This Just In ...
Kevin Fischer is a veteran broadcaster, the recipient of over 150 major journalism awards from the Milwaukee Press Club, the Wisconsin Associated Press, the Northwest Broadcast News Association, the Wisconsin Bar Association, and others. He has been seen and heard on Milwaukee TV and radio stations for over three decades. A longtime aide to state Senate Republicans in the Wisconsin Legislature, Kevin can be seen offering his views on the news on the public affairs program, "InterCHANGE," on Milwaukee Public Television Channel 10, and heard filling in on Newstalk 1130 WISN. He lives with his wife, Jennifer, and their lovely baby daughter, Kyla Audrey, in Franklin.
Warmer weather late next week...you know what that means
After this great weekend, we cool off just a bit before temps go back into the mid to upper 70's next Thursday and Friday.
Watch for some schools to get calls of phony bomb threats.
My most popular blogs
As I post every Sunday, here are the top five most popular of my blog entries from the previous week:
1) *BREAKING NEWS*
2) This blog is about Janet Evans
3) Elvis = ubiquitous
4) Culinary no-no #56
5) Ted Kennedy and my cousin
You never know who's reading....
The Barking Lot!
That's the weekly dog blog that my wife and I (but mostly my wife) post every Saturday.
Late last night, we received this e-mail:
Hi Jennifer,
Ask yourself and draw your own conclusion...
Would this happen at:
Lakefront Festival of the Arts?
Cedarburg Strawberry Festival?
Pride Fest?
Polish Fest?
Bastille Days?
Festa Italiana?
German Fest?
Irish Fest?
Indian Summer?
Arab World Fest?
Fiesta Mexicana?
African World Festival?
Labor Fest?
State Fair?
Tosa Fest?
Most neighborhood church festivals?
Great Circus Parade?
Yet another ramification of high gas prices...
The outta sight numbers at the pump have caused numerous headaches.
Add another...
How about a Fountains of Franklin update?
1) A DQ Chill and Grill. Or is it a DQ Grill and Chill? Anyway, cue the studio audience;
Oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooohhhhhhhhhh!
2) An Azana Spa and Salon.
Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!
Yeh, yeh, yeh, super, that’s all fine and swell.
Now, is it too much to ask when the groundbreaking will actually be for these, AHEM, projects that all of Franklin is on pins and needles anxiously awaiting?
Or do we have to wait months and months and months and months for that, too?
And if you’re keeping score at home, fans:
# of upscale dining venues at FOF: ZERO
# of upscale shopping venues at FOF: ZERO
Go ahead, crank your air conditioning

The LA Times reports if you're using certain strategies in hopes of increasing gas mileage as prices at the pump shoot for the moon, forget it. You're wasting your time.
Myths about getting better gas mileage debunked
There are plenty of legitimate ways to stretch your mileage: slow down, keep tires at proper inflation, avoid quick acceleration, don't pile luggage on a roof rack, use a properly fitted gas cap.
But at this time of skyrocketing gasoline prices, several myths are circulating. The claims were tested by car experts at the Automobile Club of Southern California and Consumer Reports magazine.
Fill up in the morning
The theory is that gas expands in warm weather, so if you visit the filling station early in the day when the temperature is cooler, you get denser fuel that contains more energy per gallon. In other words, fill up when it's cool to get more bang for your gasoline buck.
There's nothing wrong with the theory, except that it doesn't apply in this situation. That's because gas station storage tanks are so well-insulated these days that outside temperature has little effect.
"The key thing is the temperature of the gas when the tanker truck leaves it at the gas station," said Steve Mazor, manager of the auto club's research center. "If it's hot, it will stay hot, and vice versa."
No matter what time of day you fill up.
Change your air filter
The test team at Consumer Reports was sure that a car would get better mileage with a clean rather than a dirty air filter.
"It stands to reason that if the air is allowed to flow freely, it would result in better fuel economy," spokesman Douglas Love said.
To do the test, the team used duct tape to partially cover the air intake, simulating a dirty filter. And the result?
"We were surprised to find out it didn't much matter," Love said. "The mileage was about the same."
So, testers added a bit more tape and then some more. Short of blocking off all the air, they got the same results.
"We found that the onboard computers that adjust the fuel mixtures on recent cars did a surprisingly effective job," he said.
The auto club ran a test with clean and dirty fuel filters on several different cars. Results were similar.
"There was even one test where the mileage got a little bit better -- maybe 1% or 2% -- with the dirty filter," Mazor said.
But before you count the money you can save in air filters, there is a price to pay.
"The trade-off was that carbon monoxide emissions went up," he said.
Turn off your car's a/c
Americans are the best
The 3rd annual Index of Global Philanthropy is out.
You’re not thrilled, you say?
Consider this.
The Index tells how generous, how philanthropic countries around the world really are.
Most other countries hate us.
Maybe we should just stop sending them our private cash if they feel that way because when it comes to helping others, no one is better than the good ol’ United States. In fact no one comes close.
Conservative columnist Star Parker writes, “When consolidating all assistance funds flowing from the United States to developing countries, the total is $129.8 billion. This is the total of government aid, philanthropy and remittances – funds sent directly by private individuals to other private parties in developing countries, often family members. A far second in total giving behind the United States is the United Kingdom at $20.7 billion.”
Parker attributes the findings to the fact we are a compassionate people and we don’t need the public sector to make us that way.
Here’s her entire column.
And if you’re really adventurous, here’s the report on the Index.
Greendale kids make a really tough sacrifice
Watch. (click on play button on video)
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Wonder if they gave in and watched themselves on this report...
Remember to vote on Tuesday
No, that’s not a misprint.
Tuesday really is Election Day.
That’s right.
June 3, 2008.
In the Winneconne School District.
Voters go to the polls to vote on whether to approve exceeding revenue limits for two consecutive years by $880,000 each year. This special referendum comes after a failed referendum April 1 that asked voters to exceed revenue limits by $1.19 million in 2008-09, and $1.45 million the next year.
As we know, those who support referenda that increase taxes, spending and exceeding revenue limits have a complete lack of understanding of the meaning of the electorate when it says loudly and clearly, “no.”
Referendum backers in Winneconne have a formed a group called, “Vote Yes for Winneconne,” and they, like any other public school machine have been quite busy, cranking out ads and mass mailings and organizing a telephone-calling campaign to reach more than 2,000 Winneconne School District residents to remind them to vote.
It’s interesting that the vote yes crowd readily admits the Winneconne School District is, in one of the group member’s words, “superior with high graduation rates and high test scores.”
But they erroneously believe the results are due to cold, hard tax money, not the concerted efforts of teachers, parents, and students. They have, as expected, started to play the “sky is falling card” if the referendum fails.
There’s a major problem with this election. It comes at a non-election time. It is not customary to hold an election when the majority of voters are more concerned about graduations, weddings, vacations, gardening, and whether it’s going to be a brat or Italian on the grill. Meanwhile, the tax and spenders are extremely organized, having worked for some time to get the vote out, attempting to take full advantage of a disengaged citizenry and low turnout.
During the 2005-06 legislative session, then-Senate President, state Senator Alan Lasee authored legislation, Senate Bill 171 (SB 171) that would have prohibited a school district from calling a special election for the purposes of authorizing borrowing or exceeding revenue limits. Lasee was motivated by the Madison School Board’s approval of a $48.1 million dollar referendum that was held on May 24, 2005, just a few days before the start of Memorial Day weekend. The Racine School district had scheduled a repeat referendum in June 2005 that had previously failed.
Lasee’s common-sense bill would have only allowed school referenda to be held on regular election days when the states voting population is accustomed to going to the polls and exercising their right to vote.
The senator testified about his bill in front of a state Senate committee in early May 2005:
“This bill will allow each taxpayer the ability to have their voice heard and their vote counted for increases on their property tax bill. This practice of pulling the wool over the taxpayer’s eyes needs to stop immediately. The school boards need to be contained from ramming through multi-million dollar referendums when no one is expecting a vote. There needs to be uniformity and predictability for the voters, as their pocketbooks are being affected each time a school referendum is held.
Some School boards argue they cannot be bound by the normal election cycle. They may need a referendum for emergency purposes. I believe that it is the duty of the school board members and administrators to have a contingency or an emergency fund available for unforeseen obstacles.
As I examined the statewide referendums it seems that a majority of referendums are held at odd times and voter turnout has been low.
It is time to stop pulling the wool over taxpayer’s eyes.”
Back in the 90’s, after several referendum failures, Franklin went to the drawing board again and this time succeeded, after a summertime special election.
Lasee’s bill was approved by the state Senate and Assembly and was presented to Governor Doyle on January 5, 2006. Doyle vetoed the bill the very next day.
If proponents of increased taxing and spending so firmly believe in their cause, then they should have no problem with taking their case to voters during traditional election periods.
It's time to get serious about the Fountains of Franklin
In my second blog on FranklinNOW.com, I wrote a lengthy piece about the huge potential of Frankin, including some thoughts about our developments:
“I must admit, I am a bit impatient. I want to see these developments sooner rather than later. Construction on both the Shops of Wyndham Village and the Fountains of Franklin is set to begin this spring. And yet a huge gas station is being built right now at a furious pace at the corner of 51st and Rawson. Yes we need places to fill up our tanks. Let’s not wait too long to get going on these other projects.
I had the opportunity to meet David Hintzman, President of Equitable Development LLC, one of the developers of the Fountains of Franklin. He impresses me as being fully dedicated to making the project work, complete with much sought after amenities and attractive architecture and landscaping. My advice to Hintzman: crank up the public relations/marketing campaign. I would venture to guess a great deal of Franklin has no idea how ambitious or enticing the Fountains of Franklin is. Heck, I bet a lot of people have never heard about it, period. Get the word out, pitch your project, and make people aware of what you’re planning in your office where I see the lights on late quite frequently. Get the media to do stories, and update your web site ASAP.”
---This Just In, January 29, 2007
Since then, I have posted a number of good-natured jabs at Fountains of Franklin, a development that is moving at a snail’s pace. Hintzman and I have talked many times since, and he understands my blogs have been a matter of impatience because I want the doggone project to open, grow, and succeed.
Guess what? My patience with this white elephant has just about run out.
Tonight, I sent the following e-mail to Franklin Mayor Tom Taylor, some Franklin aldermen, Cal Patterson, Director of Finance & Treasurer for the city of Franklin, Mark Luberda, Director of Administration for the city of Franklin, and John Neville, reporter for FranklinNOW.
The e-mail is self-explanatory. I will keep you posted.
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Dear city of Franklin officials:
I write to you as a concerned city of Franklin resident and taxpayer. As a staunch supporter of economic development and continued growth and progress in Franklin, I am deeply concerned about the disappointingly slow pace and lack of progress at what should be an encouraging project, the Fountains of Franklin.
Specifically, I am troubled at the ghost town atmosphere at the site located at 56th and Rawson, the site of the office headquarters and the proposed location of promised upscale shops, restaurants, and other tenants.
Mr. Patterson, I respectfully request, not for myself, but for all taxpayers in Franklin, that you prepare, using your expertise and the resources available to you, an analysis of the monthly lost tax revenue to the city of Franklin caused by the continued dormant site at 56th and Rawson. How much tax revenue is it costing the city of Franklin each and every month that site fails to operate with open businesses?
Mr. Patterson, I mean no disrespect, but given recent requests made of you to prepare economic documents containing individual property tax data, this should not be difficult.
Alderman Sohns, I have included you on this e-mail because you represent the site in question.
Alderman Wilhelm, as my alderman, if my request is inadequate or inappropriate, I kindly ask that as my representative on the Common Council, you make the official request on my behalf.
I am interested in any economic impact data in addition to any and all information about lost tax revenue due to the site being undeveloped. Though I support the Fountains of Franklin project, I have grown impatient with empty promises and the total lack of activity at the site. What had been suggested at the site falls far below expectations of the Franklin public that anticipated and deserved far better that what has been announced to date.
At this point, I am interested in and request hard numerical data as to how much the city loses because Fountains of Franklin has failed to deliver.
In the interest of full disclosure, I plan to publish any and all responses given to me by any of the parties in receipt of this e-mail on my blog on the FranklinNOW.com website.
I sincerely thank you for your consideration and your prompt response to my request on behalf of all taxpayers in the city of Franklin.
Kevin Fischer
Alderman Sohns and the bloggers' property tax records
It’s been well-documented on these blogs that Franklin Alderman Lyle Sohns at a recent Common Council meeting brandished individual property tax records of Franklin bloggers. In the case of Greg Kowalski who doesn’t pay property taxes, Sohns had the records of Kowalski’s mother.
Some bloggers speculated that Cal Patterson, Director of Finance & Treasurer for the city of Franklin compiled the data on city time, and I made a reference to that as well in my last blog.
Alderman Sohns sent me an e-mail today to respond to my request about Fountains of Franklin. In the e-mail, he offered this clarification about the property tax files:
‘It’s important that you know that Mr. Patterson did not prepare the ‘economic documents containing individual property tax data’ that I believe you are referring to. I personally collected the data and prepared the presentation material myself. I went to the Assessors Office with addresses in hand and requested the historic assessment values for the properties I chose for my sample. The same information is available to you or anyone else as a matter of public record, for the same modest fee that I paid.”
Make the tax cuts permanent
President Bush wants tax cuts set to expire to be made permanent. If the tax cuts go away, the President fears an already slumping economy will only get worse, and he’s right.
Our country just marked the 5th anniversary of the tax cuts. Ed Feulner, President of the Heritage Foundation writes about the benefits of the tax cuts:
Five years ago, Congress and the president agreed to accelerate the key provisions of the 2001 tax act that:
- Doubled the child tax credit to $1,000 per child.
- Fixed the “marriage penalty” -- that quirk of the tax code that forced couples filing jointly to pay more that singles filing separately.
- Expanded the earned-income credit for married joint filers.
- Created a 10 percent tax bracket for low-income taxpayers.
- Reduced marginal tax rates across the board.
These cuts gave people an incentive to work, save and invest. The results have been impressive.
Although the media harps on our current economic woes, it’s important to note that with the tax cuts in place, the economy started growing almost immediately, adding jobs every month from August 2003 until January of this year. More than 8 million new jobs were created during those years, keeping unemployment low and providing steady growth (economic growth rates have more than doubled) for the overall economy.
Without the cuts, the White House estimates Americans would have paid an additional $1.3 trillion in taxes by the end of last year.
Ironically, these cuts also tilted our tax system so the rich shoulder a bigger share of the total tax burden. According to IRS statistics, the top 5 percent of income earners paid more than half (59.7 percent) of all income taxes in 2005. That’s the highest percentage since the government started keeping track in the mid-1980s.
Meanwhile, tax revenues have been rising. In 2003, federal revenues equaled 16.1 percent of our economy. Two years later, that percentage had climbed to 17.4 -- then to 18.6 the following year. Instead of starving our government of funds, the correct type of tax cuts have stimulated growth and thus increased overall tax revenue.
Meanwhile, Congressional Democrats want to make the tax cuts disappear and implement the largest tax increase in the history of our country.
Americans for Tax Reform has begun a series of releases documenting the effects such a tax increase would have on real American families.
Yes, I have referred to conservative sources for this blog.
What will be the typical liberal responses?
The tax cuts were for the rich!
We have to invest in our future!
America needs a change!
Bumper sticker slogans, devoid of facts, spoken like the true tax and spenders they are.
The left has Barbara Streisand and Chevy Chase...
The right has Chuck Norris who has turned into quite a columnist.
In his latest offering, Norris writes:
“The fact is John McCain is absolutely right. Barack doesn't have a clue what really is going on in Iraq. And Obama will eat some humble military pie if he goes there. The way I see it, he's going to face at least three major surprises.”
What are the three surprises?
Find out here.
John McCain's sons
John McCain rarely talks about his sons.
I wish he would.
He has a lot to be proud of.
This is the man who will be heading the Democrat ticket in November
I've been meaning to blog this for several days but haven't gotten around to it, so forgive me for being a bit tardy.It seems appropriate now, given that Barack Obama has enough delegates to get the donkey party nomination.
This was written last week by columnist Jim Murphy on the conservative blog, The Absurd Report:
"Let me first address a couple of statements made within the past week by the world’s smartest and most articulate human. That of course would be Barack Hussein Obama. First he appears a bit confused about exactly what the point of Memorial Day actually is.
Now for anyone who resides in The Peoples’ Republic of San Francisco let me briefly explain why we have a commemorative holiday on Memorial Day. Memorial Day is observed on the last Monday in May and it is to commemorate men and women who perished while in military service to their country. It was originally known as Decoration Day and was to honor Union Soldiers who perished in the Civil War. It was expanded after World War I to include American casualties of any war or military action.
Now with this in mind, while in New Mexico, the world’s smartest human tells a crowd that he was there to honor those people, “Many of whom, I see here today.” Now I realize that some speech writer probably thought this sounded good and thought it would convince those of us who don’t really believe that Barack Hussein Obama is very well in tune with our military, that he in fact was barely below Audie Murphy in military knowledge and courage.
Now you would think that after this was pointed out to the world’s smartest human that he might be a bit more cautious before he laid claim to any knowledge of our military or history of same. Ah, but you would be wrong. I also saw a clip of Barack Hussein Obama while making a speech before another group make a statement that his uncle had participated in the rescue of prisoners from the German Concentration Camp at Auschwitz. Now unless his uncle was in the Russian military, I don’t believe that this would have been possible. Of course as it turned out it was a great uncle and he did enter a concentration camp near Buchenwald at the end of World War II. I am sure that this was bad enough but of course Barack had to add to it to really make us proud of his ancestors.
Now that was not such a really bad mistake and I certainly am not trying to belittle any military veteran, particularly one who saw the horror of one of the Nazi concentration camps, BUT this guy wants to be our next Commander In Chief and can you just imagine what the mainstream media would make of it had this inaccurate statement been made by President Bush or John McCain or Dick Cheney. Also one must ask themselves why this guy feels like he must be viewed as coming from a military background. Or could it be that he has just been involved in a contest with the Clintons and feels like lying is not so bad.
That should have been enough screw ups for the world’s smartest human, but not necessarily. Barack Hussein Obama also took care of a speaking engagement for “Fat Teddy” at Wesleyan University in which he became confused with the name of the University and called it “Wellsleyan” which brought laughter from the audience. The point is that he evidently has a bit of a problem with either his articulation or even in some cases the truth or in some cases just plain doesn’t have a clue. Anyway the mainstream media is in the tank for this guy and as time goes by, the more incompetent he appears and how frightening it is to think that this liberal socialist bozo could actually be elected to the most powerful position on the planet. God save us if this idiot is elected."
Amen, brother.
Just keep talkin' Barack.
Just keep drifting off the script.
That's when the facade melts, and America gets to learn more and more about the real Barack Hussein Obama.
Go Lakers
The NBA Finals begin Thursday night with one of the classic rivalries in the history of the sport: The Boston Celtics vs. the Los Angeles Lakers.
During the 60’s, I enjoyed watching the Celtics, most likely because they were on TV all the time.
ABC broadcast the NBA games, once a week, on Sunday afternoons. And more often than it not, you saw Boston. Chris Schenkel and Jack Twyman were the announcers.
Bill Russell had the unusual role of being the player-coach for the Celtics. Can you imagine someone trying to pull that off today?
I stopped rooting for Boston when Milwaukee got the Bucks and I haven’t liked the Celtics ever since.
Remember the NBA Finals in 1974, game 6 in Boston. Boston is up 3 games to 2 against the Bucks. Milwaukee forced a game 7 back at the Milwaukee Arena when Kareem Abdul-Jabbar’s sky-hook from the right baseline won the game in double-overtime.
The Bucks lost that seventh and deciding game and have not been back to the NBA Finals.
Many fans won’t be able to stomach cheering for Kobe Bryant, but the Laker star is the best player in the NBA right now.
Pau Gasol is a hustling, gritty player that would be a fan favorite in Milwaukee.
I’m rooting for the Lakers because of the great human interest story of Derek Fisher, one that I've discussed on WISN. Fisher’s love and dedication to his young daughter who has suffered from cancer in the eye is touching and inspiring.
Here’s one of the latest articles updating the saga of Fisher and his daughter.
DON'T FORGET TO VOTE IN THE 2008 BEST IN FRANKLIN-AREA DINING SURVEY
Nice...
Members of the 395th Ordnance Company out of the Army Reserve Center on Ballard Road in Appleton, WI, returned home after a year-long tour in Iraq on Wednesday, June 4, 2008. (Appleton Post-Crescent)
The NBA Finals begin tonight: Why the Celtics won't win the title
It's very simple.
Who's going to guard Kobe?
Ray Allen?
Please.....
Conduct unbecoming of a governor
The Daily Telegram in Superior lays the smack down on Governor Doyle for trash talking about GM:

EDITORIAL: Doyle’s trash talk unfitting for a governor
The Daily Telegram - 06/04/2008
Trash talk is generally used by athletes who are trying to unnerve their opponents, but Gov. Jim Doyle resorted to tough, biting language in Janesville Tuesday in chastising General Motors for announcing its truck plant will close.
“After all the years of work and everything the people of Janesville have given, it is tough to stomach what GM is doing here today,” he said in a speech at the facility. “So many people here have put their hearts into building trucks at the Janesville assembly plant, and now they are left with a cold decision that casts them aside. We all feel it in our guts.”
He didn’t stop there.
“It should have been obvious long ago that the future was not where GM was headed. Bad corporate decisions kept these lines turning out gas guzzlers as fuel prices went from $2 to $3 and now to $4 per gallon. Now we stand here, carrying the burden of those bad corporate decisions — failed leadership that culminated in a calculation that left out the very heart of this company, the workers who built it.”
Doyle’s rhetoric was accepted with cheers by his audience of soured employees, but his lack of diplomacy hardly sets the stage for future investment by GM or other companies.
His frustration with GM manufacturing “gas guzzlers” is logical except for one thing: That’s what a large number of American consumers wanted, and the proof is on every road in Wisconsin. Was GM caught with its pants down as gas prices climbed? Yes. But consumers — lots and lots of them — were armed with the same knowledge and made the very same mistake. And to be sure, GM also manufactures smaller, fuel-efficient models.
You can knock GM, but let’s acknowledge the automaker builds very popular trucks and SUVs, and they yield a high profit margin for the corporation, which answers to people who buy its stock so they can earn dividends. Like it or not, that’s how public companies work.
Noticeably, Doyle’s prepared remarks didn’t address the horrendous legacy costs faced by GM and other domestic automakers. Through decades of contract negotiations, the company has become overburdened by these costs plus work rules that foreign competitors have largely avoided. This is not to say labor is solely to blame. Long ago, GM’s contract negotiators should have fought harder to reduce labor burdens.
While Wisconsin, particularly Janesville, will long suffer from GM’s departure, let’s acknowledge one more thing. By closing four plants, General Motors made the hard decision that was necessary to keep the company afloat. That’s more than can be said of Doyle and state legislators, who face similar budgetary problems. They’re in denial, afraid to make hard decisions that will keep Wisconsin government afloat. But eventually, the bill will come due, and their future decisions may well be as devastating as GM’s.
Barack Obama: The abortion President, if elected
Last weekend, the smartest, most articulate person in the entire world (just ask the glazed over news media), Barack Obama told the Rapid City Journal the following:
“I am not pro-abortion. I think I’ve said repeatedly that I think it’s a moral issue, and a difficult one. What I have said is that ultimately I think women are in a stronger position to make those decisions, in consultation with their pastors and their family and their doctors. But I think we can all agree on the need to reduce unwanted pregnancies that may lead to abortion and I think we can also agree to increase the use of adoptions where possible.”
The quote brought howls and loud laughter from pro-life advocates who know Obama’s position is that he supports abortion anytime, anywhere, anyhow.
“As recently as April 2005, Obama voted against an amendment in the Senate to prevent taxpayer funding of groups that promote or perform abortions in other nations.Obama also voted twice against measures that would help enforce dozens of state laws allowing parents to know when their minor daughter is considering an abortion. Backers of the measures point to numerous instances where teenagers were secretly taken by other people out of state for secret abortions without their parents knowing.
Obama has also come under fire for twice working to prevent a bill in the Illinois state legislature from going to the governor that would have allowed for appropriate medical care when newborn infants survive failed abortions. The bill came after Chicago nurse Jill Stanek discovered cases of infanticide following botched abortions.Meanwhile, the most recent annual report shows Planned Parenthood, for which Obama has backed federal funding, is referring women for fewer adoptions while doing more abortions.”
How can he make these outrageous statements with a straight face?
Easy.
He knows he can get away with them since he won’t be pressed by the starry-eyed lefties with the notepads sitting across from him.
Barack Obama.
The most dangerous candidate to ever receive a party nomination for President.
Conflicting reports on FranklinNOW about school taxes
Reporter John Neville writes on this very website today:“The first draft of the Franklin School District's 2008-09 budget shows a property-tax rate increase of 2.7 percent.
School district taxpayers may see an increase of 29 cents - from $10.89 to $11.18 per $1,000 of assessed value. For the owner of a home with an assessed value of $200,000 that translates to an additional $56.71 per year in estimated property taxes.
Franklin Superintendent Steven Patz said the figures are preliminary and might change more than before the levy is officially certified in late October.”
You’re probably thinking….
Ohhhh.
Wow.
That’s a good deal.
Sounds great.
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NO!
NO!
NO!
NO!
NO!
NO!
NO!
NO!
NO!
NO!
NO!
NO!
Ladies and gentlemen who pay taxes in Franklin, one of the many, many, many ,many municipalities located in Tax Hell, USA (for all you liberals reading and I know there’s a bunch because the liberal blogs are a complete bore), Tax Hell, USA would be:
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WIS-CON-SIN......
Neville reports the tax rate in Franklin could jump 2.7%.
FranklinNOW.com bloggers Janet Evans and Greg Kowalski, who were both at the same School Board meeting that Neville attended to hear this information have both blogged that the tax levy would increase 2.7%.
So this website has conflicting information.
Which one is it?
Is the tax rate or tax levy going up 2.7%?
If Janet or Greg wish to clarify, I’m all ears.
Two important points for taxpayers:
1) It doesn’t matter what the Franklin School Board or Superintendent tells us now. We learned that lesson last year when a promised 5.6% levy increase went to an almost 12% increase when the dust finally settled in October 2007.
2) It’s not the tax rate that’s important. It’s the tax levy!
That’s why, if Janet and Greg are correct, and we ultimately get only a 2.7% tax levy increase, it’s cause for celebration.
If Neville is correct, a proposed 2.7% tax rate increase is….well……meaningless.
If Janet Evans, who hasn’t commented on my blog since Groundhog Day (Gee, Is LOST on TV tonight?) or Greg would like to offer clarification, the welcome mat is out.
Friday night on InterCHANGE
Here are the topics up for discussion Friday night on InterCHANGE at 6:30 on Milwaukee Public Television Channel 10:
1– Janesville & GM.
Thousand of people in Janesville will lose high paying family supporting jobs when General Motors shuts down their assembly plant there. Who is to blame for this? GM management, who kept building gas guzzling SUV’s as the price of gas continued to climb? Or, union workers who make building automobiles in this country so expensive? Will, those jobs ever be replaced? Was it smart for Governor Doyle to rip GM, after all the years of employment it gave to Wisconsin? Is anyone really to blame, or is this old plant just a casualty of the unforeseen high cost of gasoline? You don’t see Honda and Toyota closing any plants? Do they understand the market better than American business people do?
2 – Hillary & Barack.
Hillary is finally going to give it up, and throw her support to Obama. Millions of people voted for Hillary, does Obama need their support? Will she be his running mate? Can he win without her? Why did she lose? Does she have any negotiating power any more? Can McCain beat Obama?
3– RiverSplash.
Should Milwaukee do away with the RiverSplash festival because of one violent incident? The mayor, police chief, and the alderman all rip into the bar owners for supplying too much alcohol and not enough security. Do the clubs on Old World Third Street attract a trouble making clientele? Do the clubs on Water Street attract a better clientele?
Alderman Sohns and our tax records
When Franklin Alderman Lyle Sohns brandished the property tax records of Franklin bloggers at a recent Common Council meeting, I wasn’t exactly thrilled.
Sohns’ stunt was ill-advised.
It was foolish.
It backfired.
Now we hear this.
C'mon, folks.
What Sohns did certainly wasn’t criminal.
This one needs to go in the circular file.
Coming up on This Just In...
Tonight at 11:30, two legendary bands on Friday Night Live.
Saturday, Week-ends and The Barking Lot
Sunday, Culinary no-no.
The Chicago Sun-Times wants to know...
Here ya go guys.
Of course, this is a silly exercise.
Everybody knows the Brewers have the hottest baseball fans!
Something to think about at the grocery store...
The government claims there are 57 ways to use gasoline.
We’re not talking steak sauce here, folks.
But we are talking about products consumers like to purchase.
More negative effects of high gas prices, beyond the cost of food.
Read the details…
Guaranteed to drive liberals crazy in just a matter of moments...
From CNN.com:
Wal-Mart (WMT, Fortune 500) reported on Thursday a 3.9% same-store-sales gain for May, excluding the impact of fuel sales. That was more than double the 1.6% gain expected by Thomson Reuters analysts, and it's more than triple last year's gain of 1.1% for the month. Same-store sales are recorded from stores open at least a year.Including gasoline, which soared in price over the past month, May same-store sales rose 4.4%.
"We're seeing some benefits from the stimulus checks," Wal-Mart Chief Executive Eduardo Castro-Wright said in a press release. The stimulus, he said, combined with other factors including "price leadership," contributed to the sales increase."
Customers continue to rely on Wal-Mart to stretch their dollars," said Castro-Wright. He reported that grocery sales were strong, as well as sales for flatscreen TVs, computers and digital electronics.
Wal-Mart Chief Financial Officer Tom Schoewe said in a teleconference that $350 million worth of stimulus checks were cashed at Wal-Mart stores during the month of May, but it was unclear what that money was spent on.
Consumers are choosing to make purchases at big, bad, evil corporate giant Wal-Mart.
Why?
Because they can save lots of money, that’s why.
That is NOT a bad thing.
Friday Night Live
Tonight’s guests are:
The Eagles.........and Blood, Sweat and Tears.
In the early 70’s, ABC-TV began airing a weekly series of programs late Friday nights around midnight called, “In Concert.”
Every name in every musical genre seemed to play on the show. The performers were taped in various venues, sometimes in small theaters, other times at Madison Square Garden.
Don Henley and Glenn Frey met in 1971 in California as members of Linda Ronstadt's band. They wanted to start their own band, and did. Their first single, "Take It Easy" made them worldwide stars, and their 1973 album “Desperado” launched the group’s reputation for storytelling compositions. In 1998, the Eagles were inducted into the Rock N' Roll Hall of Fame. Here they are in 1973:
Week-ends
A look back at the people and events that made news the past week.
Week-ends is a regular weekly feature of This Just In...
HEROES OF THE WEEK
Returning vets
Men in high heels
Michael and Eileen Schmalz
Norma Haddad and the family that assisted her.
VILLAINS OF THE WEEK
Phillip A. Geissler and LaVonne Tillery
Organ donation company
Con artist
Georgia high school baseball pitcher and catcher
QUOTES OF THE WEEK
"I kicked him between his legs with both feet."
84 year old Norma Haddad, describing how she survived a carjacking in downtown Milwaukee.
“It was like hearing about a death in the family. This is a kick in the gut. GM repeatedly told me that Janesville was the best work force and most productive plant. Everyone here did everything right. Did GM just wake up yesterday and realize gas prices were high? Why didn't they get some lines in here that could withstand these prices?”
Governor Doyle responding to the news that General Motors will close its plant in Janesville by 2010, eliminating about some 2,500 jobs.
“Did Gov. Doyle just wake up? GM has been in decline for years and Gov. Doyle made the deal with a declining company- something businesses typically are careful of. What has Wisconsin done to make itself more competitive? Toyota, Honda and Hyundai are doing fine despite high gas prices. Where has the State of Wisconsin been when it comes to attracting the new manufacturing facilities of the successful auto makers? If I recall correctly, the last time Honda was looking for a site for a new plant Gov. Doyle did nearly nothing to even get Honda to consider Wisconsin (possibly because with our high tax rates we would not be competitive).”
" OK Hello... GM is not the only plant in the world that is going under... what is it with everyone only looking at company's who employ alot of people.. GM workers aren't the only workers who need help with gas prices, house payments, or any financial needs. This whole economy is down and they are only worried about GM workers. What about others.. there is no help for others... Let's just worry about GM workers not having a job... It's everyone... This state has no idea who needs help.... "
Online comments to the Beloit Daily News website.
“He didn’t give me any reason to think this was a decision that was easily reversed.”
Congressman Paul Ryan, after talking to the GM chief.
“While I support vigorous investigations of oil companies’ practices to fight price gouging, the simplest and surest way to lower the price of gas is to lower the price of oil. And the surest way to reduce the price of oil is to increase its supply.”
Former Assembly Speaker John Gard who is running against Congressman Steve Kagen, announcing a series of proposals to tackle gas prices, including increases in oil refineries and domestic oil drilling.
“The Republicans haven’t done one single thing since 2001, and there are two reasons for the high gas prices: Bush and Cheney.”
Congressman Steve Kagen.
OUTRAGE OF THE WEEK
Barack Obama and porta potties.
MOST UNDER-REPORTED STORY OF THE WEEK
Wisconsin has dropped out of the top ten highest-taxed states in the nation.
But why?
State Representative Frank Lasee explains in one of his releases:
It has been widely reported that Wisconsin has FINALLY dropped out of the top ten highest taxed states in the nation. Good news? Well, it all depends on how you figure it…
According to the Wisconsin Taxpayer’s Alliance and liberal professor Andrew Reschovsky, three states, Alaska, Wyoming, and New Mexico have suddenly become high taxed states. Leapfrogging Wisconsin in tax burden. They all appear ahead of Wisconsin. But individuals in these states enjoy a lower tax burden than we do in Wisconsin. Yet governments in these states have more money to spend per person than we do here.
Their individual tax burden is lower and their governments have more to spend per person than we do here in Wisconsin. How can this be possible? Because they are harvesting natural resources (wisely so). Taxes paid by everyone who is using oil, natural gas, copper and other minerals are providing more government tax money to spend without causing people in these states to pay more. The governments in Wyoming, New Mexico and Alaska get to spend the taxes paid by out of staters and the people of these states don’t have to pay as much for their government. This is a good reason to lift the federal and state prohibition on drilling for oil in Wisconsin. Citizens in Michigan and Indiana are enjoying the benefit (to a much lesser extent than the other three states) of oil production. Why shouldn’t we?
One of the issues of relying on these taxes is when the price or demand decline, revenue declines as well. If your state politicians are wise, they bank the funds in a rainy day account for the day that either supply or demand for oil or minerals go down. Alaska’s permanent trust fund has grown to $40 Billion since it was started in 1976. It is funded by 25% of mineral and oil taxes paid. Also, Alaska citizens get yearly checks from the trust fund ($ 1,700 in 2007, $1,100 in 2006). Go figure, their state government sends their citizens money instead of taking it away.
There are studies from reliable sources and well-educated economists that show that states and countries that tax less (after a reasonable level of government services have been reached), enjoy greater prosperity over those that tax more. More businesses are created, more jobs are created and income rises more quickly with lower tax burdens.
The tax issue in Wisconsin isn’t going away soon. I understand how it feels when our property taxes or state income taxes go up.
Holding the line on taxes or better yet, actually lowering the tax burden will benefit the most people in Wisconsin. Particularly workers, who would get to keep more of what they earn and have more job opportunities to boot.
MOST OVER-HYPED STORY OF THE WEEK
Obama and Clinton.....the Dream Ticket.
Right.
STRANGEST, MOST UNUSUAL STORY OF THE WEEK
There's always more than one.
Talk about having your nerve...
I don't know if the woman involved is a blonde
This is the 9-1-1 operator.......YES, HELP, I'M STUCK IN A PORTA-POTTY!
Madison may try homeless meters.
Better late than never?
REMEMBER: Your suggestions/nominations for any of these categories every week are welcome, especially for HEROES OF THE WEEK. If you know of anyone in the community deserving of recognition, please e-mail me.
VOTE IN THE 2008 BEST IN FRANKLIN-AREA DINING SURVEY
A Week-ends hero writes to This Just In...
The May 31st edition of Week-ends featured Hilary Bilbrey as one of the HEROES OF THE WEEK.I received a very nice e-mail from Ms. Bilbrey:
Dear Mr. Fisher,
One of my friends emailed me the link to your site! I have to say, I am beyond honored that you would consider me at all. This has been such a group effort. Wisconsin Alliance for Fire Safety (www.wafs.org ) saw the potential and kept me going. Not to mention Sentry and the fire stations…the support has been overwhelming. AT the end of the summer we will have distributed over 100,000 books to families in the state of Wisconsin. That is such a testament to the people in the fire safety space. They truly care about our kids…they are the true heroes!
I didn’t expect to find my mission in life this way…but sometimes God works in mysterious ways…I am just thankful for the chance to do something…anything to help. I appreciate your “shout out” more than you know!
Live…Inspired!
Hilary Bilbrey
Mother, Author, Founder
Inspired By Family
www.inspiredbyfamily.com
Franklin getting pounded
Ever seen a storm like this?
Visibility was just about zero......Lance Hill on Channel 12 said if you live in Franklin, you probably can't see the house across the street from you. He wasn't kidding.
How about that funky color on the radar over Franklin.Hill described it as a "pink, magenta" color. I've never seen that color ever before on Doppler radar.
My street is a raging river.
Raise your hand if you didn't hear the weather sirens
I'll bet you still knew serious weather was on the way.
The announcement from the MMSD is inevitable
We had no choice but to dump thousands and thousands of gallons of crap into Lake Michigan.
The reaction from environmentalists:
Dead silence.
UPDATE, Saturday night from jsonline.com:
SATURDAY, June 7, 2008, 7:07 p.m.
By Dani McClain
Untreated sewage overflowing into rivers
The Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District is reporting overflows of untreated sewage to local rivers and Lake Michigan as a result of today's heavy rains.
For a stretch of time this afternoon, water was entering the MMSD system at a rate equivalent to 10 billion gallons per day, which MMSD spokesman Bill Graffin said set a record for what he's witnessed during his time with the agency.
"The highest I'd ever seen it was 4 billion in May 2004 when we had 19 straight days of rain," Graffin said.
MMSD's deep tunnel system holds about 500 million gallons, he said.
Graffin said he didn't know whether citywide reports of dislodged manhole covers popping up in the streets were resulting from pressure buildup in sanitary sewers or storm sewers.
Graffin said the agency won't know the amount of the overflow for several days.
Read this story and see if anything jumps out at you
Notice anything about the following story?
What reaction do you have?
Read the entire story.
From Boston.com:
Marzilli checks into hospital, will not run for reelection
By Michael Levenson, Brian Ballou, and Andrew Ryan, Globe Staff
State Senator J. James Marzilli Jr. checked into a psychiatric hospital today for treatment of an undisclosed illness and announced he would not seek reelection this September as he faces charges that he tried to grope one woman and harass another on busy streets this week in downtown Lowell.
![]() State Senator James Marzilli |
"This has been an extremely trying time for him, his wife and family. They appreciate the overwhelming support they have received from the many friends and constituents of Jim Marzilli," Marzilli's lawyer, Terrence W. Kennedy of Everett, said this afternoon in a statement.
It's called "blackboard material"
The NBA Finals just got personal.
Before we get to the 2008 version, let's travel back to the 1970 Finals.
I'm old enough to remember watching on television what turned out to be an inpsirational series, thanks to Willis Reed of the New York Knicks.
Watch.
You get the picture.
Reed goes down, misses much of Game 5, all of Game 6, then miraculously comes off the scrap heap to help win Game 7 and the title.
Now it’s the 2008 NBA Finals.
The Lakers and the Boston Celtics.
In Game 1 Thursday night, Paul Pierce acted as though he was going to die when he was taken to the dressing room in a wheelchair. But as quickly as you could say, “I can’t believe what I just saw,” Pierce was walking onto the court, gunning down three’s.
Boston 108, Los Angeles 98.
The sports media couldn’t resist, or contain themselves, making ridiculous comparisons between 1970 Willis Reed and 2008 Paul Pierce.
Lakers head coach Phil Jackson was a teammate of Reed’s on that Knick championship team in 1970. He says it’s a joke to say the Pierce scenario is anything like the 1970 experience.
"If I'm not mistaken, I think Willis Reed missed a whole half or three quarters of the game and literally had to have a shot, a horse shot, three of four of them in his thigh to come back out and play," Jackson said.
"Paul got carried off and was back on his feet in a minute," Jackson added. "I don't know if the angels visited him at halftime or in that time-out period he had or not, but he didn't even limp when he came back out on the floor. I don't know what was going on there. Was Oral Roberts back there in their locker room?"
Good stuff.
And he’s right.
The Celtics will plaster that quote on their lockers, for sure.
But let’s be honest.
Today’s players get a hangnail and head to the showers.
Wasn’t like that in the days of old school.
Pierce deserves an Oscar nomination for what he pulled.
And the media needs to stop making such a big deal out of it.
My most popular blogs
As I post every Sunday, here are the top five most popular of my blog entries from the previous week:
1) How about a Fountains of Franklin update?
2) It's time to get serious about Fountains of Franklin
3) Go ahead, crank your air conditioning
4) Culinary no-no #57
5) You never know who's reading....
One week left to vote in the Franklin-area dining survey
Who has our area’s best steaks, seafood, pizza, bakery, service?You have one week left to vote in my second survey of the best dining in the Franklin area survey.
You don’t have to live in Franklin to participate. It’s easy and fun, just a little thought and writing on your part.
To those of you who’ve sent in your surveys, thank you.
If you haven’t yet, what are you waiting for??!!
DON'T FORGET TO VOTE IN THE 2008 BEST IN FRANKLIN-AREA DINING SURVEY
Brian Fraley nails it on RiverSplash
Friend and colleague Brian Fraley gets a Best of the Blogs mention in today’s Journal/Sentinel for his personal take on RiverSplash.
It reads, in part:
“. . . When young parents are so irresponsible as to have their toddlers out so late at an event like this, is it surprising that these kids, 10, 15 years later come to similar events and display the same self-indulgence?”
This is a pet peeve of mine, irresponsible parents selfishly enjoying themselves at the expense of their children that should be home in bed.
It’s a topic I’ve brought up twice while filling in for Mark Belling on WISN. The reaction is visceral to say the least, either from outraged listeners or clueless parents who can’t understand what’s so wrong about a baby asleep in a stroller at midnight.
Here’s my blog on the subject.
Culinary no-no #58
When it comes to culinary no-no’s, this guy could provide several every week.
His name is Andrew Zimmern. He’s the host of Bizarre Foods with Andrew Zimmern on the Travel Channel.
Just as the title of the program conveys, he eats strange, weird foods. Like bugs and insects and other creepy critters.
Take a look, but just so you know, this video isn’t offensive, but it does raise the “yuck” factor to an extremely high level.
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How executives at the Travel Channel could sit around a conference table and think this kind of programming is high quality boggles the mind.
Zimmern could probably convince Janet Raloff the junk he wolfs down every week is not only delicious, but good for you. Raloff writes for Science News, and in a recent column, “Insects (The original white meat)” has documented that many people eat bugs, all kinds of bugs, and that bugs are pretty darn healthy.
Did you know, for example that, as Raloff writes, “Food and Drug Administration’s actual rules allow up to 60 insect fragments on average in a composite of six 100-gram chocolate samples. For peanut butter, it’s OK to have up to 30 insect pieces per 100 grams.”
But the FDA won’t approve drugs that could be beneficial in fighting 694 ailments. Imagine that. But that’s another blog.
Certain bugs in some places are as popular as Big Mac’s and Whopper’s.
Raloff writes, “Youngsters in central Africa may down ants or grubs while at play. Urbane snack-seeking consumers throng street vendors throughout Southeast Asia to buy fried crickets. Even car-driving Aborigines in Australia’s outback may motor a couple of hours to find, and then picnic on, a cache of honey ants. Residents of at least 113 nations eat bugs, says Julieta Ramos-Elorduy of the National Autonomous University of Mexico in Mexico City:”
Doesn’t that give you the heebie-jeebies?
It shouldn’t, because eating bugs, or entomophagy if you want the scientific term, is claimed to be very nutritious.
One expert quoted by Raloff who has started his own company that supplies frozen and dried insects to chefs says you’d be crazy to eat lobster because those crustaceans eat trash compared to the salad bar diet of insects.
And we’re not talking a solitary bug or two here, folks. We’re talking lots and lots and lots of insects on the menu.
In Mexico, 1,700 species of insects are devoured. That’s the equivalent of about 60 Baskin-Robbins’.
Go to any 5-star restaurant in Mexico, and some insect is on the menu….every day!
In Africa, worms are highly sought after.
And again, we’re reminded, like the old Life commercial ..................
that eating bugs and insects is……….
well………
a really good thing.
A team formed by food scientist Francis O. Orech of the University of Maryland Eastern Shore in Princess Anne found, according to Raloff at Science News that, “Crickets contained more than 1,550 milligrams of iron, 25 milligrams of zinc and 340 milligrams of calcium per 100 grams of dry tissue."
Convinced yet?
I mean, think about it. We’ve got food experts from all around the world claiming that if you’d only down more bugs, you’d be singing like Julie Andrews in “Mary Poppins.” (Work with me, guys. You know the song. I just didn’t want to spell it).
Ahhhhhhhh.
But like the PUBLIC school teacher who sends his/her child/children to PRIVATE schools, we learn that these food experts don ‘t practice what they preach.
Take Sandra G.F. Bukkens, an independent nutrition consultant based in Barcelona, Spain. Raloff quotes her as saying, “Overall, I was pleasantly surprised. Insects were far more healthy than I expected.” But Raloff adds:
Despite this upbeat assessment, Bukkens isn’t pushing insects on her family. “I’ve eaten them, but I’m not particularly keen about them,” she says. If food were limited, she would “eat anything. But since we have plenty of meat in developed countries, I don’t see why we should switch to insects.”
I’ll give Raloff credit. She does admit the painfully obvious duo of reasons why convincing a vast number of Americans and Europeans to dive into a plate full of bug larvae is next to impossible: concern about hygiene, and the way the damn things look.
I don’t care how many eggheads Raloff or anybody else interviews or how many bugs Andrew Zimmern swallows on the Travel Channel…………..
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Beef.
It’s what’s for dinner.
Here is the entire Science News article written by Raloff.
To read previous Culinary no-no’s, please click CULINARY NO-NO under my TAGS section.
DON'T FORGET TO VOTE IN THE 2008 BEST IN FRANKLIN-AREA DINING SURVEY
We interrupt the NBA Finals again and again to tell you it's raining
I know there was severe weather Sunday night.I know there were a gazillion warnings and watches issued.
But c’mon.
During the first half of Game Two of the NBA Finals, Channel 12’s Mark Baden frequently interrupted with live weather updates.
Baden would always start by saying, “I’m sorry…”
Then he’d go on and on and on.
At one time, he ended his live shot and was right back with another one about two minutes later.
Channel 12 split the screen so viewers could still see the game, but it was annoying.
Then came halftime, a perfect opportunity to interrupt and take as long as necessary to give all the updates. Baden didn’t show.
Don’t get me wrong. The information needed to get out, but the public seems to think that today’s meteorologists have a tendency to overdo it, unnecessarily worrying the populace.
The weekend’s storms warranted coverage, and local TV stations are so competitive that each tries to outdo the other in weather information. But in this day of the Internet and weather radios, we don’t need to be bombarded by our television sets every few minutes telling us a spring storm is coming when the sky is black and the wind is howling.
And stations always have the option of placing a crawl at the bottom of the screen instead of apologizing for one interruption after another. Was that an admission on Baden’s part that he knew he was going to tick off a lot of people?
British actor calls soldiers, "whiny wimps"
And then he apologized.
Read what Rupert Everett initially said….
And then read his complete turnabout.
Wise move.
Does make you wonder, though just how widespread the anti-military sentiment is amongst the acting elite.
Before the start of tonight's feature presentation, would you all please rise...
Just before the start of any movie, there’s that quick open from the studio.
You’ve seen them all.
They’re quite memorable.
Did you hear this on Mark Belling's show last week?
From Badger Blogger:
On the other Sullivan front, Mark Belling brought us the story of State Sen. Jim Sullivan bullying a high school student that did a project on vote fraud in Wisconsin. Since Sullivan is one of those that keep killing off any chance we have of reforming our fraud filled voting process, this is very interesting, because even this high school girl was able to school Sullivan on the issue. other students were intimidated by him, but she stood her ground. You can listen to Belling’s report here.
Dead voters still showing up on records.
Do UW campuses need gender-neutral restrooms?
State Senator Glenn Grothman doesn’t think so.
The Milwaukee Journal/Sentinel has the details and both sides of the story.
Then read Grothman’s response.
President Bush: "They have no place in America today"
In the early 80’s while working at WUWM, I went to the downtown MATC to cover, I believe, a Black History Month event. I heard an incredible speech given by an incredible man.
James Cameron spoke passionately and eloquently about miraculously surviving a lynching in Indiana. Cameron’s story and life is chronicled in his obituary in the Milwaukee Journal/Sentinel.
Over 25 years later, a noose, an instant symbol of racial hatred and violence that has divided our country, all too often pops up in some outrageous, despicable manner meant to intimidate.
President Bush has said, “The era of rampant lynching is a shameful chapter in American history. The noose is not a symbol of prairie justice, but of gross injustice. Displaying one is not a harmless prank. Lynching is not a word to be mentioned in jest."
Noose displays and lynching jokes are "deeply offensive, they are wrong, and they have no place in America today,” said the President.
Some states are now considering laws to prohibit noose displays.
There is some concern that proposed legislation with good intentions can go too far. For example, would a Halloween display like one in Greenfield last October be considered illegal?
One would hope legislation could be drafted responsibly to prevent innocent holiday house decorations from suddenly becoming criminal.
Does Wisconsin need such a law?
Probably not yet.
Remember, Wisconsin has hate crime laws on the books that could, indeed, cover malicious noose displays, though I can’t speak with certainty.
I’m not aware that this problem is as widespread here as it has been in other states. Should it become more frequent, then consideration might be warranted.
Meanwhile, President Bush is correct. There can be no disagreement that noose displays have no place in our society.
The people have spoken: Drill!
FACT: Governor Doyle last year tried and failed to impose a tax on oil companies that would have probably been found unconstitutional in the courts or led to even higher gas prices in Wisconsin, passed on to consumers.
FACT: Last week, Doyle blamed oil companies and high gas prices for the demise of GM in Janesville.
FACT: Democrats and environmentalists oppose drilling domestically.
All of that is quite interesting given the results of recent Gallup polls.
1) The percentage of voters blaming oil companies for skyrocketing gasoline prices has declined in the past year.
2) At the same time, support for more drilling in U.S. coastal and wilderness areas has increased to 57 percent from 41 percent.
Knock, knock. Who’s there? Time for your physical
The Associated Press is reporting that researchers will be going door to door in Wisconsin this week, taking physicals.
This is a research project by the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, considered the first investigation of its kind in the nation.According to the AP, “Ten researchers will measure, weigh, question and probe more than about 1,150 people to assess the health of Wisconsin’s 5.5 million residents. They’ll target 120 select census blocks.”
What are the “researchers” after?
“The project is part of an annual survey that’ll show the changes in what people eat, how much they weigh and what their health is,” reports the AP.
Price tag for the project: $4.1 million.
Surveyors will ask people ages 21 to 74 to participate in the survey, which comes in three parts. There will be an in-home interview on general medical information lasting an hour, a 45-minute survey with more in-depth questions people complete in private and a two-hour medical exam. The exam will be held at clinics in Middleton and Milwaukee, and at mobile vans elsewhere.
Participants will get $50, a T-shirt, and a copy of their blood test results
You know what the researchers are going to do with all that data?
They’ll hammer out a final report with recommendations.
It’s almost certain they’ll diagnose a whole bunch of problems that will require, you guessed it, a whole lot of increased spending and new programs.
I can save them a lot of time.
Their findings are predictable.
Wisconsin, you’re too fat and need to exercise.
Now, can we give the feds their $4.1 million back?
DON'T FORGET TO VOTE IN THE 2008 BEST IN FRANKLIN-AREA DINING SURVEY
Wisconsin flooding in photos
A house is seen after falling into the water after the land was washed away Monday in Lake Delton. Floodwater washed away three houses and jeopardized dams in southern Wisconsin.(Appleton Post-Crescent)
The 30-day sex challenge X 12
YES, THIS BLOG IS ABOUT SEX.
NOTHING DIRTY OR OFFENSIVE, MIND YOU.
BUT IT IS ABOUT SEX.
THEREFORE, IF THAT RUBS YOU THE WRONG WAY, THEN LET THIS BE A FAIR WARNING.
IF YOU WANT SOMETHING FARRRRRRRRRRRRRRR LESS INTERESTING, I SUGGEST ANY NUMBER OF LIBERAL BLOGS TO HAVE A SOMINEX-LIKE EFFECT.
I AM WILLING TO VENTURE A GUESS, HOWEVER, THAT ALL 15 OF THE 15 PEOPLE WHO READ MY BLOG WILL RESIST THE TEMPTATION TO TURN AWAY AND WILL BRAVELY READ ON TO SEE WHAT I HAVE CHOSEN TO SHARE WITH THE REST OF THE BLOGOSPHERE.
(BY THE WAY, WHEN IT COMES TO SEX, THERE IS A RATHER NOTEWORTHY FERTILITY GAP BETWEEN CONSERVATIVES AND LIBERALS).
Back In February, I blogged and talked on WISN about the Florida minister who challenged his flock to spice up their lives by getting sexy for 30 consecutive days.
30 days.
One month.
Four straight weeks and some change.
If you’re not exhausted yet, take a deep breath.
Douglas Brown is a reporter with the Denver Post. He has wriiten a new book entiled, ““Just Do It.”
Brown “just did it” for 101 days.
101 days.
If this were the Olympics, he’d get a medal.
But it wouldn’t be the gold.
That’s because Brown was “outdid,” if I could coin such a word.
Charla and Brad Muller are described by the New York Times as, “Bible-studying steak-eating Republicans from Charlotte, N.C.”
They, too, have written a book about their love for one another with a self-explanatory title: “365 Nights.”
Again, as so many callers to my WISN program in February noted, a healthy sex life is commendable, a laudable goal.
Now, 365, 101, even 30 days in this day and age might translate to Fantasy Island for most married couples, but the intended message is clearly a positive one.
Read more about the two new books in, "Yes, Dear. Tonight Again, " in the New York Times.
Has the NBA turned into the WWE?
Is the NBA as fixed as pro wrestling?
As the world watches Game 3 of the NBA Finals tonight, there is word that the NBA playoffs in 2002 were fixed by referees.
I have friends of mine who, like me, work closely with officials by scoring and timing college and high school sports.
One of them is indignant, fully believing all professional sports are fixed.
This is an absolutely foolish notion.
To pull something like that off, with numerous players and possible situations, is next to impossible.
Not to mention the fact that it's a serious crime. You risk your entire life if you mess with the integrity of the game.
This could be the case of a disgruntled ex-referee.
I do not believe pro sports are fixed.
If that was the case, as I tell my friend every time he brings up the "sports is big business argument," you'd have New York and Los Angeles in championships every year in every sport.
By the way, who played in the recent NHL Stanley Cup, and who won?
Stupid stunt costs baseball player a college scholarship
Two Georgia high school baseball players pulled a very dumb stunt recently in a state championship game.
The pitcher and catcher battery went beyond poor sportsmanship when faced with losing the title game by conspiring to take out their frustrations on the home plate umpire.
Watch the following video. It shows the pitcher throwing a perfect shot to the head of the umpire as the catcher makes no attempt to flag the high pitch. What does he do? He ducks down and pretends to catch what he thinks is a pitch in the dirt.
It is painfully obvious the pitcher intended to throw directly at the umpire and bean him.
I'm from the city and I'm here to shut down your rummage sale...
I have never understood the appeal of rummage sales.
What’s so exciting about driving down the road, seeing a bunch of tables set up in someone’s yard filled with junk they want to get rid of, stopping the car, and jumping out to make a mad dash to see if you can purchase an old lamp, frying pan, or clothes?
It’s not for me but clearly rummage sales are a warm weather ritual in these parts.
Rummage sales are popular.
They are an outlet for people to sell off what they no longer want.
They provide an opportunity for bargain hunters.
Everybody’s happy.
The ventures are harmless.
All good reasons why the government has to get involved and spoil everything.
Based on the recommendations of some bureaucrat who has nothing better to do than to try to justify his position, the city of Racine is considering imposing all sorts of restrictions on rummage sales because, as everyone knows, if there’s any unscrupulous activity the public’s involved in that needs thorough government regulation, it’s the yard sale.
Racine wants to limit when you can hold the sales, how many days you can drag your trinkets out onto your own yard, and restrict the signage you put up to promote your attempt to sell your wares.
You can’t make this stuff up, it’s laughable.
As I’ve written many times in the past, people in power in other locales pay attention to this malarkey. They nod their heads and go, hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm.
And they start contemplating what an absolutely superb idea this would be in their own little hamlet. That's how this baby was born. Racine stole this incredibly dumb idea from other places that already have the law on the books.
Government intrusion where it doesn’t belong…….bothering women, for the most part, who simply want to sell or buy old stuff.
Read about this nonsense, and here’s an editorial panning the idea.
It's just a little sunburn for goodness sakes...
From ABC News:
Police charged a Kentucky father with criminal abuse after he allegedly failed to protect his shirtless, fair-skinned 2-year-old from the sun before leaving the child out to play in 95-degree heat for more than an hour.
The boy suffered second-degree burns, police said.
"It was downright brutal down here, we had 90 degree temperatures all day," Berea Police captain Ken Clark told ABC News on Tuesday.
"The father has said the child was just out playing, but we felt we established probable cause to charge him with a crime; when you talk about a 2-year-old child, someone who cannot speak up for themselves, in that type of heat ... There must be someone responsible for his safety."
How stupid and cruel could this parent be, you may be yelling at your computer screen.
Was he wrong?
Was he a bad parent?
Should he be in trouble with the law?
I think so.
Yes on all counts.
I can’t help but wonder if there are plenty of people that think this poor excuse for a father simply “made a mistake, “ and that “it could happen to anyone,” and don’t forget that “he has suffered enough.”
While filling in on WISN, I have spent time discussing parents who leave their small children unattended, locked in cars for several hours in sweltering heat, sometimes with fatal results.
My favorite asinine excuse by the brain-dead parent is that he or she “forgot” the child was in the car.
In my mind, there are no excuses, period.
The idiot parents can cry and cry and cry and cry and beg for forgiveness until doomsday. As far as I’m concerned, they deserve no sympathy or leniency.
When I’ve talked about these cases on WISN, the hand wringers come out of the woodwork with the above mentioned excuses.
That leads me to believe that if these people would call in to a 50-thousand watt radio station to defend a person totally bankrupt of parenting skills who left a baby to fry to death in a car, then certainly they’d express the same mercy for a parent who let his child exposed to severe burns from the intense sunlight.
If they’d be willing to let a death of a child be swept under the rug, they’d assuredly forgive a little sunburn, wouldn’t they?
Some people don’t deserve to be parents. This guy is certainly one of them.
Look what's happening on the field! Somebody wake up the Journal guy!
Did you watch the Brewers-Houston game Wednesday night?If you did, you saw the meltdown and brouhaha in the 7th inning when first base umpire Angel Campos made some highly questionable calls, all against Houston leading to some heated arguments and two quick ejections.
Campos tossed Houston catcher Brad Ausmus in the blink of an eye. I wonder if Campos could actually hear the magic word Ausmus must have uttered near home plate all the way down at first base.
Then first baseman Lance Berkman went ballistic on a call just moments later, but despite his histrionics, Campos didn’t give him the thumb. When Astros manager Cecil Cooper came out to argue, he was tossed.
Campos is lucky to be alive.
Pretty interesting part of the game, wouldn’t you say?
Not according to Anthony Witrado who covered the game for the Milwaukee Journal/Sentinel. He didn’t write a word about it in his Thursday morning story for the paper.
If you wanted to read about it, you had to go, not to the MILWAUKEE paper, but to the Wisconsin State Journal in Madison.
The sports section is the best part of the paper. When they start missing things…..
Heartbreaking video
You’ve seen the video of the house in Lake Delton that is swept away.
Matt Lauer of the Today Show on NBC puts a human face on this tragic story with a live interview of the family that lost their home.
Your heart goes out to the family that somehow found the strength to discuss their sadness live on national television.
Watch.
You want to debate the issues, fine, but...
Greg Kowalski blogs today e-mails that I received from two Franklin aldermen and then criticizes me for what he thinks is some broken promise to my blog readers because I didn't blog the same e-mails fast enough for his satisfaction.
He took the unusual and unnecessary step of filing an open records request with the City Clerk’s Office to get the e-mails. He’s probably been losing sleep, paranoid about what correspondence there’s been thus far between yours truly and City Hall on a legitimate tax question I asked about Fountains of Franklin.
He writes that I asked “harmful and damaging” questions of City Hall leaders. This is the same guy who wrote in a recent blog about his frustration with the way Target was handled:
“Our leaders betrayed us, the people of Franklin, and went on their merry way to destroy everything we had going for us. We will always be paying the consequences of their actions.”
Destroyed everything?
What does that mean?
What exactly has been destroyed in Franklin? How about some examples rather than misleading, inflammatory statements.
I haven’t seen Franklin destroyed.
He accuses city officials of purposely working to achieve this so-called destruction, but as usual offers no substantiation. And I’m the one who’s harmful and damaging.
I have a few notes for Kowalski.
1) All he had to do was e-mail me, or ask me on my blog or his if he so desperately wanted to know if I had received reaction to my questions of City Hall leaders. He’s criticized me for making an unreasonable request from an over-worked, understaffed workforce at City Hall, yet he makes a request of those same workers for these e-mails.
2) I never said WHEN I would blog my responses. Truth is, I’ve been waiting for other responses and information.
3) Kowalski doesn’t dictate how I plan or write my blog.
By the way, he also blogged an e-mail TODAY he received from Senator Lazich one week ago today. Gee, Greg……why did you wait a week to blog the e-mail? If we’re being consistent here, shouldn’t you have blogged it right away?
Kowalski’s blogging of the e-mails is no big deal, but in doing so, he displayed how irresponsible he truly is.
The e-mails he received from the City Clerk’s Office should have redacted my private home e-mail address, but did not.
Even so, when Kowalski received the e-mails and made the decision to post them, he is then personally responsible for the content he puts on his blog.
He chose to post the e-mails verbatim and not block out my private home e-mail address.
This was irresponsible and reckless, going beyond Kowalski’s youthful naiveté.
Given my profession, my conservative views, and my appearances on radio and TV, you can imagine that not everyone agrees with me or likes me, and that’s putting it mildly.
I don’t believe people truly grasp the amount of hatred that’s out there. People are downright vicious and cruel, as I have received numerous hateful, harassing correspondences, even personal threats that have had to be investigated by authorities.
What was Kowalski thinking when he posted my private home e-mail? Certainly he values privacy for himself and his family. Does he not have the same respect for others?
Kowalski apparently isn’t smart or responsible enough to take that into consideration before he blogs a private e-mail address, or simply lacks common human courtesy and decency, or both.
I know he doesn’t agree with me, but go after me on the issues. He has cried from day one about being mistreated, yet he has engaged in the same kind of behavior, if not more so that he blames others for. Kowalski did block out my e-mail address on his blog, but only after he was instructed to do so by the City Clerk’s Office. Again, he had to be prodded to do the right thing, just like last year when he hemmed and hawed for several weeks before he removed lies about me by people commenting on his blog.
I’ve refrained from writing reactive blogs about Kowalski for a long time. This one needed a response.
I keep hoping that someday Kowalski will learn his lesson. Unfortunately, he keeps proving me wrong.
Now it's 3.9%
Last week, I blogged that there were conflicting figures being tossed around on this website about proposed Franklin school tax increases.
FranklinNOW reporter John Neville said the tax RATE increase was 2.7%.
FranklinNOW bloggers Janet Evans and Greg Kowalski both reported the tax LEVY increase was 2.7%
There’s a difference, as I pointed out in my blog.
So which one is it?
Is the RATE or the LEVY going up?
And by how much?
Neither Evans nor Kowalski made any clarification.
Gee. I thought Kowalski was the guy who expected everybody to get and give answers on their blogs as soon as possible.
It seems Neville did some homework since my last blog, and in the paper edition of FranklinNOW today, he writes:
“The first draft of the district’s budget for next school year calls for a 3.9 percent increase in the tax levy. The proposed tax levy is $29.6 million, up from $28.5 million in 2007-08.District taxpayers might see an increase of 29 cents — from $10.89 to $11.18 — per $1,000 of equalized value. That means the owner of a $200,000 home would pay an additional $58 per year in estimated property taxes.”
A 3.9% increase in the LEVY.
That’s much better than the 5.6% that turned into 11.7% last year.
Neville continues:
“However, Business Services Director James Milzer cautions the numbers are preliminary.”
Oh, we know that all too well, don’t we Mr. Milzer.
Milzer’s the flim-flam man who told School Board member last October they were voting on a 5.9% levy increase. Citizens found out a few weeks later it was actually an 11.7% levy increase the Franklin School Board approved.
Another line from Neville’s article:
“This year the budget will be shaped by a greater degree of community input than in the past, board President Dave Szychlinski said.”
That’s a very good thing.
Here’s the Neville article.
Did Doyle daddle while Wisconsin was getting flooded?
Jim Wigderson raises the question which leads to some interesting back and forth commentary on his blog.
Freedom Eden also blogged about Doyle.
It's halftime of the NBA Finals, Game 4...
And during the entire frst half, there wasn't a single Mark Baden sighting on Channel 12.
Hmmmm....
New photos added to my flooding blog
My blog of flooding photos seems to be of great interest.
I've updated with new photos., FYI.
Friday night on InterCHANGE
Dan Jones, Gerard Randall, Joel McNally and I discuss the following on Milwaukee Public Television, Channel 10, Friday night at 6:30, Sunday morning at 11:00:1– Milwaukee Weather & Lake Delton.
Weather is certainly the talk of the town. How did Milwaukee and surrounding communities handle the storms that drenched our parts? Is there any way we could have been more prepared? Is it ridiculous to think we can be immune from the problems that Mother Nature sends our way? Did MMSD do what it is supposed to do? Is dumping raw waste into Lake Michigan just expected at this point in time? Should homeowners who had flooded basements be expected to be made whole again by their insurers, or by the government? Or, should they be on their own and just forced to deal with it? How about the draining of Lake Delton in the Wisconsin Dells? Should the state and federal governments be asked to rebuild that “man made” lake? Or, should that be the responsibility of the businesses over there which have made millions off of the tourism industry? Is it folly to rebuild a lake and expect it can be immune to the forces of nature?
2 – Milwaukee Schools.
I don’t think folks are that surprised that there might be problems at Bradley Tech High School, but many of us were surprised when students were arrested and police officers hurt at Riverside High School? Isn’t Riverside supposed to be one of the jewels of MPS? Isn’t this the school for the bright and the college bound? The next day police show up in riot gear and on horses. Did the Milwaukee Police Department over react, or are they sending a clear message that something like this will not happen again? Are even the best schools of MPS a disappointment when compared to private schools? Should the taxpayers be expected to contribute even more money for hiring even more security?
3– Obama & McCain.
Granted we’re six months away from the election, but is there any stopping Obama-mania? What do you see possibly happening in the months ahead that would possibly put John McCain ahead in the polls? One recent poll has Obama with a double digit lead already here in Wisconsin? Are the facts that we have an incredibly unpopular war going on, and an incredibly unpopular president, and an incredibly difficult economy simply too much for any republican candidate to overcome? Is Obama so popular because of who he is and what he stands for? Or, is he popular because he represents a change from the status quo?
The truth about "Big Oil"
Earlier this week, Republicans in the U.S. Senate managed to block an effort by Democrats to impose a 25 percent tax on any "unreasonable" profits of the five largest U.S. oil companies.
The tax, if enacted, wouldn’t have lowered gas prices by one cent. Oil companies surely would have passed the expense onto consumers in the form of higher gas prices.
Democrats tried to exploit the current public outrage over fuel costs to ram through another tax increase disguised as the little guy sticking it to those big, bad, evil oil giants.
The truth needs to be told about “Big Oil.”
Jeff Jacoby is a fine conservative columnist for the Boston Globe. In a recent column, Jacoby writes:
“We've been down this road before. Under a windfall tax signed into law by Jimmy Carter, domestic oil production plummeted by an estimated 795 million barrels, while imports of foreign oil surged. Congress had anticipated windfall tax revenues of $393 billion. The actual take: just $80 billion. Like so much else associated with the Carter era, the windfall-profits tax was a counterproductive flop. Do Democrats really believe a new dose of Carternomics is going to make today's economy stronger?
If you want to see a real windfall, take a look at what Big Oil pays in taxes. The 27 largest US energy companies forked over $48 billion in income taxes in 2004, $67 billion in 2005, and more than $90 billion in 2006 - an 87 percent increase. Since 1981, the Tax Foundation calculates, the oil industry has earned a cumulative $1.12 trillion in profits - but it paid a cumulative $1.65 trillion in taxes (add another half-trillion to account for taxes paid to foreign governments).
For most of the 25 years between 1981 and 2006, says foundation president Scott Hodge, taxes collected from oil companies by federal, state, and local governments were nearly double the industry's profits in any given year. For all the clucking over ExxonMobil's $10.9 billion in profits last quarter, little attention was paid to its total tax bill in the same period: more than than $29 billion.
So who's the real ‘profiteer’ - Big Oil or Big Brother? And who is likelier to keep energy abundant - the profit-seeking entrepreneurs who pull it from the ground, or the politicians who demonize them when they succeed?”
Columnist Bill Steigerwald also commits a flagrant act of journalism in a piece following testimony on Capitol Hill by oil company executives:
“Many Americans have heard by now the truth that oil companies pay far more dollars in taxes each year than they earn in profits. And that the oil industry's average net profit margin -- 8.3 percent last year -- is lower than Big Tobacco and Big Beverage (19.1 percent), Big Pharma (18.4 percent) and Big Banking, Big Insurance and Big Media.
But during their show trial, the execs delivered some other pertinent facts in their defense:
* U.S. companies, while huge, are actually relatively small players in a gigantic global oil market. They can compete directly for only 7 percent of available reserves while large government-owned companies like Petroleos de Venezuela own and control 75 percent of world supply.
* As Stephen Simon of ExxonMobil humbly pointed out, his hated behemoth -- America's largest oil and gas corporation -- accounts for only 3 percent of global oil production and 6 percent of global refining capacity. It has only 1 percent of global petroleum reserves - 14th in the world.”
And one more.
An excellent guest column by Al Smith in this week’s Journal/Sentinel.
Dining survey deadline is Saturday
SATURDAY IS THE LAST DAY TO SEND ME YOUR VOTES IN THE 2008 BEST IN FRANKLIN-AREA DINING SURVEY
Friday Night Live
Tonight’s guests are:
Kiss, ABBA, and the Captain and Tennille.
In the 70’s, In Concert and The Midnight Special aired on Friday nights. On Saturday night, it was Don Kirshner’s Rock Concert.
Prior to his 70's show, Kirshner was a successful record producer in the 60’s. From Answers.com:
“Kirshner employed some of the best writers in the business including Carol King, Neil Diamond and Tommy Boyce. The latter two artists played a large part in the success of another Kirshner creation, the pop group the Monkees. Kirshner's staff of writers churned out hit song after hit song for such groups as the Drifters, the Ronettes, the Crystals and the Shangri-Las, upping the standard of songwriting significantly in the process.
In 1966, the enterprising Kirshner embarked on the second stage of his professional career when he developed America's answer to the Beatles. By creating the Monkees, a group assembled by placing advertisements in various trade papers, for the NBC network, Kirshner created a cute, loveable, slightly anti-establishment rock group that would parade around in a half-hour TV show while going on zany adventures a la the Beatles in a Hard Day's Night and Help! The kids loved it. And so did Columbia when they received the royalty checks from the Monkee's hits.
After the Monkees ran their course, Kirshner formed Don Kirshner productions in 1973 to produce his successful Don Kirshner's Rock Concert series. The ‘Rock Concert’ series ran for several years before Kirshner eventually moved away from rock n' roll and into TV production in the mid '70s.”
“ABBA, a musical entity consisting of two couples, became by far the most successful act of that decade (70's), even one of the biggest phenomenons of the whole century.”
carlmagnuspalm.com
From biography.com:
“Swedish pop singing group, formed in 1973 by Björn Ulvaeus (1945– , guitar, vocals), married to Agnetha Fältskog (1950– , vocals), and Benny Andersson (1945– , keyboards, vocals), married to Anni-Frid (known as Frida) Lyngstad (1945– , vocals). The group's name derives from their first-name initials. Their major international breakthrough came with the winning song in the 1974 Eurovision Song Contest, ‘Waterloo’, which was followed by hit singles and albums throughout the 1970s and early 1980s. During the 1970s they were the most successful international group since the Beatles. Ulvaeus and Andersson wrote their songs, and have written a successful musical, Mamma Mia! (1999), built around many of them, as well as collaborating with Tim Rice in the musical Chess (1984). Björn and Agnetha divorced in 1979, and Benny and Frida in 1981.”
Happy Flag Day, America!
A tattered American flag flies behind the Spirit of the American Doughboy soldier statue on S. Memorial Drive in Appleton on Memorial Day. The Parks and Recreation Department recently replaced the flag, which is displayed year-round. Appleton Post-Crescent photo by M.P. King
The Appleton Post Crescent offers these Flag Day reminders:
Flag etiquette don'ts
Week-ends
A look back at the people and events that made news the past week.Week-ends is a regular weekly feature of This Just In...
HEROES OF THE WEEK
All those who came to the aid of flooding victims this week.
Boy Scout victims
Boy Scout survivors
Mount Rainer hiker
Gerald Miller
ER nurses
Chef Adam Siegel at Lake Park Bistro
VILLAINS OF THE WEEK
Trent Christopher Benson
Dena Schlosser (Background of the story)
Brice Brian McMillan and Sandra Elizabeth McMillan
QUOTES OF THE WEEK
"My truck'll come through the water if I can get to it. I'll probably have to put my swimming suit on to get it out. What really makes me mad is my Harley's in the garage, and it's in water, and I don't like that."
Duane Wilson. Both of his vehicles were under water on his brother-in-law's property near 92nd St. and 8 Mile Road in Franksville. His Peterbilt truck was in about 4 feet of water. But he was worried about his Harley motorcycle, a 1994 Dyna Wide Glide.
"Let's not talk about it. It's my foolishness."
Former state senator Donald Stitt, who was pulled by firefighters from Milwaukee River floodwaters in Saukville shortly after 11 a.m. Monday after his vehicle became submerged. Firefighters waded into about four feet of water to rescue Stitt, of Port Washington. He was heading south on Highway W when he drove around road closure barricades. Stitt continued driving another quarter-mile until his SUV got caught in floodwaters, nearly submerging. Police planned to cite Stitt for failure to obey an official sign.
"It was full of fish, full of boaters, full of life—and now it's gone."
Harland Tourdoy, looking at what was once Lake Delton.
"Please, please don't cancel your reservations. Ninety percent of the Dells is still up and running."
Lake Delton Village trustee and Tommy Bartlett Show proprietor Tom Diehl.
“Let me be absolutely clear. Milwaukee drinking water is safe.”
Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett.
“I’m sure people are going to be upset with me. I will not be voting for Obama. I will cast my vote for John McCain. I just feel you need to have somebody who has experience with foreign matters. I’m on a lot of the (pro-Clinton) blogs, and so many people, male and female, feel the same way as I do. The Democrats jumped on this wagon of Barack Obama, and nobody really knows him.”
Debra Bartoshevich of Waterford, an elected delegate to the Democrat National Convention in Denver this summer.
“Not a delegate? To the national convention? We have a Clinton national (convention) delegate who says she’s voting for John McCain? I’ve never heard of such a thing.”
Joe Wineke, chairman of the Democratic Party of Wisconsin.
“Don’t take (Republican nominee John McCain) for granted, particularly in Wisconsin. If Barack Obama loses Wisconsin, he’s not going to be president.”
Senator Russ Feingold, addressing the Democrat state party convention in Stevens Point.
“President Bush has admitted to The Times that his gun-slinging rhetoric made the world believe that he was a “guy really anxious for war” in Iraq. He said that his aim now was to leave his successor a legacy of international diplomacy for tackling Iran. In an exclusive interview, he expressed regret at the bitter divisions over the war and said that he was troubled about how his country had been misunderstood. “I think that in retrospect I could have used a different tone, a different rhetoric.” Phrases such as “bring them on” or “dead or alive”, he said, “indicated to people that I was, you know, not a man of peace”. He said that he found it very painful “to put youngsters in harm’s way”. He added: “I try to meet with as many of the families as I can. And I have an obligation to comfort and console as best as I possibly can. I also have an obligation to make sure that those lives were not lost in vain.”
From timesonline.co.uk
"Well, I know Michelle, she's been my friend, a friend of my wife, for many, many years. She can take it. She can handle herself. She's a very accomplished person. But I will tell you this: the hottest ring in hell is reserved for those in politics who attack their opponents' families. And if there are some Republican strategists who think that's the way to win the election, I think they're wrong."
U.S. Senator Dick Durbin (D-Illinois) on criticisms of Barack Obama's wife, Michelle.
The team "wet the bed - a nice big one, too. One of the ones you can't put a towel over."
Los Angeles Laker Kobe Bryant after the Lakers blew a 24-point lead and lost to Boston in Game 4 of the NBA Finals. The Celtics now lead the best of seven series, 3 games to 1.
OUTRAGE OF THE WEEK
Another illegal immigrant, another horrific crime.
MOST UNDER-REPORTED STORY OF THE WEEK
If not for talk radio (Mark Belling) and the bloggers, you wouldn't have heard about this story.
Or this.
MOST OVER-HYPED STORY OF THE WEEK
Weather.
Weather.
And more weather.
But the vast majority of the coverage this time was warranted.
STRANGEST, MOST UNUSUAL STORY OF THE WEEK
Norman Bates didn't kill that woman...
Here's a summer festival Milwaukee doesn't have.
Hey guy, put a shirt on!
REMEMBER: Your suggestions/nominations for any of these categories every week are welcome, especially for HEROES OF THE WEEK. If you know of anyone in the community deserving of recognition, please e-mail me.
TODAY IS YOUR LAST DAY TO VOTE IN THE 2008 BEST IN FRANKLIN-AREA DINING SURVEY
This is not a cool idea
Earlier this week, I told you that Racine is considering imposing restrictions on rummage sales.
Further south, in Addison, Illinois, more government bureaucracy run amok.

Juan Tijerina stands outside a building he owns in Addison that has window air conditioners facing the street, which are now illegal. Village officials say the ordinance will help improve the town's image. (Chicago Tribune photo by Chuck Berman / June 11, 2008)
Sad, but I can imagaine Franklin considering something like this.
Here's the story from the Tribune:
Addison's ban on some window air conditioners is hot topic in town
Village says ordinance will improve its look
By Joseph Sjostrom
Tribune reporter
10:57 PM CDT, June 12, 2008
Is the great Obama scared?
We're told he's the smartest, most articulate guy on the planet.
So what's he afraid of?
The division continues in the Democrat party
Democrats are scrambling this morning, making their best attempts at spin and damage control after one of their delegates went public, saying she'll vote for John McCain.
The Democrats do eat their own.
And there are more dismayed Democrats out there...
The Barking Lot
WOOFS AT WORK
By Jennifer Fischer
Your morning rush-out-the-door ritual probably sounds something like this:
“Lunch? Check.”
“Cell phone? Check.”
“Brief Case and Laptop? Check.”
How about adding:
“Milk Bones and Rawhides? Check.”
“Water Dish? Check.”
“Squeaky Toy? Check.”
That’s right, it’s the 10th Annual Take Your Dog To Work Day this Friday, June 20th.
A friend and coworker enjoys the company of two Pomeranian pooches. Fortunately for her, she lives so close to work that she can go home on her 30-minute lunch break to let them outside. I don’t know many people who have that luxury.
One of only two arguments that Kevin can offer against us getting a dog is the fact that we are not home enough (in his opinion) to be fair to our Future Fido (The other argument is that for all the love and enjoyment we get from them, dogs have a disappointingly short life span. He dreads the day we would eventually need to have a pet euthanized).
Just think how much more enjoyable your workplace could be if you were allowed to bring your dog with you. There are many facts you can present to your employer in favor of a canine-friendly cubicle.
Perhaps June 20th will be the pawfect way of introducing your tail-wagging buddy to the office. In that case you’ll want to make sure Rex is on his best behavior.
If you need further ammunition to sway your boss, you could mention that this system works well for Las Vegas tycoon Steve Wynn.
If all else fails, you could consider relocating with your four-legged friend to Greensboro, North Carolina. Get a job with Replacements, Ltd. and you’re all set!
So this Friday, pack your sandwich and chips but save room in your lunch bag for some kibble.
---Jennifer Fischer
Pawfect???
Insert imagined rim shot here.
Time now for DOGS IN THE NEWS, canines that made headlines.
We begin with our most serious dog story of the week. Two Marines are in trouble for a puppy video.
Of course, we have some good news. This Rottweiler survived a twister.
Here's another lucky dog.
And finally, be careful out there, Fido. Big brother's watching you.
That's it for this week.
On behalf of Jennifer, thanks for stopping by but we gotta go because, when you gotta go, you....
Gotta go.
Happy Father's Day? For far too many, it's not
This weekend, consider yourself lucky, very lucky if you can celebrate Father's Day.
Here is my lengthy piece from last Father's Day, still relevant, and troubling, today.
My most popular blogs
As I post every Sunday, here are the top five most popular of my blog entries from the previous week:
1) Wisconsin flooding in photos
2) See a home literally washed away
3) Knock, knock. Who's there? Time for your physical
4) President Bush: "They have no place in America today"
5) The people have spoken: Drill!
Culinary no-no is one year old
One year ago on Father’s Day, I wrote a blog about brats.I think it’s wrong to put ketchup on the sausages.
Clever devil that I am, I called the blog a Culinary no-no.
My plans were to write a few related blogs over the summer and then pull the plug.
After all, how many blogs can you come up with that say you shouldn’t salt this or use a heavy cream on that?
But then the blog evolved, and for reasons I can’t explain, became popular. Real popular. It’s one of my most –viewed blogs, making the top five or close to it every week. I've written 58 Culinary no-no's since last summer.
On this Father’s Day and one-year anniversary of Culinary no-no, here’s the blog that started it all, numero uno.
I also went back and checked for the Culinary no-no that was the most popular.
Here it is.
A brand new edition of Culinary no-no will be here next week.
Enjoy the day in the backyard grilling, Dad’s, but no ketchup on those brats!
Fathers are the "Rodney Dangerfield's" of marketing
There’ve been some great TV dads in the past.Ozzie Nelson.
Ben Cartwright.
Sheriff Andy Taylor.
Howard Cunningham.
Tom Corbett (Bill Bixby in “The Courtship of Eddie’s Father”).
Cliff Huxtable.
Those were all a long time ago.
Today’s TV images of fathers are Homer Simpson-like buffoons.
Same deal in commercials.
Ask most dads around the country and they’ll tell you they’re dissed more often than not in the media and in advertising.
The pendulum might be swinging, though, ever so slowly, led by companies like Hallmark.
Here’s more from the Kansas City Star:
No more bumbling Homer: Marketers are reframing dad ads
Buying into corporate America’s depiction of men, and dads in particular, one would be pretty sure they’re mostly lazy, dense dimwits with whom only Homer Simpson could bond.
What is the key function of the federal government?
Is it:
1) To provide health insurance for everyone in the country, including jailed felons and illegal immigrants.
2) To provide cash payments from cradle to death for any number of reasons including inability to see the blackboard in the 4th grade and simply because my mother, her mother, and her mother’s mother also received welfare checks.
3) To attempt to solve every problem known to mankind rather than allow human beings to work hard to pull themselves up by the proverbial bootstraps and gain economic independence.
If you are a liberal, you answered, all of the above.
If you have a modicum of common sense and knowledge of government, you would have answered, “to secure our borders.”
If that was your answer, congratulations.
Is George Bush the greatest President ever?
Probably not.
You know why?
He had a tendency to spend too much.
But for the past couple of years, I’ve mentioned on television and radio what a successful and noteworthy President George Bush has been.
Why?
How many terrorist attacks have been made on our country, on George Bush’s watch, since 9-11, almost seven years ago?
Everyone, including the Bush haters on the left know the answer.
ZERO!
Now, liberals who read my blog, and there are a ton because of two reasons:
1) The incense and sandals crowd has no life, so to inject a bit of excitement, they read conservative blogs (like mine) and listen to conservative talk radio so they can rush to their keyboards and write intelligent garbage like, “Fischer bad. McIlheran evil. Sykes and Belling, the worst (How do they think that stuff up so fast?).
2) Liberal blogs are like watching paint dry. Boring as hell. Sheer bumper sticker emotion and no facts.
Conservatives are interesting people with senses of humor, whether you like them or not.
I have a kajillion liberal friends and associates (who, by the way, don’t want me to step in front of a train and don’t hate me) who admit readily they love to read conservative blogs and listen to conservsative talk radio to, of course, hear what the other side is saying, but also because it’s GOOD STUFF! THEY ARE INTERESTED! THEY ARE ENTERTAINED! Could that be why liberal talk radio in America has gone over like a fart (sorry, Mom) in church?
Let’s get back to the issue at hand.
(By the way, most liberals reading this blog stopped reading at the 3rd paragraph and have already reached some hateful conclusion).
Ann Coulter writes about what I’ve been saying for years on radio and TV. George Bush has been amazing because after 9-11, he protected this country……..PERIOD!
Coulter in her most recent column writes:
“The man responsible for keeping Americans safe from another terrorist attack on American soil for nearly seven years now will go down in history as one of America's greatest presidents.
Produce one person who believed, on Sept. 12, 2001, that there would not be another attack for seven years, and I'll consider downgrading Bush from "Great" to "Really Good."
Merely taking out Saddam Hussein and his winsome sons Uday and Qusay (Hussein family slogan: "We're the Rape Room People!") constitutes a greater humanitarian accomplishment than anything Bill Clinton ever did -- and I'm including remembering Monica's name on the sixth sexual encounter.
But unlike liberals, who are so anxious to send American troops to Rwanda or Darfur, Republicans oppose deploying U.S. troops for purely humanitarian purposes. We invaded Iraq to protect America.
It is unquestionable that Bush has made this country safe by keeping Islamic lunatics pinned down fighting our troops in Iraq. In the past few years, our brave troops have killed more than 20,000 al-Qaida and other Islamic militants in Iraq alone. That's 20,000 terrorists who will never board a plane headed for JFK -- or a landmark building, for that matter.”
Now, if America wants to turn this record of safety over to a guy who’s never been to Iraq and subscribes to the un-American policy of cutting and running promoted by “hide under the bed” Russ Feingold, then I would suggest America brace for another terrorist attack God knows where: Chicago, Los Angeles, Dallas, New York?
Liberals, thank George Bush your office or house with your computer that spits out such hateful venom hasn’t been blown to kingdom come.
Liberals, if you got this far down in the blog (I doubt it) here’s Coulter’s entire column if you care to pick up any pointers on how a truly captivating writer does it.
Who wants to take away your right to vote? Not Republicans...
Liberals erroneously scream that Republicans want to prevent people from voting by pushing for a photo ID requirement.
Actually, Repubicans merely want voters to be who they say they are before they cast their ballots.
If anyone wants to prohibit people from voting, it’s liberals.
Charlie Sykes writes in the Wisconsin Interest:
“No sooner had the votes been counted and liberal Supreme Court Justice Louis Butler ousted from the state’s high court than the outrage began.
Bad voters!
Governor Jim Doyle, who had appointed Butler to the high court declared the result a ‘tragedy,’ while liberals and their allies in the media immediately embraced voter suppression on a massive scale. Upset by the results, state Representative Fred Kessler (D-Milwaukee) proposed the elimination of elections for justice altogether and the state’s largest newspaper, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, embraced his call for disenfranchisement.”
Here’s Charlie’s entire piece.
Add the editorial board of the Wisconsin State Journal to the list of folks who want to take your vote away.
They’ve decided it would be best if judges got on the bench via some merit selection system, and they offer some lame reasons.
All because a conservative was elected to the state Supreme Court in April. Had Louis Butler won, there’d be complete silence.
Iowa is no Katrina
Blogger Right from the Right has an interesting perspective on the media coverage of the massive flooding in Iowa.
With tongue firmly implanted in cheek, he says the coverage is “racist.”
Belated HERO OF THE WEEK
I should have included local tanners in my Week-ends blog on Saturday as one of my HEROES OF THE WEEK.
Their story is featured on this website in the YOUR STORIES section.
If you haven't read it, here it is.
YOUR VOTES ARE IN!
Votes in the 2nd BEST DINING IN THE FRANKLIN-ARE SURVEY are being tabulated.
The results will be announced very soon!
Pete Kosovich belongs on the Franklin Plan Commission
The Franklin Common Council tonight will consider Mayor Taylor’s appointment of former Alderman Pete Kosovich to the Plan Commission.
Kosovich is an excellent choice and should be approved by the Council.
Kosovich is a small businessman with knowledge of local ordinances, state rules and regulations, and has had experience in dealing with Franklin business and economic development issues. He would be a perfect fit for the Plan Commission.
To suggest that Kosovich is just a TV repairman is insulting and out of line. Kosovich is a small businessman who dedicated himself to public service and wants to do it again.
Was he thrown out of office? Sure, if you consider losing by such a narrow margin that a recount was necessary being “thrown out of office.”
Political boards and commissions all across the state are filled with appointees of people who once held public office who bring a wealth of institutional knowledge to the table.
I am confident Kosovich will be a great addition to the Plan Commission. He needs to be approved at tonight’s meeting.
Franklin "destroyed?"
“I love Franklin."
“This is a great place to live.”
“I really enjoy working here.”
Those are some of the remarks from Franklin residents I’ve heard in reaction to a Franklin blogger who, still upset at how the new Target site was developed, recently wrote, “Our leaders betrayed us, the people of Franklin, and went on their merry way to destroy everything we had going for us. We will always be paying the consequences of their actions.”
Suggesting that our local representatives willingly and merrily worked to “destroy” Franklin is hyperbole to the nth degree. And to be honest, I’m not really sure what “consequences” we’re paying.
Granted, in this day and age of “what have you done for me lately,” city of Franklin officials arguably have left themselves open to criticism. Just how much is open for debate.
There was the “Boomgaard” public relations nightmare, followed by one alderman’s ill-advised stunt of openly brandishing the property tax records of Franklin bloggers at a Common Council meeting. I would also toss out the less than enthusiastic response from most aldermen to Mayor Taylor’s pledge to hold the line on a city property tax levy increase to 3%.
But Franklin, “destroyed?”
I’ve been a loud critic of our tax and spend climate at City Hall and especially with the Franklin School Board. And there are some projects, notably Fountains of Franklin that I wish would move out of neutral. But if you search your memory banks beyond “Boomgaard,” you’ll find a litany of success stories that make charges that leaders worked to destroy our city sound absurd.
Franklin has seen much to be proud of.
In no particular order, try Sendik’s.
And not just one, but two of the quality food markets.
Target comes to town after residents asked for such a store for 20 years.
Hopefully, an Azana Spa and Salon will open soon along with other tenants at Fountains of Franklin that, despite my concern over its lack of progress, does have tremendous potential.
Northwestern Mutual Life.
Wheaton Franciscan Health Care.
The architecturally magnificent Indian Community School.
Harley-Davidson.
Carma Laboratories.
Over $450 million in economic development currently underway on South 27th Street.
The day-to-day operations of keeping our streets and neighborhoods safe and clean.
The incredible work of volunteers to help enact tough new laws to protect our children from sex predators.
And it was all done by people who’ve been involved in Franklin efforts for many, many years.
It’s easy to point out areas that need improvement. I do it all the time. But let’s not forget the wonderful foundation that has been built in this city through hard work, service, and civic pride.
Franklin "destroyed?"
Hardly.
Do men really hate Barry Manilow?
Barry Manilow turned 65 today.
Mention his name and certain thoughts, opinions, and images immediately come to mind.
Wow......that's....really clever...... Al
Can you imagine if a conservative Republican wrote garbage like the junk in Al Franken’s book.From Matt Purple's column:
“A passage from a book by comedian and Minnesota Democratic Senate candidate Al Franken describes one prominent conservative being shot in the head and another soliciting a prostitute, among other graphic images.
The chapter, a satirical short story, portrays the cowardly and bumbling actions of several conservative commentators deployed as a squad to Vietnam. Titled “Operation Chickenhawk,” it was included in Franken’s 1996 book Rush Limbaugh is a Big Fat Idiot and Other Observations as a scathing rebuttal to conservative criticisms of then-President Bill Clinton’s draft dodging.
In the passage, Franken jokes about conservative author Bill Bennett getting shot in the head and the effect it had on columnist George Will, whom Franken calls “Stoner” and portrays as being addicted to acid.
“First day in 'Nam, Stoner saw a buddy get greased,” Franken writes. “Guy named Bill Bennett. Got it right in the eyes. Stoner tried to plug the hole, came up holding a handful of goop that used to be Bennett's brain. It was pretty grotesque, bizarre and grotesque to be honest. Stoner hasn't been the same since.”
There's more.
The warm, compassionate, and I might add, clever left.
I wish the Lakers had won the NBA championship, but...
It’s not quite 10:00 Tuesday night and I’m watching the Boston Celtics demolish the Los Angeles Lakers in Game 6 of the NBA FInals on their way to the NBA title.
Many thoughts are going through my mind.
I waited for the past two days for a knock down, drag ‘em out, exciting down to the wire, pressure packed, nail biter of an NBA Finals game…and I get this????
Like many other so-called “experts,” I thought the Lakers would have too many explosives to lose to the Celtics and that no one could stop Kobe Bryant. I was wrong.
I was so hoping Derek Fisher, the beyond classy Laker who has done so much for his daughter with eye cancer would win another title. It wasn’t meant to be. My guess is Fisher starts tending to his daughter even more, starting tomorrow.
The Lakers will return next year with a great chance to go back to the Finals and win. Why? Because not a single announcer has mentioned that the Lakers have played the entire playoffs without 7-foot 280-pound center Andrew Bynum who could have made a difference.
And what if (and what if is a question reserved for fans of the losing team) the Lakers had not blown that 24-point lead in Game 4?
I loved watching the Celtics as a kid in the 60’s. I stopped pulling for them when Milwaukee got the Bucks. I don’t like the Celtics.
However, I’m also thinking about their coach, former Marquette star “Doc” Rivers.
I worked for WUWM for 11 years. I did everything there except scrub the floors, and that included covering Marquette basketball.
Among a million cassettes and personal archives in my possession are taped interviews I did with “Doc” Rivers. Entrenched in my memory, and I can’t remember what I had for breakfast, is a very young freshman who had stardom written all over him.
Keep in mind, I’m a radio reporter, I need audio. I can’t put video highlights on the air of Rivers dunking on the opposition. I need sound bites. Quality sound bites. Articulate sound bites.
Rivers and I, from day one, the first day we met in the MU locker room seemed to connect. I started asking him to consent to post-game interviews very early in his freshman year.
It didn’t take long before Rivers and I just took it for granted that we’d be meeting after every home game, win or lose.
There was Rivers, even if he had already talked to a myriad of reporters while I was off talking to someone else, greeting me with a huge smile as if to say, “What do you need? How can I help? You want a great story? You want a great quote?”
This went on his entire career at MU. Oh, sure he was nice to everybody. But I’d like to think that before his folding chair in the locker room got so crowded when he became an upperclassman, that “Doc” Rivers and I developed a relationship that helped us both.
I learned, I believe before a lot of folks, that this was an intelligent, savvy, self-confident, talented individual who was going places. That’s why I’m not surprised Rivers was able to turn a rag-tag, lousy Celtics team into an NBA champion.
No way in hell “Doc,” as I was able to call him face to face for years when he was just a college student, remembers me. Rivers is one of the katrillion memories I have of my previous life and 24-7 career.
And I remember those days.
Fondly.
And 25-plus years later I'm grateful he was so nice to me.
And while I wish the Lakers had won the 2008 NBA Finals, I’m truly happy for “Doc” Rivers.
He deserves it.
My wife wanted to remind everyone...
That Friday is Take Your Dog to Work Day.
A "Boomgaard" solution
STRIKE ONE: Julie Becker of FranklinNOW reports, “The Oak Creek Common Council last night unanimously approved a motion referring the name (the “Boomgaard District) back to the (South 27th Street Steering) committee, with a recommendation to consider selecting a new name.
STRIKE TWO: Becker also reports that Oak Creek and Franklin officials agreed last month that the name should be re-evaluated by the committee.
STRIKE THREE: Public reaction to the name was overwhelmingly negative.
The people have spoken. The vast majority of those who have offered an opinion on “Boomgaard” have panned the brand. Reaction has ranged from guffaws to accusations of City Hall scandals.
Time is ticking on the 120-day schedule to make a final decision on a nickname to promote the 27th Street Corridor.
I suggest the following recommendations as a positive solution to what has been a public relations debacle.
Public participation in the process needs to be encouraged and then utilized to achieve consensus and, ultimately, acceptance of an approved name.
The Franklin and Oak Creek Common Council’s should immediately seek interested citizens from both cities to serve on the 27th Street Steering Committee. A specific time period could be established to collect nominations from people who wish to volunteer their time in researching prospective names.
An application process could be created online on the websites of both cities. The call for citizen volunteers could be promoted on those websites, on FranklinNOW, Oak CreekNOW, and discussed by bloggers.
Applicants would be expected to offer reasons why they would be best suited to be chosen.
Both council’s could then review the applicants and select an agreed upon number of people to serve. The Franklin Common Council and the Mayor would select Franklin committee volunteers. Ditto for Oak Creek.
It appears from previous minutes of a May 13th committee meeting that several alternative names to “Boomgaard” were considered before “Boomgaard” was chosen. So this process needn’t drag on. A final list of names could be announced so that the general public could weigh in on which name is preferred before the final selection is made.
There are good people already serving on this committee who have done exhaustive work. I am proposing a few members from the general public be added to the committee because one of the loudest criticisms of the process thus far has been the lack of transparency and public input.
Opening the door and inviting the public to step forward and offer guidance and possibly some untapped expertise would go a long way in repairing whatever damage has been done to public relations, whether that be great or small.
Volunteers would energize the process and I daresay could be just as, if not more effective than the public relations firm that came up with “Boomgaard.”
Get the word out.
Volunteers needed to assist Franklin and Oak Creek in coming up with the name that will front a multi-billion dollar project that will be the shining glory of both communities.
Select the best applicants.
Start meeting.
Get back on track.
Make up for lost time.
Let’s pick a great name and get this project moving in the right direction.
A gift from me to fellow blogger Greg Kowalski
Yes, you read the title, correctly.
Actually it's a gift to all my readers.
But I thought Greg would especially appreciate it.
You see ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, I happen to be an extremely nice guy.
So read on.
Scroll down.
Enjoy.
The Key Lime is always a wise choice this time of year.
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This year marks The Cheesecake Factory’s 30th anniversary. In honor of this exciting milestone, we invite you to join in the celebration! *BEST DINING IN FRANKLIN-AREA SURVEY: 2008*Your votes are in and here are the results of the 2nd Best Dining in the Franklin-area Survey! As I wrote weeks ago, this project was inspired by similar surveys conducted by Milwaukee Magazine and OnMilwaukee.com, and was an effort to engage readers in a public service to showcase the best in our community. The survey comes at a time when there’s a buzz about future retail developments in Franklin and the anticipation of bigger and better things to come. It is my hope that the survey recognizes and acknowledges the quality establishments we have in and around Franklin, and at the same time, illustrate the need to improve on the relatively small number of quality dining options in our area. Survey responses were taken between May 18, 2008 and June 14, 2008. Selections were limited to restaurants in the Franklin-area, including Franklin, Greendale, Greenfield, Oak Creek, and Hales Corners. In each category, there is a first and second place winner. THE WINNERS: Best place for appetizers 1) KA, Franklin 2) HUGO’S STEAKHOUSE, Franklin Best appetizer 1) Prosciutto wrapped mozzarella at Casa di Giorgio, Franklin 2) Reuben Rolls at Hugo’s Steakhouse, Franklin Best Bakery 1) SENDIK’S, Franklin and Greenfield 2) ELIZABETH’S CAKES, Greenfield Best Breakfast 1) MEYER’S RESTAURANT AND BAR, Greenfield 2) MELROSE, Oak Creek Best Lunch 1) HANLEY’S, Franklin 2) MEYER’S RESTAURANT AND BAR, Greenfield Best Burger 1) IRV’S MUG, Oak Creek 2) RED ROBIN, Greenfield Best Coffee Shop/Café 1) FIVE STAR, Franklin 2) No 2nd place winner, all votes went to Five Star Best Décor 1) TRATTORIA DI CARLO, Oak Creek 2) MIA FAMIGLIA, Hales Corners Best Desserts 1) SENDIK’S, Franklin and Greenfield 2) CASA DI GIORGIO, Franklin Best Fish Fry 1) BARTOLOTTA’S AT BOERNER BOTANICAL GARDENS, Hales Corners 2) WEGNER’S, Franklin Best Frozen Custard 1) OMEGA, Franklin 2) KOPP’S, Greenfield Best Patio 1) THAT’S AMORE, Hales Corners 2) MIA FAMIGLIA, Hales Corners Best Pizza 1) TRATTORIA DI CARLO, Oak Creek 2) TIE: MICHAELANGELO’S, Franklin; ANN’S, Hales Corners; RICARDO’S, Greendale Best Romantic Restaurant 1) HUGO’S STEAKHOUSE , Franklin 2) No 2nd place winner Best Seafood 1) WEGNER’S, Franklin 2) BARTOLOTTA’S FRIDAY FISH FRY AT BOERNER BOTANICAL GARDENS, Hales Corners Best Steak 1) HUGO’S STEAKHOUSE, Franklin 2) CASA DI GIORGIO, Franklin Best Subs/Sandwiches 1) COUSIN’S, Multiple locations 2) JIMMY JOHN’S, Oak Creek Best Family-Friendly Restaurant 1) CHAMP’S, Greenfield 2) MEYER’S RESTAURANT AND BAR, Greenfield Best Asian 1) LE BISTRO SHANGHAI, Hales Corners 2) TAJ MAHAL, Hales Corners Best Italian 1) CASA DI GIORGIO, Franklin 2) TIE: TRATTORIA DI CARLO, Oak Creek and ANN’S, Hales Corners Best Mexican 1) GUS’ MEXICAN CANTINA, Franklin 2) JALISCO’S, Franklin Best Bar Food 1) KA, Franklin 2) HANLEY’S, Franklin Best service 1) CASA DI GIORGIO, Franklin 2) TIE: WEGNER’S, Franklin and MEYER’S RESTAURANT AND BAR, Greenfield BONUS CATEGORY Top two restaurants (names or types of restaurants) you’d like to see open at Fountains of Franklin, or anywhere in the city for that matter. Here are some of the ideas suggested for Fountains of Franklin or Franklin-area restaurants: A BARTOLOTTA’S OR BARTOLOTTA-TYPE RESTAURANT ESPN ZONE OR ESPN CLUB WOLFGANG PUCK’S CAFÉ A GOOD IRISH RESTAURANT LIKE MO’S ON BLUEMOUND FAMILY TYPE PLACE FOR KIDS SIMILAR TO STONE FIRE IN NEW BERLIN CALIFORNIA PIZZA KITCHEN STEAK N SHAKE PF CHANG’S CHEESECAKE FACTORY Some additional comments made by voters: Wegner’s tartar sauce is the BEST! Sendik’s pizza: Seriously they have outstanding pizzas What romantic restaurants in Franklin area? Are there any? My sincere thanks to everyone who participated! Feingold: Dems better worry about McCainSure, they're good friends. Want to live longer?Drink more coffee. Is the death penalty appropriate for child rape?The U.S. Supreme Court could issue a decision Thursday in a case involving the death penalty for child rape. Patrick Kennedy is on death row in Louisiana for brutally and violently raping his 8-year old stepdaughter. ABC News reports: “In 1998, Patrick O. Kennedy called 911 to report that his 8-year-old stepdaughter had just been raped. Kennedy blamed two boys from his suburban New Orleans neighborhood for the attack and told police that the boys had fled on bicycles. But police soon suspected Kennedy of the crime. At trial, the girl, who had required surgery after the attack, testified that Kennedy had raped her and that he had coached her to lie to police. Testimony at trial also revealed that Kennedy had called a carpet cleaning company about removing bloodstains from his carpet even before dialing 911. Kennedy's crime was considered so heinous that he was sentenced to death under Louisiana law, which imposes the death penalty for the rape of a child.” Some argue that Kennedy’s crime is more heinous than a homicide. Ironically, Kennedy’s supporters include victim’s rights groups. It's a compelling case. Is the death penalty appropriate when the victim isn't dead? Here’s more from CNN. UPDATE, 6//20/08: No ruling yet, but one is expected by the end of June. Friday night on InterCHANGE1-- MICHAEL MCGEE TRIAL STARTS IN FEDERAL COURT2 – DOUBLE WHAMMY – WILL HIGH GAS PRICES AND FLOODING SINK SUMMER TOURISM IN WISCONSIN. 3– OBAMA BYPASSES PUBLIC FUNDING. Denise Callaway, formerly of WTMJ-TV Channel 4 will be the guest host. That huge explosion you just heard came from the PotawatomiThe Grand Opening of the incredible expansion at Potawatomi casino is now underway. I'm sorry Mayor Taylor, the answer is no, however....Some time ago, Franklin Mayor Tom Taylor asked me if I would serve as a citizen member of the city’s Finance Committee. I was immediately interested and intrigued, not to mention honored.However, I politely and respectfully declined the Mayor’s offer because I didn’t feel I had enough time to properly give to this all-important committee. I asked Mayor Taylor if I could offer to him the kind of advice and suggestions I would have made if I had been on the Finance Committee in order to help him meet his pledge of proposing a budget with a property tax levy increase that does not exceed 3 %. Mayor Taylor welcomed my thoughts and opinions and I will be happy to share them. The key, of course, is support from the Common Council. Only one member, Steve Taylor has openly said he/she would not support a budget with an increase that goes beyond 3%. Meeting the Mayor’s pledge is not impossible, but it will be tough. The community can certainly survive some lean years. Taxpayers do it all the time in their own households. It could be worse, you could be in HawaiiIf you’re reading this when I first posted, on Thursday night, and live in the Milwaukee-area (I have readers scattered everywhere), I have good news and bad news. The good news is that your commute to work tomorrow morning will be the best commute you have all week. The bad news is that your commute home will be the worst commute you have all week. The metro-Milwaukee area has the 46th worst traffic congestion in the nation according to the INRIX National Traffic Scorecard. Here’s the scorecard for our area with info about our overall congestion and worst bottlenecks. The next time you’re stuck on I-94 or 43, think about Honolulu, where those same natives that tell tourists to “Hang Loose,” get high blood pressure near the end of the week. According to INRIX, “If you happen to be driving on a Thursday from 5 PM to 6 PM on its main highways – you’re no longer in the Aloha State – you’re in the worst place and worst hour of any single roadway in the U.S., taking 88% more time to get where you’re going than if there were no congestion. If Highway 520 west bound in Seattle is your daily commute, you could conceivably get out and ride your bike faster than your car can take you to work, with an average speed of only 9 mph during congested periods.” Here are some other national stats from INRIX: • Worst Traffic Day: Friday • Worst Week Day Commute: Friday PM • Worst Commuting Hour: Friday 5-6 PM • Worst Morning Commute: Wednesday AM • Best Week Day for Traffic: Monday • Best Week Day Commute: Friday AM • Best Week Day Commuting Hour: Friday 6-7 AM • Best Week Day Afternoon: Monday PM
Jim Webb a VP choice for Obama?I thought so, given Webb is a distinguished veteran, an equalizer against John McCain. UPDATE: 6/19/08 @ 11:50 pm What's your kissing IQ?Time for a kissing quiz, a smooching survey. Question #1: 1) When you kiss your significant other, do you turn your head to the right…………….or left? We ask because most couples do it….. a certain way. Question # 2: 2) Between 2 and 34…..yeh, I know it’s weird……when you, not your significant other, but you…………I’M TALKIN' TO YOU…..when you kiss, how many muscles in your face do you use? BE HONEST! Question # 3 3) Kissing is good for our teeth, TRUE or FALSE. (My dentist never said a word about that to me, what the hell is this?) Question #4 4) How many hours will the average person spend kissing in his/her lifetime? A) 184 hours B) 252 hours C) 336 hours Question #5 5) Why, oh why do we use the letter “X”, the 3rd letter in “sex” to represent a smackola? Question #6 6) How many men did Jennifer kiss before she married me, the man of her dreams? Question #7 7) It’s a good idea for men to kiss their significant other’s before going to work, but why, besides personal preservation? And finally, Question #8 8) What was the longest kiss in movie history? > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > The answers and some other kissing tidbits from msn.com and Laura Schaefer, the author of Man with Farm Seeks Woman with Tractor: The Best and Worst Personal Ads of All Time 1. Two out of every three couples turn their heads to the right when they kiss. 2. A simple peck uses two muscles; a passionate kiss, on the other hand, uses all 34 muscles in your face. Now that’s a rigorous workout! 3. Like fingerprints or snowflakes, no two lip impressions are alike. 4. Kissing is good for what ails you. Research shows that the act of smooching improves our skin, helps circulation, prevents tooth decay, and can even relieve headaches. 5. The average person spends 336 hours of his or her life kissing. 6. Ever wonder how an “X” came to represent a kiss? Starting in the Middle Ages, people who could not read used an X as a signature. They would kiss this mark as a sign of sincerity. Eventually, the X came to represent the kiss itself. 7. Talk about a rush! Kissing releases the same neurotransmitters in our brains as parachuting, bungee jumping, and running. 8. The average woman kisses 29 men before she gets married. 9. Men who kiss their partners before leaving for work average higher incomes than those who don’t. 10. The longest kiss in movie history was between Jane Wyman and Regis Tommey in the 1941 film, You’re in the Army Now. It lasted 3 minutes and 5 seconds. So if you’ve beaten that record, it’s time to celebrate! Now isn't this more fun than looking at some rendering of a site plan for a new Costco in Two Rivers? Sendik's news
OK, get off your duppa and get yourself down to...POLISH FEST! See Bryan Maersch eat one pierogi after another. See Bryan Maersch polka until he drops. Get Bryan Maersch’s autograph here. See Bryan Maersch sing along with Eddie Blazonczyk and the Versatones.
The Catholic Church wonders why it has problems
Bishop defends handling of sex scandal involving his brother and teen girlYou really didn't expect Jim Doyle to do the right thing, did you?Well, he didn't. School boards and administrations never tire of pickpocketingWhat’s the typical MO of most school boards and administrations? Citing all kinds of problems, they cry for money. If they don’t get the money, civilization, as we know it, will crumble. Money is the only answer to solve the problems they perceive. How do they get the money? You know how. They put a referendum on the ballot. Then they concoct an end of the world sob story to try to guilt voters into opening up their wallets to say, in between tears, “Here. You can have it. Take as much as you want.” They will use every tactic and trick in the book (locking voting age students into a school assembly to instruct them on the referendum, handing out flyers in school to take home to parents, talking about how good a YES vote would be right in class, etc.) Now the referendum passes. The money comes pouring in from suckers, I mean taxpayers. And all those problems go away, right? Yeh, sure. And then, there’s one more element to this entire process. Know what it is? Think about it. If you’re insightful, it’ll come to mind rather quickly. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > After all of the above has happened, the same school board and administration does one more thing. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > THEY ASK FOR ANOTHER REFERENDUM AND MORE MONEY!!! That is exactly what is happening in Racine. Fred at Real Debate Wisconsin gets the hat tip. Friday Night Live
Week-endsA look back at the people and events that made news the past week. The Barking LotTHE BARKING LOT IS A REGULAR WEEKLY DOG BLOG FEATURED ON THIS JUST IN, WRITTEN PRIMARILY BY MY BETTER HALF. HERE’S JENNIFER. By Jennifer Fischer I know our calendars say that yesterday was the first day of summer. Given that our days have been filled with cooler-than-normal temperatures and an ungodly amount of rain it seems difficult to imagine that we will ever enjoy a nice, dry, sunny, HOT day. But as soon as you can say “Wanna go for a walk?” to Fido, we will see our thermometers shoot up past 80 degrees. Every summer, we are reminded of the stupidity of people who claim to love their dogs. Claim that they are responsible pet owners. Claim that they buy the best food, take them to the best veterinarians. These same “dog lovers” are the ones who leave their helpless dog in the car while they “just run in to the store for five minutes.” And they come back to a dead dog. If I had my way, any owner who lets this happen would suffer the exact same fate. And I know I am not the only person who feels this way. Leaving your dog unattended in a sweltering car is not the only way to mistreat your four-legged friend during hot summer weather. Keeping them outside too long with no shade, taking them for too long of a walk during the hottest part of the day, and not providing them with adequate water are all other ways owners fail to meet their responsibility to their pet. I have faith in the people who read The Barking Lot that they would never do something so cruel, so ridiculous, so unbelievably stupid. But as a reminder to every dog owner out there, PLEASE REMEMBER THESE TIPS. Of course, there is the flip side of the insensitive owner. There are the pet owners who buy their dogs a kiddie-size wading pool. (Been There, Done That.) They buy their precious pooches special doggie “ice cream.” (Um, BT, DT again.) And one of the coolest (sorry, couldn’t resist) ways to pamper your puppy during the blazing days ahead is with KOOL DOGZ Ice Treat. Go ahead, start making those pupsicles. Your dog will love you even more, if that’s possible. ----Jennifer Fischer Thank you, Jennifer. Time now for DOGS IN THE NEWS, canines that made headlines the past week. This is quite a story, a dog surviving a 220 foot drop off a cliff. Dog cloning? It’s arrived. They call it an underground doggie railroad. And finally, I love this: A pet store tells Paris Hilton to take a hike. That's it for this week. Remember, stay cool, cats...........I mean dogs. My most popular blogsAs I post every Sunday, here are the top five most popular of my blog entries from the previous week: The World's Ugliest DogThis news broke too late Saturday to make our weekly dog blog, The Barking Lot, but take a look.... From the LA Times Ugliest dog is a real winnerA pedigree Chinese crested with three legs, one eye and no hair wins the World's Ugliest Dog contest in Petaluma, California.
Racine woman named Miss WisconsinThe Journal Sentinel seemed to ignore this story all week.
Jim Stingl's column a must-read todayStingl writes about Darvelle Hutchins of Milwaukee.Hutchins bought his own house. He works full time. He took only 3 years to graduate from high school. Culinary no-no #59
The Serb Hall fish fry costs $14.95. That is a rip-off and a major culinary no-no. Friday’s Milwaukee Journal/Sentinel carried a story about the predicament restaurant owners are finding themselves in. The rising cost of food caused by the ridiculous ethanol craze has restaurateurs debating whether to raise fish fry prices or keep them where they are to prevent losing customers. The paper reported, “Serb Hall management is asking customers to swallow a nearly 60% price increase, from $9.50 to $14.95 for the standard fish fry.” Quoted in the article is my good friend, Larry Meyer who runs Meyer’s Restaurant and Bar in Greenfield. Regarding the 60% price increase at Serb Hall, Meyer said, ““I give them credit for being gutsy.” I call it stunning. A fish fry on a Friday night at Serb Hall is one of Milwaukee’s most storied traditions. The fish dinner is good. Many would say very good. I submit it’s not even close to being the best, making the pole vault in price from $9.50 to $14.95 about a month ago highway robbery. In February 2007, then-Journal/Sentinel restaurant critic Dennis Getto wrote a piece rating the best fish fries. Getto gave the best fish fries a rating a four fish and the next best three and half fish. This weekend, I checked the restaurants rated by Getto as the best of the best to see if they too had no other choice but to raise the price of a standard fish fry to $14.95. Here are those restaurants followed by the current price of their fish fries: Wegner's St. Martins Inn, 11318 W. St. Martins Road, Franklin$9.25 Kegel's Inn, 5901 W. National Ave., West Milwaukee $9.95 Karl Ratzsch's Restaurant, 320 E. Mason St $13.95 beer battered $15.95 broiled Three-and-a half fish Ron's Cozy Corner, N54-W35994 W. Lake Drive, Oconomowoc $7.95 Polonez, 4016 S. Packard Ave., St. Francis $9.75 Erv's Mug, 130 W. Ryan Road, Oak Creek $7.95 Carleton Grange, 3807 S. Packard Ave., St. Francis $10.95 Tanner-Paull American Legion Post, 6922 W. Orchard St., West Allis $9.50 Bavarian Inn, 700 W. Lexington Ave., Glendale $11.50 $14.00 all you can eat Beerbelly's, 512 W. Layton Ave. $7.25 The Country Squire Supper Club, S72-W16373 Janesville Road, Muskego $11.95 It seems other restaurants, faced with the same increase in food prices as Serb Hall chose not to increase their prices by nearly 60%. In fact, they’ve stayed virtually unchanged since Getto’s February 2007 article. Also, if someone, including Serb Hall management wants to argue that their $14.95 fish fry is ultimately superior in quality to the fish fries mentioned by Getto (He did not include Serb Hall), it’s going to fall on deaf ears. Some of the fish fries that are close to Serb Hall’s $14.95 price tag, like Karl Ratzsch's serve the same generous portion, in a Sprecher beer batter and includes yummy potato pancakes. And there’s atmosphere along with live music. Bartolotta’s Catering at Boerner Botanical Gardens has a fish fry that runs from November to just before summer when the fish fries are bumped by Friday night wedding’s and wedding rehearsal dinners. Bartolotta’s charges $14.95 for their beer battered version. But they also include the best salad bar that goes on and on and on. And there’s atmosphere along with live music. The atmosphere at Serb Hall where you’re herded in and out like cattle? Here’s a photo of the room from roadfood.com that describes the “atmosphere” this way: “Cozy it’s not.” ![]() Serb Hall reportedly serves over 1,000 fish fries every week. Couldn’t they have raised the price of beverages or other items that clearly could have made up for the increase in fish and food prices the management claims it just couldn’t handle? Other managers are, at least for the moment, rejecting increases that could kill their biggest night of the week and are switching to other styles of fish. Serb Hall is taking the huge risk of losing customers by jacking up the price, not by .50, or one dollar, or two dollars, but by $5.45. They’re not the best or the only game in town. What once was the $9.50 fish fry at Serb Hall is now a big, fat, deep-fried culinary no-no. NOTE: Kegel's Inn, rated with four fish by Getto in his 2007 article, is no longer in business. To read previous Culinary no-no’s, please click CULINARY NO-NO under my TAGS section. Johnny Depp should have stayed hereHere's what happens when filming of a movie leaves the friendly confines of Wisconsin for Illinois. ![]() A police officer talks with costumed extras on the set of the film, "Public Enemies," after a drive-by shooting occurred nearby. Chicago Tribune photo by E. Jason Wambsgans. I say pack up and move the entire operation north. Appleton, Columbus, Oshkosh, Cudahy, Franklin.....no chance of gettting shot in any of those places. From the Chicago Tribune: Teen arrested in drive-by shooting near Johnny Depp movie setActor was not on scene; no one injuredTribune staff report
Great news for the Hamm brothers of WaukeshaA day ago, it was uncertain. Paul Ryan's the manThe Wisconsin State Journal has an interesting article on the notion, I believe, that Paul Ryan is the future of the GOP. Why Wisconsin can't be like ArizonaAnd I don’t mean the sunshine, pretty mountains, cactus, or deserts. I’m talking taxes. Nothing short of miraculous has transpired in Arizona. Nearly thirty years ago, Arizona had one of the nation’s worst tax burdens as a percentage of state income, the 5th highest in the nation. Does that sound familiar Wisconsin taxpayers? That was 1990. Today, Arizona’s tax burden with taxes as a percentage of state income has gone from the 5th highest in the nation to 31st highest, according to the non-partisan Tax Foundation in Washington D.C. that keeps track of all tax data. (Wisconsin ranks 7th highest in the country). How was Arizona able to pull of the dramatic turnaround? They did it for the same reasons it’s clear that if Wisconsin continues its tax and spending patterns of the past that we’ll be mired in the depths of tax hell for years and years to come. Arizona dug itself out of a massive hole for two reasons: 1) They CUT state taxes. 2) Individual incomes rose faster than state and local tax collections. CUT state taxes in Wisconsin? We can’t even FREEZE taxes! Remember the entire debate a few years ago about a tax freeze. You would have thought the apocalypse was at hand. The streets would be flowing in blood, grandmothers and babies would starve, people would die before our very eyes. Freeze taxes? Are you mad? Amidst that over-reaction and threat to our habit of spending like drunken sailors, imagine the reaction if someone would attempt to CUT state taxes. Democrats would start ordering strait jackets for anyone who would express such an idea. That’s #1. #2……..individual incomes in Arizona rose faster than state and local tax collections. There are a couple of pieces in that equation. First, there needs to be some restraint on the increase in state and local taxes. Folks, this is Wisconsin we’re talking about. Slowing the rate of increase in taxation? We tried that a few years ago. It was called TABOR, the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights. Remember the reaction? You want to throw Grandma off the train. You want to starve innocent children. You want the elderly to eat dog food. So tax collections remain high in Wisconsin. What about incomes? Per capita income is at rock bottom for Wisconsinites compared to other states. Those with large incomes leave. From a blog written by state Senator Mary Lazich (my boss): “During November 2005, the Wisconsin Taxpayer Alliance issued a very troubling report entitled, "Moving In, Moving on: Migration in Wisconsin." During the five years prior to the 2000 census, almost 669,000 people either moved to or out of Wisconsin. However, the net in-migration into Wisconsin was a meager 7,282. Individuals with college or advanced degrees were more likely to leave, while those with less education tended to come. Individuals with household incomes above $75,000 left Wisconsin. Those with incomes of $200,000 or more had the highest rates of leaving. The huge exodus of wealthy Wisconsinites leaving the state caused a loss of an estimated $4.72 billion in net worth and a loss of $455 million in income over the five years of this study. That means far fewer in-state bank deposits, less stock in Wisconsin firms, less investment capital for in-state ventures, and less money given to local charities.” And why do those with sizeable incomes leave? Oh, they may be enticed by palm trees and sunshine. But they do leave for states that have far more favorable tax climates than Wisconsin. Wisconsin continues to tax and spend beyond the ability of the affordability of taxpayers, over and over and over and over and over again. That is why unless there is dramatic change in the mindset of the governor and the Legislature, you won’t see an Arizona miracle in Wisconsin for a long, long, long time. That means open your wallets, keep forking your hard-earned money, unless you elect individuals who strongly believe in fiscal responsibility. For more on tax policies in Arizona, here is an article from today’s Arizona Republic, copied so you don’t have to register, etc. Tax policies draw attention in hard times | ||













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