Boots & Sabers

The blogging will continue until morale improves...

Month: October 2016

Obama Signs Bill Mandating Changing Stations in Men’s Bathrooms

He does seem a bit obsessed with our bathroom business in his final year in office, doesn’t he?

This month, President Barack Obama signed the Bathrooms Accessible in Every Situation Act, or the BABIES Act, which requires diaper-changing facilities in male and female restrooms in public federal buildings, such as Social Security offices, courthouses and post offices. If these restrooms do not have changing tables, hallway signs must direct parents to the nearest facilities, the act states.
The law doesn’t cover restrooms that aren’t in public buildings, such as restaurants or retailers, and those in buildings that can’t safely support changing facilities.
Mounting more changing tables in restrooms seems like a small task, but the policy suggests a step forward in gender equality, enabling all parents to take part in child care.
Wait a minute… if gender-specific bathrooms are now taboo and it is perfectly acceptable for men to go in the ladies’ room and vice versa, why do we need a changing table in each bathroom? Wouldn’t it be OK for men to go into the ladies’ room to change their kid’s diaper?
Honestly though, I changed a lot of diapers with my kids and I don’t recall this ever being an issue.

Managing Under Act 10

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel is running a pretty good series about the impact of Act 10 now that we’re 5 years into it. It points out some of the consequences that some people argue are positive and some argue are negative. For example, since Act 10 teacher turnover has increased as districts compete for the better teachers and/or teachers who teach a specialized subject. Some argue this is bad because it creates more turmoil in the district that loses good teachers and that poorer districts struggle to attract those good teachers. I argue it is a good thing for a freer marketplace for teacher labor to exists because a freer marketplace allocates scarce resources in the most efficient and equitable manner possible. And as the marketplace drives up wages for needed skillsets, it will attract more teachers into that field.

Another example is how 40% of districts have implemented some form of merit pay for teachers. Some perceive that as a bad thing because they believe that merit pay is untenable in an education setting. I think it is a good thing because compensation is the best way to drive the behavior you want. My only lament is that the other 60% of school districts have not moved forward on some form of merit pay.

In any case, many folks, including myself, are frustrated that school administrators have failed to take more advantage of the power given to them in Act 10 to improve outcomes for students and control costs. It occurred to me today… I don’t think many of them know how to manage in this environment.

Before Act 10, school administrators did not really control 80%-85% of their budgets because they were dictated by the union contracts. They never had to create and actively manage compensation plans, incentive plans, performance, recruiting, retention, staffing, etc. At least, their range of decision-making was severely limited. For some of these school administrators, they have been working in schools for 20+ years and truly are just ignorant of how managers function in the private sector. They aren’t more actively using the tools of Act 10 because they flat out don’t know how.

I would encourage school boards to push their administrators to get management training or exposure from the private sector. It also wouldn’t hurt to hire a few administrators who haven’t spent their entire careers in education. Good leadership and management skills transcend specific industries. Yes, there will be a learning curve, but there’s already a learning curve for lifelong educators in this new environment.

Clinton Email Accuses Saudi Arabia and Qatar of Funding Terrorists

No doubt she’s right.

On Aug. 17, 2014 — eight months before she declared her candidacy for president — Clinton sent a detailed strategy for combating the Islamic State, which she referred to as ISIL, in an email to John Podesta, then a White House counselor and now her campaign chairman.

Along with a military campaign to roll back the terror group in Iraq, the Clinton email talks about confronting the Saudis and the Qataris, both key U.S. allies, over what she refers to as governmental backing of ISIL.

The Clinton email states: “We need to use our diplomatic and more traditional intelligence assets to bring pressure on the governments of Qatar and Saudi Arabia, which are providing clandestine financial and logistic support to ISIL and other radical Sunni groups in the region.”

As a basis for the assertions, Clinton in the email cites “Western intelligence, U.S. intelligence and sources in the region.”

In a realpolitik view, however, we can’t abandon our decades-old alliance with the Saudis. With Russia asserting its power and influence through its proxies in Iran and Syria, the U.S. needs its alliance with Saudi and the Gulf states to have any influence in the Middle East – a crucial geopolitical fulcrum. So while Clinton is undoubtedly stating a truth, the real question is what are you going to do about it?

Clinton Funneled Haiti Aid to Foundation Supporters

We all knew it was happening, and now we have proof. Hillary Clinton’s State Department made it a point to funnel billions of dollars of aid to people who put money in her family’s pocket. It is the purest form of quid pro quo and it is both immoral and illegal.

However noble the motives of the officials working to get supplies into Haiti after the 2010 earthquake, numerous messages show a senior aide to then–Secretary of State Hillary Clinton coordinating with a Clinton Foundation official to identify FOBs. The Clintons have said repeatedly that the State Department never gave favorable treatment to foundation supporters in Haiti or anywhere else.

“Nothing was ever done for anybody because they were contributors to the foundation,” Bill Clinton told CBS News’ Charlie Rose in September. “Nothing.”

The correspondence offers a glimpse into the first stages of a $10 billion Haiti recovery effort. The emails appear to show a State Department process that at times prioritized — and, some argue, benefited — people with close ties to the Clintons.

“I think when you look at both the State Department and the Clinton Foundation in Haiti, that line was pretty faint between the two,” said Jake Johnston, a Haiti analyst for the nonpartisan Center for Economic and Policy Research. “You had a lot of coordination and connection between the two, obviously. And I think that raises significant questions about how they were both operating.”

Sheriff Gets Snarky

Heh.

The Sheriff’s Office would like to return the below lawnmower, and chair, to the rightful owner. Investigators can only assume the items inadvertently fell out of the back of an environmentally conscious person’s vehicle as they were on their way to one of the many different types of recycling centers that accept such items. We would also hate to have the person miss out on any opportunity to get a bit of spare change at one of the several conveniently located scrap yards throughout Washington County. This could potentially offset the cost of gas it took to drive out to the Town of Wayne where it fell out of the vehicle and landed neatly in the ditch just out of plain sight. Investigators are amazed just how lucky the Town of Wayne was that the lawnmower, only by chance, landed on a cardboard box that protected the environment from the dripping oil. Investigators are also examining the physics of how that same cardboard box the person used to protect his/her own vehicle carpeting could have flown out of the vehicle at the same time as the other items.

If the person would also like the cardboard box returned the Sheriff’s Office could facilitate that return. We understand it could have some sentimental value as it was a box for a pink scooter; we would hate for your child to miss it. We do not wish to set a bad example for your child by not returning something that does not belong to us.

Just Scratching the Surface

Act 10 allowed local governments a lot more flexibility to manage their affairs in order to control costs while providing services. Many of us have been saying for years that almost none of our local governments have been using the full power of Act 10. Some have been better than others, but I can’t think of one that is doing everything it can.

Here is one example. The West Bend School District has actually been better than most school districts at using Act 10. They have done things like add a wellness clinic to provide convenient care to their employees and lower costs and implemented merit pay for employees. But I notice this in the West Bend Daily News:

A family plan now has an added cost of $20 a month. A single plan is at $5.

“Our families have never contributed to the dental plan,” Elliehausen said.

Really? Nothing? When something is free, people lack the incentive to use it judiciously. And it is virtually universal in the private sector that employees contribute to their dental plan. This is a small step to normalize compensation plans that Act 10 allows the School Board to unilaterally make, but the West Bend School District has failed to implement it until now.

Ding-dong, the Doe is dead

My column for the West Bend Daily News is online. Here you go:

“The petition for a writ of certiorari is denied.” With those nine words from the U.S. Supreme Court, the long, winding road of the illegal and immoral John Doe investigation has come to an end. But with that end, there is a lot of work to be done to clean up the mess, right the wrongs committed and rewrite the laws to ensure rogue prosecutors are checked before they can do so much damage.

The John Doe process, which is unique to Wisconsin, allows prosecutors extraordinary powers to investigate people in exchange for utter secrecy to protect the lives and reputations of the targets of the investigations. In this case, Milwaukee County District Attorney and former chief investigator Francis Schmitz ran roughshod over the rules. In a wide-ranging investigation that included unannounced pre-dawn raids of people’s homes by armed police, confiscation of years’ worth of files and communications, capturing of electronic and phone communications through service providers without notifying the targets, and several other brute force investigatory tactics, the John Doe prosecutors thoroughly uprooted the lives of dozens of conservatives in Wisconsin.

Throughout the investigation, there were several leaks to the media and the media even happened to know when some of the unannounced raids were taking place so they could record it for their news broadcasts. Even as recently as a few weeks ago, more than a thousand pages of documents that are supposed to have been kept secret by the prosecutors were leaked to the British media, where it will be difficult for American law enforcement to track down the source.

It is clear that, from the beginning, John Chisholm and his cohorts used the power of their offices to target conservatives and bully them into silence while allowing the information they collected to be leaked to the media to influence elections.

After years of legal wrangling and news stories, it is worth backing up and remembering what Chisholm was trying to prosecute. He was trying to prosecute conservatives — only conservatives — for exercising their First Amendment right of free speech. The judges overseeing the John Doe process told Chisholm what he was trying to prosecute was not a crime. The Wisconsin Supreme Court told him the same thing. The federal Court of Appeals said the same thing. But the prosecutors were not acting as prosecutors enforcing the law. They were acting as political agents prosecuting their enemies for laws that do not exist.

In responding to the Supreme Court’s denial, Chisholm reiterated as much when he said, “We look forward to the day when Wisconsin adopts a more enlightened view of the need for transparency in campaign finance.” In other words, he knows that he was trying to prosecute conservatives for laws that he would like to exist, but do not, and cannot as long as the First Amendment still holds sway.

The fight is not over yet. The prosecutors have already demonstrated they are not honorable and not above political retribution. They still possess thousands of documents about dozens of people they should never have taken. Even if they claim to return or destroy those documents now, as the Wisconsin Supreme Court ordered months ago, the victims can have little assurance that copies do not exist to be used by their enemies in the years to come. That is why the state attorney general must aggressively investigate and prosecute whoever already leaked documents over the past several years. Only by strict enforcement of the law can future potential malcontents be deterred.

Also, the Legislature took a small step to reform the John Doe process by preventing it from being used for political infractions. They need to go the rest of the way by completely repealing the John Doe process. While it can be argued to have some value, its potential for abuse by dishonorable prosecutors is too great. All of Wisconsin’s citizens are at risk of the abuse of this process and should be protected — not just the politicians. Forty-nine other states manage to prosecute people for crimes without this process. So can Wisconsin.

Thankfully, this abusive John Doe is over. Now we must ensure that no prosecutor is ever allowed to use it to abuse Wisconsinites again.

Ken Bone Was Here

I predict a “Ken Bone was here” sign forthwith in Wausau and at least a 12% increase in tourism to that fair city.

When you answer the door for Halloween, don’t be surprised if Ken Bone shows up, or at least someone who is dressed like him.

The 34-year-old, who works for a coal-fired plant in Southern Illinois, stood out among the audience at Sunday night’s presidential debate — so much so that he seems to have sparked a fashion movement: The distinctive red Izod sweater he was wearing at Washington University in St. Louis is sold out in every size from small to extra large this afternoon on Amazon.

Before the debate, Bone had 7 Twitter followers, including two accounts opened by his grandmother, he said. By 6 p.m. ET, his @kenbone18 account had 36,300.

Bone told ABC News that he had planned to wear an olive suit to the debate, but as he got in his car on Sunday morning, his pants split down the seam. The replacement? Cargo khakis with pockets and his red sweater that he bought in a pinch when he traveled to his only nephew’s baptism a couple years ago and the shirt he brought didn’t fit him.

“I bought it at a Kohl’s in Wausau, Wisconsin,” Bone said of the red sweater.

The Bear Growls

It’s been a few decades since Russia rattled the nuclear saber this much.

Critics call him the “Kremlin’s chief propagandist”. And like many other top Russian officials, he is on the Western sanctions blacklist.

But the warning he delivered to Washington in last night’s edition of his show News of the Week was, even for him, particularly dramatic. “Impudent behaviour” towards Russia may have “nuclear” consequences, he said.

“A Russian takes a long time to harness a horse, but then rides fast,” said the news anchor, quoting a famous Russian saying.

By “riding fast”, Kiselyov was referring to a string of recent Russian military deployments:

  • Last week, Moscow sent three warships from the Black Sea Fleet to the Mediterranean: on board, cruise missiles that can carry nuclear warheads

  • Russia deployed nuclear-capable Iskander-M missiles into the Kaliningrad region bordering Poland

  • The Russians announced they would send 5,000 paratroopers to Egypt for military exercises

  • Moscow also suspended three nuclear agreements with the United States

My understanding is that SoS Kerry will respond with a sternly worded letter.

New Cancer Drug Shows Remarkable Promise

Here’s some good news on a Monday evening.

An immunotherapy drug has been described as a potential “game-changer” in promising results presented at the European Cancer Congress.

In a study of head and neck cancer, more patients taking nivolumab survived for longer compared with those who were treated with chemotherapy.

In another study, combining nivolumab with another drug shrank tumours in advanced kidney cancer patients.

Immunotherapy works by harnessing the immune system to destroy cancer cells.

Advanced head and neck cancer has very poor survival rates.

In a trial of more than 350 patients, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, 36% treated with the immunotherapy drug nivolumab were alive after one year compared with 17% who received chemotherapy.

Patients also experienced fewer side effects from immunotherapy.

I would note that since this drug is not approved by the FDA, you could not try it even if you were terminally ill because Harry Reid blocked Senator Ron Johnson’s “Right to Try” bill.

Iranian-Supported Militants Fire Missiles at U.S. Warship

Yes, Iran does continue to support terrorists around the globe who hate America despite Obama’s sham nuclear treaty with them.

Riyadh (AFP) – Two missiles fired from rebel-held territory in Yemen fell short of a US warship patrolling the Red Sea off the coast of the war-torn country, the US navy said Monday.

The USS Mason “detected two inbound missiles” within an hour of each other from around 7:00 pm (1600 GMT) on Sunday, said US Naval Forces Central Command spokeswoman Paula Dunn.

The destroyer had been “conducting routine operations in international waters” at the time, she said in a statement.

“Both missiles impacted the water before reaching the ship,” said Dunn, adding that “there were no injuries to our sailors and no damage to the ship”.

“We assess these missiles were launched from Huthi-controlled territory in Yemen,” she said, referring to the Iran-backed rebels fighting Yemen’s internationally recognised government.

Coal CEO Slams Tesla

He has a point.

In a discussion on CNBC Monday morning, Robert Murray, CEO of coal-mining company Murray Energy Corp, took a shot at electric car manufacturer Tesla over the taking taxpayer subsidies and failing to turn a profit. Following the attack, Elon Musk took to Twitter to refute the claims and challenge Murray’s beliefs head-on.

In the CNBC discussion (viewable here), Murray said “Tesla is a fraud. [Musk has] gotten $2 billion from the taxpayer, has not made a penny yet in cash flow, here again it’s subsidies.” The Trump-supporting CEO continued on to say that Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton intends on giving subsidies to “Elon Musk, Warren Buffett,” and her other rich “friends” and that it would have “nothing to do with supporting the environment.”

Following the live footage, Musk tweeted out a link to the interview and another one stating, “Real fraud going on is denial of climate science. As for ‘subsidies,’ Tesla gets pennies on dollar vs coal. How about we both go to zero?”

I would note that it is in Big Coal’s best interests to support electric cars like Tesla. After all, a lot of electricity is produced by coal while zero cars with an internal combustion engine are. Notice that Musk doesn’t actually refute the point.

Industry Groups Highlight Wisconsin’s High Utility Costs

Here’s yet another reason why Wisconsin’s politicians should not be looking at tax increases. There are many things that make Wisconsin more expensive in which to do business that put the state at a disadvantage. We should not be adding to that list.

“Our members, Wisconsin’s largest manufacturing companies, now pay an average of 13 percent more for electricity than the average rates paid by their competitors in all other Midwest states,” said Todd Stuart, executive director of WIEG. “That’s a big cost disadvantage for our members, some of whom pay well over $1 million a month for electricity.”

That can easily add up to millions of dollars more paid annually in electric bills in Wisconsin versus similarly situated customers in the Midwest. And energy costs have a proportionately much bigger impact in our state, because we typically have the #1 or #2 highest percentage of per capita manufacturing jobs in the country. Manufacturing currently employs 467,000 people at 9,500 companies in Wisconsin. Manufacturing provides $57 billion annually or 19 percent of the state’s gross domestic product.

“Our member companies compete in world markets and electricity is one of their three greatest costs of doing business,” said Jeff Landin, president of the WPC. “The energy premium we pay for our factories and paper mills in Wisconsin therefore acts as a large tax on our industries. If you want to move the needle on economic development and jobs, then getting rates under control should be at the top of the list.”

Hurricane Unearths Civil War Cannon Balls

Wow.

(CNN)Civil War-era cannonballs have been detonated in South Carolina after Hurricane Matthew uncovered the old military ordnance in Folly Beach.

It’s a shame that they had to destroy them.

Supreme Court Rules on Kaepernick

At least one justice has, and I agree!

When asked by Couric how she feels about San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick, and others athletes, refusing to stand for the anthem, Ginsburg replied, “I think it’s really dumb of them.”

“Would I arrest them for doing it? No,” Ginsburg elaborated. “I think it’s dumb and disrespectful. I would have the same answer if you asked me about flag burning. I think it’s a terrible thing to do, but I wouldn’t lock a person up for doing it. I would point out how ridiculous it seems to me to do such an act.”

Couric then asked, “But when it comes to these football players, you may find their actions offensive, but what you’re saying is, it’s within their rights to exercise those actions?”

“Yes,” said Ginsburg. “If they want to be stupid, there’s no law that should be preventive. If they want to be arrogant, there’s no law that prevents them from that. What I would do is strongly take issue with the point of view that they are expressing when they do that.”

Ryan Focuses on Congress

This is a healthy position for Ryan, and frankly the entire GOP, to take.

The speaker told his members “you all need to do what’s best for you in your district” and that he will not defend Trump or campaign with him over the next 29 days until Election Day on Nov. 8. Ryan had been planning to campaign with Trump on Saturday, the day after the video surfaced, but that appearance was quickly scrapped.

According to sources, Ryan will now spend his energy to make sure that Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton doesn’t get a blank check with a Democratic-controlled Congress if she does win the presidency. This is what Ryan sees as best for the party and for his members, not himself, and he was aware there may be other political pressures to get him to do otherwise, but his concerns about keeping the majority superseded that.

“The speaker is going to spend the next month focused entirely on protecting our congressional majorities,” Ryan press secretary AshLee Strong said.

Now That We’ve Slept on It…

Kevin Binverse has his take on the winners and losers of the 2nd presidential debate. He sums up:

While many pundits have called last night a “win” for Trump, but reality is it was a “draw” at best for his campaign. With the lewd comments from Friday’s video still the dominate topic – and Trump doing little to nothing to defuse them during the debate – his very candidacy continues to be a cancer inside the conservative movement. One which would be best cast off before it means electoral ruin on Election Day.

At this point, I don’t think the GOP can replace Trump. Sure, he can step down anytime he wants, but then what? The ballots are set and many states have already started early voting. And every day that passes, it becomes less and less doable.

The GOP is stuck with Trump because they voted for him to be their candidate. Let’s stop fretting over that bad decision and figure out what happens next.

Success in All Four Seasons

Good advice from the patriarch of the Four Seasons.

“It comes down to one principle that transcends time and geography, religion and culture,” he says. “It’s the golden rule – do unto others as you would want done to you.

“It is the simple idea that if you treat people well, the way you would like to be treated, they will do the same.”

Easy to say but harder to implement, cynics might say. But Fortune magazine has named Four Seasons as one of the 100 Best Companies to Work For every year since its list began in 1998.

Four Seasons is also well known for having one of the lowest staff turnover rates in the hotel industry.

Point Nemo

I want to visit.

Point Nemo is so far from land, the nearest humans are often astronauts. The International Space Station orbits the Earth at a maximum of 258 miles (416km). Meanwhile the nearest inhabited landmass to Point Nemo is over 1,670 miles (2,700km) away.

 

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