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Kevin Fischer is an award-winning veteran broadcaster who has been seen and heard on Milwaukee TV and radio stations for nearly three decades.
Kevin, who is a legislative aide to state Sen. Mary Lazich (R-New Berlin), can be seen offering his views on the news on the public affairs program, “INTERchange,” on Milwaukee Public Television Channel 10. He lives with his wife, Jennifer, in Franklin.

April 2008 - Posts

Ethanol and food prices are linked

By Kevin Fischer
Wednesday, Apr 30 2008, 11:49 PM


My Culinary no-no this past Sunday (# 52) was one of the most serious I’ve done, focusing on the role ethanol has played in the world food crisis.

The food dilemma is dominating the news media this week.

People demand bread northeast of Cairo on March 29, before the government boosted bread subsidies and deployed troops to help distribute loaves.



Pakistani women struggle as they try to order food outside of a subsidized food store on the outskirts of Rawalpindi, Pakistan.

Pakistani women struggle as they try to order food outside of a subsidized food store on the outskirts of Rawalpindi, Pakistan. Many depend on government subsidies to simply get by.


 Children rummage through garbage in search of food in Mogadishu, Somalia.


Children rummage through garbage in search of food in Mogadishu, Somalia.

 

A U.N. peacekeeper patrols a street market in the neighborhood of Cite-Soleil, Port-au-Prince, Haiti.

A U.N. peacekeeper patrols a street market in the neighborhood of Cite-Soleil, Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Several people have died during violence in which U.N. troops battled demonstrators rioting over soaring prices

 

A farmer and his wife work in a corn field near Serdan, Mexico.

A farmer and his wife work in a corn field near Serdan, Mexico. The spiraling price of corn has brought protests and riots to the streets of the country.
(Picture 1: USA TODAY, Pictures 2-5 : TIME.com)


ABC reports that while food scientists are calling for a halt to ethanol, President Bush wants more of the biofuel.

The Washington Post has run a series of reports all week on rising food prices. One of the installments dealt with the skyrocketing cost of corn brought on by the ethanol craze that I blogged about earlier this week. Members of Congress are calling for action, proposing that approved mandates increasing the production of ethanol be scaled back. Read more about the impact of ethanol from the Washington Post:


Siphoning Off Corn to Fuel Our Cars

As farmers feed ethanol plants, a costly link is forged between food and oil.
By Steven Mufson
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, April 30, 2008; A01




CHARLES
CITY, Iowa

Erwin Johnson picks up a clump of the dark, rich soil that he has farmed for 35 years, like his father and grandfather before him. In a few months, this flat expanse of northern Iowa will be crowded with corn ready to be trucked to market.

A year ago, that market got a little closer -- and a lot better. Instead of sending his corn to a barge company to be shipped down the Mississippi River for export, Johnson now loads it into an open truck and sends it two miles up the gravel road to a hulking new ethanol distillery that he can see from his field. The plant is paying him $5.50 or more a bushel, more than twice as much as Johnson could get just a couple of years ago.

"This is a fantastic time to be farming," Johnson says. "I'm 65, but I can't quit now."

Across the country, ethanol plants are swallowing more and more of the nation's corn crop. This year, about a quarter of U.S. corn will go to feeding ethanol plants instead of poultry or livestock. That has helped farmers like Johnson, but it has boosted demand -- and prices -- for corn at the same time global grain demand is growing.

And it has linked food and fuel prices just as oil is rising to new records, pulling up the price of anything that can be poured into a gasoline tank. "The price of grain is now directly tied to the price of oil," says Lester Brown, president of Earth Policy Institute, a Washington research group. "We used to have a grain economy and a fuel economy. But now they're beginning to fuse."

Not everyone thinks it's fantastic. People who use corn to feed cattle, hogs and chickens are being squeezed by high corn prices. On Monday, Tyson Foods reported its first loss in six quarters and said that its corn and soybean costs would increase by $600 million this year. Those who are able, such as egg producers, are passing those high corn costs along to consumers. The wholesale price of eggs in the first quarter soared 40 percent from a year earlier, according to the Agriculture Department. Meanwhile, retail prices of countless food items, from cereal to sodas to salad dressing, are being nudged upward by more expensive ingredients such as corn syrup and cornstarch.

Rising food prices have given Congress and the White House a sudden case of legislative indigestion. In 2005, the Republican-led Congress and President Bush backed a bill that required widespread ethanol use in motor fuels. Just four months ago, the Democratic-led Congress passed and Bush signed energy legislation that boosted the mandate for minimum corn-based ethanol use to 15 billion gallons, about 10 percent of motor fuel, by 2015. It was one of the most popular parts of the bill, appealing to farm-state lawmakers and to those worried about energy security and eager to substitute a home-grown energy source for a portion of U.S. petroleum imports. To help things along, motor-fuel blenders receive a 51 cent subsidy for every gallon of corn-based ethanol used through the end of 2010; this year, production could reach 8 billion gallons.

Now, however, the legislation is being criticized for making food more expensive while gasoline prices continue to climb. Rick Perry, a Republican who succeeded Bush as Texas governor, has asked the Environmental Protection Agency to waive half of the "misguided" ethanol requirements because of rising food costs; every penny increase in per-bushel corn prices costs his state's livestock industry $6 million a year, he said.

Although ethanol was once promoted as a way to slow climate change, a study published in Science magazine Feb. 29 concluded that greenhouse-gas emissions from corn and even cellulosic ethanol "exceed or match those from fossil fuels and therefore produce no greenhouse benefits." By encouraging an expansion of acreage, the study added, the use of U.S. cropland for ethanol could make climate conditions dramatically worse. And the runoff from increased use of fertilizers on expanded acreage would compound damage to waterways all the way to the Gulf of Mexico.

Development specialists have also joined the fray. "While many are worrying about filling their gas tanks, many others around the world are struggling to fill their stomachs, and it is getting more and more difficult every day," World Bank President Robert B. Zoellick said in a recent speech.

No place demonstrates the competing demands on corn better than Iowa, one of the two biggest corn-exporting states. Iowa is home to 28 ethanol plants, which consume more than a quarter of its corn crop; two dozen others are under construction or in planning stages.

Two leading oil pipeline companies are exploring the feasibility of building a $3 billion ethanol pipeline, the first of its kind, to link Iowa and other parts of the Midwest with motor-fuel markets in the East. It would carry 3.65 billion gallons a year and give another industry a vested interest in maintaining high ethanol output. Because of this domestic demand, Iowa's exports of corn are expected to shrink to less than half of current levels in the next couple of years. Nationwide, corn stockpiles are dwindling.

All that could make this cycle of corn prices different from previous ones, when prices eventually fell back. "As long as you keep that ethanol industry running, grain prices will be high," says Bruce Babcock, professor of economics and the director of the Center for Agricultural and Rural Development at Iowa State University. "If you didn't have this large growth in ethanol corn, prices would be nowhere near where they are today."

Corn as Fuel

As consumer prices climb, more and more people are pointing fingers at ethanol plants, like the one VeraSun Energy built here just outside Charles City. VeraSun is riding the crest of the ethanol boom. Thanks to internal expansion and the purchase of a rival, VeraSun will become the nation's biggest producer of ethanol by the end of the year, with about four times as much capacity as it had in 2005.

The plant is hard to miss. Its two massive concrete silos reach 150 feet into the air; each one holds half a million bushels of corn, delivered by an average of 110 brimming trucks every day. The silos are connected to a distillery with giant shiny steel vats for milling the corn, then fermenting and distilling it into 200-proof, fuel-grade ethanol. The ethanol is shipped out by train, 84 black tanker cars at a time.

The VeraSun facility is buying up almost all the corn produced in Floyd County and much of the corn produced in the four surrounding counties. While that might seem anathema to East Coast grocery shoppers, around here it makes VeraSun pretty popular.

"From Washington where Lester Brown is sitting, agriculture can't do enough to satisfy the nation's energy needs and meet all the demands put on it for food and feed," says Matt Liebman, an agronomist at Iowa State University. "But from agriculture's point of view, [ethanol] enhances market opportunities. So it really depends on your perspective."

Some folks around here get defensive when talking about corn prices. Johnson, the corn farmer, points out that the share of household income that goes to buying food has dropped steadily over the past 50 years; U.S. government statistics say that the portion is half of what it was in the 1950s. And of that portion, farmers get about a fifth; the rest goes to middlemen, food manufacturers, transportation, packaging and advertising. Indeed, farm groups say that energy costs in transportation and packaging have boosted food prices more than the price of corn has.

"There's no doubt that food prices are going to increase, but I suggest to you that food is still reasonable," Johnson says.

Don Endres, the chief executive of VeraSun and owner of 20 percent of its shares, grew up on a farm in Watertown, S.D., where his father and grandfather raised corn. His brothers are still farmers.

Endres says ethanol plants aren't to blame for high corn or food prices. He notes that the corn used to make ethanol isn't the kind that people eat anyway. Moreover, he says, ethanol plants like VeraSun's extract the starch in corn for fermentation while producing a dry feed that contains protein and nutrients. Piles of it are collected from industrial dryers at the plant. VeraSun then sells that feed, known as dried distillers grain, back to farmers who raise animals. Much of it goes to Texas, Mexico and China; it accounts for about 15 percent of VeraSun's revenue. When the grain is mixed with inexpensive starch, such as alfalfa, farmers can save money, Endres says.

Finally, he says, yields on corn will continue to increase so that the current acreage will be able to meet both food and fuel demands. His grandfather got 40 bushels to an acre, his father got 80, and his brothers get 160. Someday, Endres says, farms will get 300 bushels an acre.

"I think we'll see this thing come back into balance," he says. "There's an ability to produce so much more at these price levels."

The Feed Price Shock

About 20 minutes' drive from Johnson's farm and the VeraSun plant, two neighbors, Bill Huebsch and Ray Avila, are raising about 15 percent of the nation's capons, castrated roosters that are popular fare on Easter, Thanksgiving and Christmas. In a shed longer than a football field, 13,000 of the birds scurry about, nibbling at a corn mixture fed through automated pipes. In a matter of weeks, each tiny bird will eat about 40 pounds of feed.

The cost of that feed, three-quarters of which is corn, has risen sharply, and as a result, Huebsch and Avila are asking to be paid more for their capons -- a premium of 10 cents a pound last year and maybe another 15 or 20 cents this year -- to cover the added cost.

"Ultimately, you know where that price has to go," Huebsch says. "Ultimately, it's the consumer that's got to take the brunt of it."

He doesn't buy Endres's argument. He says that capons, like egg-producing chickens, can digest only limited quantities of the dried distillers grain. And the price of that protein-rich feed is also rising. (Cattle, which have four-chambered stomachs, can digest the distillers' grain more easily.) Some studies have also linked dried distillers grains with the bacterium E. coli in feedlot cattle.

"I think the ethanol is hurting us," Huebsch says. "It hasn't lowered our fuel prices at all, and it has increased feed costs."

The sharp rise in corn prices has confounded Avila's buying plans. Ordinarily in the fall, he buys all the corn he needs for the next season. But with prices around $4 a bushel last fall, he decided to wait. Now they're even higher, and he's buying only four days' supply, hoping that the price will go down.

"I'm just going day to day," Avila says. He says that a corn farmer friend of his bought a boat, and Avila asked whether he would name it Four Dollar Corn. Now, Avila jokes wryly, his friend would have to name it Six Dollar Corn.

Capons are a niche product, but high corn-feed prices are also giving poultry and egg producers a lot to cluck about. Iowa produces more eggs, 13.5 billion, than any other state. And chickens, like capons, mostly eat corn feed. The Charles City ethanol plant alone consumes three-quarters as much corn as the entire Iowa egg industry.

"Corn has gone up dramatically since the ethanol plants went in," says Deb Wolf, a small egg producer in Osage. "They're buying millions of bushels. That's got to come from somewhere." She and her husband, Keith, have a sign reading "Eggs 4 Sale" outside their home on Route 9, and customers often get the eggs while they're still warm. The Wolfs have tripled the price they charge for a dozen.

"We don't have to make fuel out of corn and soybeans, but we do have to feed animals," says Kevin Vinchattle, executive director of the Iowa Egg Council. "We're going to be right there bidding for feedstocks and making sure that we have the highest-quality feed available. We just don't have an alternative."

'Maxed Out'

Back in Charles City, farmer Johnson is reaping the benefits of high corn prices. He knows what the other extreme is like. His grandparents arrived from Germany in 1913 and, dirt poor, worked as farmhands before buying this land. Johnson took it over in the early 1970s, when prices, which hadn't changed much since the end of World War II, doubled and then leveled off again for most of the next three decades.

Two hundred years ago, he says, this was prairie covered with six-foot-high switchgrass. Winnebago Indians lived here, and then white settlers came in the mid-1800s.

But now the ethanol plant and 50 wind turbines that were erected over the winter have brought new energy to a town that Johnson says long lived off "the ground God created with glaciers and laid down here."

VeraSun built its plant in this area to be close to corn farms; Johnson says that he keeps part of the money that once went to trucking his corn to the barge company. "That money stays in my pocket now, and I like that."

Johnson is a one-person summary of how high corn prices are washing through the world of agriculture and climate change. Normally, he plants half of his 900 acres with corn and half with soybeans. He alternates crops on each field because it is better for the soil.

But last year he planted 500 acres of corn and 400 of soybeans, and this year he will do the same. "The market was screaming, 'Farmer Johnson, plant more corn, plant more corn,' " Johnson says.

Farmers across the country joined him. In 2007, U.S. acreage devoted to corn hit a record 93.6 million acres, up 20 percent from the year before. Farmers are expected to plant a little less than that this year.

That market response would ordinarily bring nothing but cheers, but the growing alarm about climate change casts it in a different light. In the United States last year, corn edged out some soybeans, which as a result are being grown in greater numbers on previously unplowed areas in other countries. And that releases carbon dioxide that had previously been stored in the soil as organic matter.

Johnson, along with about two dozen other people in the area, has invested in 25,000 acres of cattle-ranching and savanna land in Roraima state in northern Brazil, where they have planted 750 acres of soybeans and plan to expand. He says U.S. agriculture is a mature market. "We're maxed out," he says.

Meanwhile in Iowa, he is tilling his own soil more often, a farming trend that dismays climate experts. Usually Johnson doesn't till his soil in the fall; he points to short remnants of cornstalks that still stand in rows where soybeans will be inserted. But Johnson plans to till a piece of land where he will plant corn for a second year in a row.

Johnson also owns a small piece of land that is part of the federal government's conservation reserve program, which pays farmers for leaving land vacant. Millions of acres are in the program. The CRP parcels tend to have lower-quality soil, and they attract birds and other wildlife. In the climate-conscious era, they have the added virtue of storing carbon in the soil.

Johnson put a 10-acre parcel aside years ago and signed a 10-year contract with the government to leave it undisturbed. But the contract is running out, and he's thinking about planting corn. The CRP contract pays him $170 an acre. Johnson says, "I'm making a lot more than that now."



 

A very sick joke

By Kevin Fischer
Wednesday, Apr 30 2008, 09:38 PM
At an MPS athletic event tonight, an MPS security aide mentioned this.

It seems some students at the MPS high school he works at daily who claim to have the HIV virus are now bragging that they are taking syringes filled with their own blood and are placing them on seats in movie theaters and on gasoline pumps.

The intent is that some poor, innocent, unsuspecting person will jab and infect themselves with the deadly virus.

The security aide said the brazen students speak openly about their sabotage, saying that if they must have the virus, others should suffer, too.

The kids are lying about the movie seats and the gas pumps.

It’s all a hoax, one that's been going on for a long time.

It’s also very sick and twisted.

The days of ringing someone’s doorbell and running away are long gone.


 

The best investment Franklin could ever make, and it only costs $24.95

By Kevin Fischer
Wednesday, Apr 30 2008, 06:30 PM

Someday, Franklin may want to select a slogan to identify itself.

Someday.

For now, the major project isn’t to name and market an entire city,  but a proposed business district on a street that hugs both Franklin and Oak Creek.

The name’s already been chosen for that area of S. 27th Street......…The Boomgaard District.

I have a suggestion for anyone associated with the project along with city leaders and planners.

Invest $24.95 and buy this book:




Destination Branding for Small Cities by Bill Baker

  

 

The book is advertised this way:


Branding is one of today's hottest and most misunderstood destination management and marketing concepts. Destination Branding for Small Cities takes readers on a fascinating journey and shows how to orchestrate a successful brand for tourism and economic development.
This must-read primer demystifies branding, demonstrates how to uncover a Destination Promise, and provides real world examples, as well as affordable, proven tools, templates and checklists to help breathe life into a city brand.

Destination Branding for Small Cities highlights:

 

  • Why branding is important to ambitious places
  • The pitfalls in destination branding and how to avoid them
  • The essential steps in brand planning for cities
  • How to define your positioning and Destination Promise™
  • Critical questions to test your positioning, logo and tagline
  • How to encourage stakeholders to be champions for the brand
  • How to deliver outstanding brand experiences 
     

 

American City and County Magazine says this:

For economic development officials and tourism leaders, a city's brand can be a strong magnet for businesses and visitors. But, many cities do not have clear or meaningful public images to attract tourists or business investment, according to Bill Baker, author of a new book. In “Destination Branding for Small Cities,” Baker, president of Tualatin, Ore.-based Total Destination Management, explains seven steps to help communities create successful place brands. The book explains how city leaders can discover their brand, express it, and keep it fresh and relevant.  


Here are the book’s contents, along with the seven steps to create successful place brands:

Contents:

1. The World of Brands and Branding

2. The Challenges and Rewards of Branding Places

3. What is Being Branded and Why?

4. Prepare to Start: Mobilize the Forces

5. Seven Steps to a Community Brand

6. Step One: Assessment - What's Your Place in the World?

       Research: How to Obtain the Answers to Your Questions
7. Step Two: Analysis and Advantage - What Will You be Known For?
       Brand Positioning - Claiming the Most Valuable Real Estate
       It Takes an Emotional Edge
8. Step Three: Architecture and Alignment - What Are the Brand's Relationships?
9. Step Four: Articulate - How Can the Brand be Expressed?
10. Step Five: Activation - How Will the Brand Come to Life?

11. Step Six: Adoption and Attitudes - How Do We Maximize the Support of Stakeholders?
12. Step Seven: Action and Afterward - How Do We Keep the Brand Fresh and Relevant?
Appendix: Destination Branding Terms
 


Here is just one review of the book that early critics of the name, “Boomgaard” will find interesting, no doubt:

"This book by Bill Baker has the potential to save millions of dollars spent in the past by cities, states and nations on ill conceived and ineffective campaigns purporting to be brand development exercises. In addition it has the further potential of reinforcing the value of brands in the rapidly changing world of destination marketing."
John King
Managing Director
Global Tourism & Leisure Pty Ltd
Sydney, Australia
 


So before there are any more meetings, teleconferences, or press releases, someone really ought to go to Amazon.com, plunk down $24.95 and take the time to read these 192 pages.

I wonder what author Bill Baker would say about “Boomgaard?”
  

 

The ultimate gesture of sportsmanship

By Kevin Fischer
Wednesday, Apr 30 2008, 06:10 PM

 Take a look at this picture. 





What do you see?

Seems pretty obvious, doesn't it.

Two ballplayers are carrying another player who appears to be injured.

The two who are doing the carrying are obviously not the injured player's teammates.






Nice gesture?

Oh, it's more.

Much more than that.

This is an amazing story that could very well be the greatest display of sportsmanship.

Incredible.


 


 

Did Mariah pass Elvis or didn't she?

By Kevin Fischer
Wednesday, Apr 30 2008, 06:02 PM
Earlier this month, there was that big announcement that Mariah Carey had eclipsed Elvis on the list of the most #1 singles. Carey, the stories proclaimed, had 18 #1’s to the King’s 17.

But if you go to Elvis.com, count ‘em up, Elvis has 18 hits that topped the Billboard charts.

Sounds like a tie to me.

What gives?


 

Fred's right...you can't make this stuff up

By Kevin Fischer
Wednesday, Apr 30 2008, 05:56 PM
Back in the 90’s when I worked at WTMJ, there was a husband and wife team that had an afternoon talk show. They went by their real first names, Jim and Andee and were very nice people.

They had a standing gag on some topics where, if they were trying to assess blame for a certain problem, one would humorously say, “I think it’s Reagan,” and the other would quickly reply, “El Nino!”

Wherever they are today, if Jim and Andee are still a tandem talk show, they would have to add “global warming” to their bit.

Franklin’s Fred Keller has an amusing post on some of the weird things people actually believe are being caused by global warming………..uhhhhhh, for you hyper-enviro tree huggers, that would be climate change (but everybody knows you mean global warming).

 

Get ready, Milwaukee... It's time again for, "A Day Without Latinos"

By Kevin Fischer
Wednesday, Apr 30 2008, 05:43 PM
Thursday, May 1 has been designated as, “A Day Without Latinos.”

This is the day when people who are here illegally, know they are here illegally, and nothing is done about it swarm the streets to complain about how bad they have it here in America.

The militant group, Voces de la Frontera that instructs illegals on how to act when confronted by authorities is an active organizer and sponsor of this rally.

If you don’t know remember Voces de la Frontera, this is the bunch of goons that harassed former state Senator Cathy Stepp at her home a few years ago.

A day without Latinos?

I prefer to envision, “A Day Without Illegal Immigrants.”

One year ago, I blogged the following. It remains valid today.

Thursday, the local news media will be tripping over itself to cover a group advocating for criminals.

There’s rain in the forecast Thursday. Maybe the whole deal will be a bust.

I do know something else is going on Thursday, May 1, but I doubt it will get much media attention. Too wholesome and positive.


 

Public school teachers are sitting ducks

By Kevin Fischer
Tuesday, Apr 29 2008, 07:51 PM
I happen to know many current and former Milwaukee Public Schools (MPS) teachers.

Because I’m very involved with MPS Athletics and have been for over 30 years, I’ve been a guest inside MPS schools, have made guest appearances and speeches and have known many MPS personnel.

Those in the rank and file, those on the front lines, the day-to-day teachers, while certainly open to criticism for being whiny, definitely have a thankless, challenging, and let’s face it, dangerous job.

The number of assaults made on teachers by students at MPS every year numbers in the hundreds. Teachers have literally no defense against often larger, tougher, evil, violent students if they choose to attack.

War zone is a phrase I’ve heard used by some MPS teachers used to describe their work environment.

Hyperbole?

I don’t think so.

In May of 2007, the Journal/Sentinel did an investigation on the climate inside MPS buildings. Care to trade in your desk job anyone. Here’s what the paper found:


• Dozens of teachers, administrators and staff are getting attacked. In the first semester of this school year alone, at least 127 MPS employees reported being physically assaulted by students or outsiders coming to campus.

• Elementary school teachers are falling victim to physical or verbal assaults nearly as much as those in high schools. Close to half the teachers assaulted this year work at elementary or K-8 schools.

• Far more Milwaukee students were expelled for bringing firearms to school last year than in all of the Chicago Public Schools, a district more than four times the size of MPS. In Chicago, unlike Milwaukee, high school students walk through weapons scanners every day, and handguns have virtually disappeared from the schools.

• The number of students expelled and suspended for drugs, violence and weapons has nearly doubled in the past five years, and many are simply transferred to other schools. Total MPS expulsions have tripled in the past 15 years.

• Police are called routinely to break up fights or deal with other disturbances. Staff at each of the district's 11 large high schools called police about twice a school day on average in the past six months.


The violence is worst at a handful of schools, and is caused by a small percentage of the district's 90,000 students. But their actions are taking a toll on staff, teachers, taxpayers and students who want to learn.

Safety costs have increased at a time when some schools are forced to cut their last music teachers or librarians. The district is spending $10 million on security this year, up about $1 million from last school year.

Dozens of injured teachers are filing worker's compensation claims, adding to the overall cost of school violence.

---Milwaukee Journal/Sentinel, May 5, 2007


It’s happening all across the country.

Recently while filling in on WISN, my phone lines were jammed with outraged callers when I talked about third graders in Georgia plotting to kill their teacher.

Why so much violence in the schools?

Why are kids out of control?

You want the liberal excuses?

Here they are:


1) It’s not the kid’s fault. How can it be if his father and mother were no good.

2) His self-esteem is shot.

3) It’s society’s fault. Guilty white liberals, you think that's the truth, admit it.

4) There aren’t enough jobs. That one has always been a mystery. Gee, I’m unemployed. Should I look at the want ads or blow somebody’s fool head off? Hmmm…..where’s my gun?

5) Government doesn’t spend enough money on all those wonderful programs that work so well.



Naturally, like what’s inside the head of many liberals, this is all garbage.

Why do kids attack their teachers so often?

BECAUSE THEY KNOW THEY CAN GET AWAY WITH IT, THAT’S WHY!

One of my favorite columnists, Doug Giles writes on this very topic as to why this has escalated into an epidemic:

Here’s your answer: Pathetic parents + kids who’ve never had their butt whipped + psychobabble BS + a whopping entitlement mentality + Johnny can do no wrong attitude from the parental unit + too much self-esteem + blowing off God for secularism + violent movies, music, and video games + educators getting their hands tied behind their backs (both figuratively and now, nearly literally) = demonic third graders who’ll plan to duct tape a teacher and slit her throat if she happens to righteously rebuke them.”

Read Giles’ entire piece.

I feel bad for teachers at MPS or anywhere else for that matter that, like police officers, have no idea when they head to work everyday what kind of punk, hood, or thug they’ll have to deal with.

It is why I have commented that I do not dismiss outright the suggestion that trained, licensed school officials be allowed to bring guns to work for protection.

When teachers moan about 6-hour workdays, 9-month work years, having to buy crayons or other supplies, being forced to work assignments at extra-curricular activities like sports, they don’t get my attention.

Having to work in a minefield day after day……..no thank you.



 

Don't cut the emissions program, get rid of it

By Kevin Fischer
Tuesday, Apr 29 2008, 06:21 PM

A major change will take place this summer in Wisconsin’s emission testing program in southeastern Wisconsin.

Beginning July 1, cars and trucks built before 1996 will be exempt from having to go through that silly test. The emissions program costs the state over $13 million each year.

One year ago this time, I called for a stop to the entire program.

Dad29 and No Runny Eggs share my opinion.


 

What's a pair of Brewer tickets worth to you? Your life, maybe???

By Kevin Fischer
Tuesday, Apr 29 2008, 06:04 PM

Wish I had seen this so I could have posted it earlier.

For six hours today at Miller Park, tickets were being given away to future Brewer games.

To get them, all you had to do was take a prostate exam.

I am told that people were lined up in frigid, windy weather at 6:00 this morning, shortly after the sun came up.







Certainly, some obvious snickers come to mind.

But prostate cancer is no joke.

Seems to me getting checked out for a chance to see the Brew Crew is definitely worth it.


 

"The truth about Obama is that he is not a good man"

By Kevin Fischer
Tuesday, Apr 29 2008, 05:59 PM

Everyone’s talking, writing, and blogging about Barack Obama’s pastor and his latest bout of foot-in-mouth disease.

Hillary Clinton’s best weapon apparently has finally gotten to the great uniter. Obama now says he doesn’t approve of his racist pastor's latest rants. No, really. He doesn’t.

And what about those 20 years Obama was going to Jeremiah Wright’s church? Obama had noooooooooooooooo idea Wright held those bombastic, racist, anti-American views.

What a joke and a phony Obama is.

But it’s worse than that according to columnist Selwyn Duke.

Duke writes:

“The truth about Obama is that he is not a good man. He is a bad man.

Good men don't turn a blind eye to unrepentant ex-terrorists; support vile, anti-American bigots; lie about their core beliefs; and look down on traditional Americans. Most significantly, good men don't allow beautiful babies — the least among us — to be discarded like refuse and die miserable, lonely deaths in dark utility rooms. In fact, if we cannot call Obama a bad man, there is no such thing as a bad man. And calling him a good man doesn't just strain credulity, it puts it in the hospital in traction.”

Read the entire column.


 

Anonymous posters will sink to any level

By Kevin Fischer
Monday, Apr 28 2008, 06:04 PM

I have blogged about the dangers and the problems with reckless anonymous bloggers and Internet posters here and here.

Some have cowardly spread their hate (and blatant mistruths) on FranklinNOW and other blogs.

Here’s more evidence that anonymous posters (some, not all) are all too often gutless and evil.

From Forbes.com:

On Halloween last year, 18-year-old Nicole Catsouras had the urge to go out. She had just started college but her father had confiscated her car keys earlier that day, after a spat. So she sneaked out of the house, grabbed the keys to her dad's Porsche 911 convertible and sped off. Fifteen minutes later Nikki lost control of the car and crashed into a freeway tollbooth at what witnesses said was 100 miles per hour.

She died instantly. The pain of her parents and her three younger sisters continues, deepened by a malicious, masked mob on the Internet. Gruesome police photos of the carnage, her mangled remains still in the driver's seat, showed up online at Google, Yahoo, News Corp.'s Photobucket and at more than 1,500 other outposts. In chat rooms and on fetishistic car-crash forums, anonymous assailants called Nikki a "spoiled rich girl" who "deserved it."

One post urged cohorts to harass her family, providing the Catsourases' home address in Ladera Ranch, Calif. On MySpace, one member calling himself "Hell Fire" posted the morbid photos laced with his own jeering commentary. Another put up a new Nikki profile with a ghastly closeup: "What's left of my brain here: As you can see, there wasn't much." When a high school friend uploaded a touching memorial on YouTube, ghouls flooded the page with images of the accident scene.

Read the entire article here.


 

Marathon County DA makes the right call

By Kevin Fischer
Monday, Apr 28 2008, 05:46 PM

For parents to sit back and watch their child die without intervening is unconscionable and unforgivable.


 

So let me get this straight about photo ID...

By Kevin Fischer
Monday, Apr 28 2008, 05:27 PM

Jim Doyle was right about photo ID, but the overwhelming majority of the American people and the U.S. Supreme Court are all wrong?

I would add the out-of-touch Journal/Sentinel Editorial Board to the Doyle camp.


 

Ethics, schmethics...

By Kevin Fischer
Monday, Apr 28 2008, 05:18 PM

Follow along.

March 1, 2008: American City and County Magazine reports, “
A major ethics scandal may soon unfold in the public sector unless government agencies, particularly local and state governments, institute strong ethics programs, according to a report from the Arlington, Va.-based Ethics Resource Center (ERC). Those programs, according to ERC, must create an “ethical environment” in government workspaces.”

April 1, 2008: Local elections are held for the Milwaukee County Board.

April 8, 2008: Safely re-elected for another four years, Milwaukee County Board members blast a proposed ethics code update.

April 21, 2008: Milwaukee County Board members, some of whom asked Board Chairman Lee Holloway to step down in 2006 for alleged ethics violations, re-elect Holloway as chairman after 7 hours and 45 ballots.


 

Hollywood hopes riding on comic book heroes

By Kevin Fischer
Monday, Apr 28 2008, 05:53 AM
Hollywood didn’t fare well this past winter.

But summer is coming, when lots of people go to the movies.

The industry is banking on heroes in the comic books to come through on the silver screen.




 

Ned Yost goes against conventional wisdom

By Kevin Fischer
Monday, Apr 28 2008, 05:39 AM

From the Wall Street Journal:

In defiance of longstanding National League tradition to hit pitchers ninth and last, the Brewers this season began to hit their pitchers eighth, in front of catcher Jason Kendall on the days he plays. The decision was based on mathematics. The team -- whose principal owner, Mark Attanasio, is an investment banker who bought the club before the 2005 season -- computed that the move could bring an additional 30 runs scored over the course of the season, says Mr. Melvin, the Milwaukee general manager. Management figured Mr. Kendall's skill at getting on base would give the hitters at the top of the order more baserunners to drive in. Tony La Russa, manager of the St. Louis Cardinals, has been doing this as well.

No matter what the math says, though, whenever their weak-hitting pitchers come to the plate in a key, run-scoring situation, the Brewers invite dissent with their unconventional move. "I must say: I've got a wary eye toward the pitcher batting eighth," says Jim Powell, a Brewers announcer. "What the statistics can't show you is it undermines your No. 7 batter." The reason, he says, is opposing teams will pitch around the No. 7 batter, knowing the punchless pitcher is next.

But if Mr. Melvin had his way, the Brewers organization might be even more progressive. He has another counterintuitive idea: using relievers to start the game, and delaying the "starting" pitcher's entrance until the third inning or so. The thinking is that starters are typically among a team's best pitchers, yet nowadays they often pitch only through the fifth or sixth inning, well before many games are decided. By having them pitch later, they'd be around for the higher-leverage innings.

The idea would need to be tested first in the minor leagues, Mr. Melvin says. The only problem, it appears, is that it's too unconventional. "I can't get anybody to do it," he says.

Heres' the entire WSJ article.

With this type of managerial strategy, Ned Yost will do what he did last year: blunder his way into managing the club into enough losses that will cost the team a playoff shot.


 

Are you better off eating in the suburbs?

By Kevin Fischer
Monday, Apr 28 2008, 12:02 AM

That was quite an article the Milwaukee Journal/Sentinel ran Sunday about restaurant violations in the city of Milwaukee restaurants.
 

More than one out of three restaurants was cited for violations by the City of Milwaukee Health Department since 2007,

McDonald’s (granted, there are a lot of them) had 250 violations.

KFC had 195 violations.

Burger King had 83.

George Webb had 85.

Taco Bell had 68.

Arby’s had 23.

Cousin’s had 25.

Leon’s Frozen Custard had 18.


How about some of the best restaurants in the city of Milwaukee?

Bacchus had 7 violations.

S
anford had 9.

Dream Dance (it was lumped in with all the Potawatomi Casino restaurants) and all the casino restaurants had 11.

Karl Ratzsch’s had 21. 

Mader’s had 14.

Yanni’s had 9.


One could argue that you're better off dining out in the suburbs.

Will these reports stop me from going to any of the city of Milwaukee restaurants mentioned above?

Not in your life.








 

Culinary no-no #52

By Kevin Fischer
Sunday, Apr 27 2008, 10:36 PM

Eating Dirt

 Eating Dirt

 Eating Dirt

 A woman dries mud cookies in the sun on the the roof of Fort Dimanche, once a prison, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Nov. 29, 2007.

Rising prices and food shortages are threatening Haiti's fragile stability, and the mud cookies, made of dirt, salt and vegetable shortening, are one of very few options the poorest people have to stave off hunger. Pregnant women and children have long prized the dirt as a rich source of calcium and an effective antacid, but for some in the country's most desperate quarters, where thousands buckle under rising food prices and rampant unemployment, mud has become a daily staple.
(Ariana Cubillos/ AP Photos )

 

Men are forced into a police truck after being detained for allegedly looting near the presidential palace in Port-au-Prince, Wednesday, April 9, 2008. Haiti's President Rene Preval is calling on Haitians to quit rioting over high food prices, and in his first public remarks since the unrest began last week, told Haitians that soaring food prices are a global phenomenon. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)



From VOA (Voice of America):

As the price of oil rises, farmers are finding it more profitable to raise corn for ethanol, instead of for food.


According to the World Bank:

  • Since 2000, global food prices have increased 75% and wheat prices 200%.
  • The food crisis imperils 100 million people.
  • 36 countries are in a food crisis (Food and Agriculture Organization).
  •  A quarter of the U.S. corn crop (11% of world production) went into biofuels this year.


From the Washington Post:

The World Bank estimates that global food prices have risen 83 percent in the last three years. Hence, food riots in Haiti, Egypt and Ethiopia and the use of troops in Pakistan and Thailand to protect crops and storage centers. Many countries are banning or limiting food exports. World Bank President Robert B. Zoellick says that 33 countries are at risk of food-related upheaval. Famine may revisit North Korea, parts of Africa or, disastrously for U.S. foreign policy, Afghanistan.

To many, the villain is biofuels. U.S. and European ethanol programs, intended as an antidote to climate change and an alternative to OPEC oil, stand accused of snatching food from the world's hungry. According to India's finance minister, ethanol is "a crime against humanity." And it is part of the problem. The more corn becomes ethanol, the less will be available as food for people and livestock. In the U.S. farm belt, heavy ethanol subsidies, such as a tax break of 51 cents a gallon, encourage the shift. These subsidies were already questionable, in economic terms, before the commodity crunch. That they might contribute to hardship for the world's poor is another argument for reducing them.


From the New York Times:

Work by the International Food Policy Research Institute in Washington suggests that biofuel production accounts for a quarter to a third of the recent increase in global commodity prices. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations predicted late last year that biofuel production, assuming that current mandates continue, would increase food costs by 10 to 15 percent.

Many specialists in food policy consider government mandates for biofuels to be ill advised, agreeing that the diversion of crops like corn into fuel production has contributed to the higher prices.

Skeptics have long questioned the value of diverting food crops for fuel, and the grocery and live- stock industries vehemently opposed an energy bill last fall, arguing it was driving up costs.

A fifth of the nation’s corn crop is now used to brew ethanol for motor fuel, and as farmers have planted more corn, they have cut acreage of other crops, particularly soybeans. That, in turn, has contributed to a global shortfall of cooking oil.


From the Free Republic:

One factor being blamed for the price hikes is the use of government subsidies to promote the use of corn for ethanol production. An estimated 30% of America’s corn crop now goes to fuel, not food.

“I don’t think anybody knows precisely how much ethanol contributes to the run-up in food prices, but the contribution is clearly substantial,” a professor of applied economics and law at the University of Minnesota, C. Ford Runge, said. A study by a Washington think tank, the International Food Policy Research Institute, indicated that between a quarter and a third of the recent hike in commodities prices is attributable to biofuels.


From the Financial Post, April 8, 2008

Who caused the world food crisis?


We are now by all accounts in the midst of a global food crisis: key grain prices were up 40% to 130% in the last year, people are protesting and hardship is mounting. But it could soon be worse. Governments and agencies all over the world are gearing up for a global "New Deal" on agriculture policy to solve the food crisis, which means the people who brought us the food crisis are the same people who now want to fix it.

The World Bank reports that prices of staples have jumped 80% since 2005. The price of rice hit a 19-year high last month, and wheat rose to a 28-year high, twice the average price of the last 25 years. Factors behind the surge in prices are varied, including bad weather in some regions, soaring demand from growing populations, and US$100-a-barrel oil.

But no factor gets more consistent credit for food price turmoil than the international biofuels stampede. Spurred on by what can only be described as massive subsidies and supporting regulations, farmers all over the planet are giving up on food production and shifting to fuel production.

The biggest biofuels boosters are in the United States, Europe and Canada. In the U.S., the leading Democratic candidates are campaigning on even more aid for ethanol. Canada's Conservative government, playing to the farm lobby and a coterie of rent-seeking corporations, has showered millions on the biofuels market. Regulations forcing consumers to convert to biofuel automobiles are in the works.


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We are shoving corn into our gas tanks. In the process, we are taking food out of the mouths of people all over the world.

The effort to help beleaguered farmers has turned into a major worldwide crisis, all for a biofuel that has far more problems than benefits.

The time to stop ethanol fever is now.


CULINARY NO-NO EXTRA:

Janet Evans
posted a blog last week that definitely falls under the category of culinary no-no.


To read previous Culinary no-no’s, please click CULINARY NO-NO under my TAGS section.


 

$6 a gallon????

By Kevin Fischer
Sunday, Apr 27 2008, 09:28 PM

When it comes to what's important about your vehicle, do you care more about how much it costs to fill it?





Or do you care more about this?






More on that in just a bit.

Newsweek.com has posted a ridiculous article that says higher gas prices make economic sense, even as high as $6 per ga