
  • The $309 million MATC has budgeted for 2006-'07 represents a 32.4% increase from its spending at the start of the decade and tops the rate of inflation for that period by roughly 14 percentage points
  • Since the 2000-'01 budget year, the college has raised its tax levy 42%, from $93.2 million to the $132.6 million
Outrageous.

Is there any other word to describe this budget, these priorities, the impact on area taxpayers?

And folks wonder why taxpayers wanted a state-imposed cap on local revenue and/or spending.

We can thank these clowns for screwing the taxpayers yet again. Note that most of these unelected board members earn their living solely on the backs of taxpayers, or with significant help from the public trough.

Convention Correction

I just received a nice note from Senator Mike Ellis, about whom I blogged I did not see at the GOP Convention in Appleton.

He was there on the convention floor, with the Winnebago County delegation.

So my apologies to the good Senator.

This just reaffirms my notion that this year's convention was more crowded than most.

And it's nice to know that folks in Neenah read this blog.

Dumbing Down the UW System

The University System is de-emphasizing academic prowess and achievement for its admission standards.

Until now, all campuses with the exception of UW-Madison have used set academic requirements such as grade point averages and test scores to make the majority of admissions decisions. The change means no student will be guaranteed admission to the system no matter how good his or her grade point average, test scores or class rank - although these measures will continue to carry the most weight. "There will be no automatic admission, even for top students," said Larry Rubin, the system's assistant vice president for academic and student services.

The holistic review of first-year applicants, to be implemented in 2007, is already being employed at UW-Madison and other selective universities across the country.

There is a growing belief in the admissions world that GPAs, test scores and class rank are an imprecise measure of a student's likely success. A student who enrolled in rigorous classes in high school, for example, may have a lower GPA than a student who took easier coursework.

But it's not just a matter of fairness. A comprehensive review of applicants is required if colleges and universities want to consider race in their admissions.

This will increase the cost of education for all UW System students as more remedial education courses will need to be offered to meet the demand.

Kevin nails it.

Smart, Rich, White Kids Need Not Apply
Where do all the deserving kids who worked their asses off in high school, got good grades, had the extra-curricular activities, prepared themselves for college get to go to complain? I'd say former Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, but blaming her would be too easy.

The Regents are only using Michigan as an excuse to do this. Sadly, Diversity is being used nationwide in Academia as a cover-all to focus more on a campus that ‘looks like America’ not ‘thinks like America’ or even ‘respects America.’

Rick argues this is nothing new for the UW.
UW was apparently dropping out minorities and considering them separately where necessary. That's too transparent. They need to be opaque. That's what this is about. I am fairly sure that UW has been trying to get the "best" minority numbers that it could all along and that it will continue to do so. I am not sure you're going to see much change in who gets in and who does not.
Owen's take:
It is outrageous that our university system is going to systematically discriminate against kids for things that are completely outside of their control. And for what? So liberal white guilt can be appeased and university officials can feel good about themselves at night when they go to bed in their ivory towers.

Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Feingold on Hayden

United States Senator Russ Feingold votes against Bush CIA nominee.

Shocking news.

Headline could have read:

Feingold Wishes to Reconstruct Wall Between Intelligence Agencies
Sees No Need to Conduct Surveillance on Americans Speaking to those with Ties to Terror Suspects

The most interesting nugget from his statement:
Having finally been briefed about this program last week, I am more convinced than ever that it is illegal.
Nice to see he waited til he got all the facts on the program before he blasted away and appeared on every Sunday morning talk show who would take his call.

File this release under: Why is this News?

Jim Doyle and State Employees

Heh.
Senator Kanavas: Doyle to Reach Job Goal by 2029
(Madison, WI)….State Senator Ted Kanavas (R-Brookfield) announced today that Governor Jim Doyle, at his current pace, will reach his goal of eliminating 10,000 jobs from the state payroll in 2029.

During Doyle’s campaign for Governor in 2002, he promised to cut 10,000 state employees by the year 2010. According to information obtained from the non-partisan Legislative Fiscal Bureau, from 2002 to 2005 only 1,490 jobs have been eliminated, an average of 372.5 jobs per year.

“I am pleased the Governor going to reach his goal, but his math was a little off. If Governor Doyle is serious about eliminating the bureaucracy in Madison, he had better get cracking. We are more than halfway to 2010, and he has not made one-quarter of the job cuts,” Kanavas said.

Governor Doyle’s plan was to eliminate full-time equivalent jobs from all funds to downsize the government to its size in 1986. However, Governor Doyle is not even close to attaining that goal.

“I support streamlining government and cutting jobs at the state level. But, it’s difficult to draw any conclusion other than the Governor did not intend to fulfill that promise,” Kanavas concluded.
Isn't it a bit unfair to actually expect Governor Doyle to keep his word, now...all of a sudden?

Recipe for Voter Fraud in Wisconsin

Prediction:

We have a recipe for voter fraud here in Wisconsin.

A group that backs rights for non citizens is now also sponsoring a voter drive.

You don't need a photo id to prove who you are at the polls.

Anyone else see a problem here?
Local organizations will join in a national effort this summer to produce a million new voters and citizens and urge them to get involved in government.

At a news conference at City Hall this morning, Christine Neumann-Ortiz, director of Voces De La Frontera, an immigrant worker rights organization, said her organization along with other Wisconsin groups will participate in the "We are America" campaign, a national effort to register poor and working class people as voters and to encourage those eligible for citizenship to become naturalized.

The new effort grew out of the recent marches nationwide that sent thousands into the streets to push for comprehensive changes in immigration laws, she said. "We need people to get involved and to take back the government," she said.

In addition to Voces, Wisconsin Citizen Action and the Milwaukee Innercity Congregations Allied for Hope (MICAH) will be involved in the voter drive and citizenship effort that's being called "Democracy Summer."Nationally, the coalition includes the Center for Community Change, the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles and the Service Employees International Union.
We know Voces De La Frontera as the group that tried to intimidate Senator Cathy Stepp. So I think it's legitimate to question their commitment to honoring the democratic system.

How Use Tawkin'?

Your Linguistic Profile::
70% General American English
15% Upper Midwestern
10% Yankee
0% Dixie
0% Midwestern



h/t Dean

What Does Doug LaFollette Do All Day?

What does Wisconsin's Secretary of State do all day?

Milwaukee Magazine's Bruce Murphy wants to know.

A recent story in Madison’s Isthmus suggested that the office now functions “as a huge government filing cabinet where one can find land deeds, oaths of office and the complete Blue Book collection since 1853. The secretary’s most notable task is affixing the state’s Great Seal to all of the official acts of the governor.”

The office is a moldy artifact of the 19th century, back before the explosion of agencies run by the governor. The Secretary of State’s minimal duties could be easily and more efficiently absorbed by the executive branch. I’m guessing any staffer with a strong hand could affix the Great Seal.

Tribes Have a Friend in Diamond Jim Doyle

It's really nice having friends. It is even better to have really good friends, because good friends are much more likely to do you a favor.

Take for example, Governor Doyle. I'll bet tribal gaming interests who are looking to for a massive expansion in off-reservation casinos in this state consider him a very good friend. Why? Because Governor Doyle appears to be getting ready to veto a bill which would allow the legislature an up or down vote on all off-reservation proposals (AB 461).

Currently, once a tribe receives approval from the Bureau of Indian Affairs to build an off-reservation gaming facility, the request only needs the Governor's signature to allow such expansion. One signature means one-stop shopping for the tribes. Legislative oversight, as detailed in AB461, would give the legislature a say in any off-reservation expansion decision.

This check and balance seems to make sense.

It even made sense to Governor Doyle too, as AG and as Governor-Elect.

Once elected though, it didn't make sense to him anymore. Since being elected, Doyle has negotiated and signed compacts allowing the exponential growth of gaming in Wisconsin , over a billion dollars spent on expansion to help house nearly 17,000 slots machines and nearly 300 Vegas-style table games, at eighteen different facilities spread across the state. In fact, he's even permitted one tribe to build five new casinos without any local approval.

So, why has Governor Doyle had a change of heart when it comes to supporting legislative oversight? The list of weak excuses Doyle's shared publicly for vetoing legislative oversight don't include the one that matters most: good friends stick together.

I'll bet you a bumper sticker that Doyle vetoes the bill, as fast as he can.

Monday, May 22, 2006

24 Finale

Spoiler alert.

Your thoughts on tonight's two-hour season finale of 24?

I fear we'll look back at the scene where Bierko nodded to the CTU Van driver a few episodes back as the moment that the series jumped the shark.

As for tonight's plot twists, while the show was interesting, I saw them all coming. From the First Lady sleeping with the enemy to the planting of the listening device on the President...From the kidnapping of Jack to the identity of his captors, each turn was anticipated.

The writers usually surprise me. Perehaps after five years we've all been trained to think three steps ahead.

Either way, the show is still better than 90 percent of what's on television.

Former NJ Governor's New Book

Is the former governor of New Jersey so hard up for money that he wrote this book?

Jim McGreevey shockingly admits that before he became governor of New Jersey, he'd have anonymous gay sex at Garden State highway rest stops.

"All I knew was that my behavior was getting crazier and crazier," McGreevey says of his torrid truck-stop trysts in an upcoming book that details his tortured life of lies and sexual repression.

"With each new encounter, I was getting nearer and nearer to being caught - which surely would have generated headlines, especially after I became executive director of the state parole board" in the mid-1980s.
We think we have it bad here in Wisconsin. At least Governor Doyle is merely screwing taxpayers as governor.

Of course the actions of his (now former) parole board chair have been much worse...

McGreevy was not forced to resign because, as he said in his farewell speech, he was a 'Gay American.' His transgression was the hiring of a foreign national with no law enforcement experience to serve as his homeland security advisor.

When McGreevey was elected governor in 2001, he quickly appointed Cipel to a cushy $110,000-a-year homeland security job - even though Cipel was an Israeli citizen who couldn't sit in on sensitive security briefings.

Like most Israelis, Cipel had served in the military, but he was a paper-pusher in the Israeli Navy.

"He wasn't a warrior or anything," said an Israeli source.

Critics denounced McGreevey for treating a vital post-9/11 position like a patronage post. But McGreevey stood by his man, shifting him to an undefined "special counsel" job at the same high salary.

New Jersey newspapers hinted at a closer relationship between the two men, noting they had traveled together, and hounded both men to explain why Cipel was paid $110,000 a year to do nothing.

In 2002, the Star-Ledger of Newark detailed McGreevey's unusual effort to help Cipel get an apartment near the governor's Woodbridge home. "McGreevey took time out from his transition plans to accompany Cipel on a last-minute walk-through of the townhouse," the Star-Ledger reported.

The same article quoted Cipel as saying he "wanted to have a place that was in close proximity to where the governor was because he was a personal adviser on call 24 hours."

Cipel eventually left the state payroll to work for two public relations firms with close ties to McGreevey. But both let him go - one after just a month - because he did not show up for work enough.


While the homosexual relationship may have made 'good copy,' the outrage for NJ taxpayers centered around the fact that Cipel was pulling down $110,000 for a post in which he was clearly not qualified.

That's McGreevey's shame.

I can't believe he wrote this book.

Decision 2008 in the Dairy State

George Allen won this year, Condi Rice, last year's winner, took 4th place.

Yet, the Wispolitics.com straw poll showed that no one potential 2008 presidential candidate has a clear lead among convention delegates.

**Which possible 2008 presidential candidate do you currently favor?
_ George Allen, 61
_ Sam Brownback, 11
_ Bill Frist, 8
_ Newt Gingrich, 53
_ Rudy Giuliani, 60
_ Chuck Hagel, 1
_ Mike Huckabee, 2
_ John McCain, 37
_ George Pataki, 4
_ Condi Rice, 50
_ Mitt Romney, 40
_ Tom Tancredo, 8
_ Write In, 7
No response, 15

More Republican Party of Wisconsin convention coverage here and here.

Convention Wrap Up

Still coming down from what was a great convention for JB Van Hollen, the one statewide campaign I am working on.

Owen, Kevin, Sean, Joey and Jenna have their takes posted, and Wispolitics offered more specifics than any newspaper or broadcast outlet.

Check out their convention blog.

Overall, while the convention was more interesting than I expected, I wish the convention had more meaning. I'd like to see the state party cancel the odd year conventions and give the even year conventions more significance. Obviously I have a reason to think this way this year, but I wish the endorsement process was more prominent, better thought out and better cultivated. The state party should do a better job of publicizing the platform and resolutions in the weeks before the convention, and the reports from elected officials should be moved to Sunday morning.

(Frankly, what would make the conventions really interesting and elections in Wisconsin more competitive would be to move the Primary up from September to June, but incumbents of both parties are hell bent to prevent that from ever happening.)

Mark Green had a better convention than I anticipated, and weathered the Tommy media buzz admirably.

Jean Hundertmark was a positive ball of energy as always and Paul Ryan and Jim Sensenbrenner were on fire as well.

There were some duds of course. Congressman Petri shouldn't be allowed to do more than the Pledge of Allegiance and our 'slate' of US Senate candidates is downright pathetic. Yet overall, it was a good convention, and as I said, a great one for JB.

The Early Spin Podcast

The Early Spinsters surprised me with a 7 am call this morning.

They are now podcasting the entire show.

To hear my take on the just-concluded RPW state convention, click here and listen to hour 2, part 2.

Madeline Albright Fears Bush's Faith

These comments by Albright are interesting, considering President Bush has made more mention of Islam and has spoken more positively of that religion than either of her former bosses ever did.

President Bush's certitude about what he believes in, and the division between good and evil, is, I think, different," said Albright, who has just published a book on religion and world affairs. "The absolute truth is what makes Bush so worrying to some of us."

Bush, a Republican, has openly acknowledged his Christian faith informs his decisions as president. He says, for example, that he prayed to God for guidance before invading Iraq.

Some Muslims have accused him of waging a crusade against Islam, comparable with those of the Middle Ages.

The White House says it has nothing against Islam, but against those who commit terrorist atrocities in its name.

But Albright says Bush's religious absolutism has made U.S. foreign policy "more rigid and more difficult for other countries to accept."


Albright seems to put a lot of concern into being liked and accepted. Being liked is easy. When you can be pushed around, it's easy to understand why you are accepted/liked by those doing the pushing.

More Liberal Tolerance on Display

I'm not the biggest Mc Cain fan, but you have to shake your head at this latest display of liberal academia's tolerance for ideological diversity and debate.

The jeers, boos and insults flew, as caustic as any that angry New Yorkers have hurled inside Madison Square Garden. The objects of derision yesterday, however, were not the hapless New York Knicks, but Senator John McCain, the keynote speaker at the New School graduation, and his host, Bob Kerrey, the university president.

Senator John McCain delivered the keynote speech at the New School's graduation ceremonies. No sooner had Mr. Kerrey welcomed the audience to the university's 70th commencement than the hoots began to rise through the Theater at Madison Square Garden. Several graduates held up a banner aimed at Mr. McCain, an Arizona Republican and likely 2008 presidential candidate, declaring: "Our commencement is not your platform." Other students and faculty members waved orange fliers with the same message.

Liberals Hate Guns, Don't Understand Gun Owners

Liberal Wisconsin State Journal Columnist Susan Lambert Smith attended the NRA convention in Milwaukee last weekend. Her report paints a truly compassionate and open minded portrait of people with whom she disagrees (sarcasm alert).

Oh, and we're supposed to feel sorry for her because she felt intimidated by the looks she received when she didn't stand for the national anthem.