THANK YOU WISCONSINITES

  Thank You Wisconsinites for your courage, determination, and persistence on April 7, 2020. **Green Bay Wisconsin  Polling places had been consolidated to Green Bay West and East High Schools which meant long lines. Some voters in Green Bay waited past midnight to cast their ballot. The last person to vote was Earyll Guest. Guest voted at 12:30 am. “I thought it was my duty to stand in line and do it the old fashioned way.” As long as people were in line by 8pm they could vote. Some voters stood in line for four hours. **Voters waited for hours to ...

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COMPARING THE CANDIDATES

  Northwest Wisconsin is having another election May 12th. This is a special election in the 7th Congressional district to select a new member for the House of Representatives. The contrast between the two candidates is huge. A look at each candidate's own words (from the “issues” page of their campaign websites) speaks volumes.   Tricia Zunker, the Democratic candidate, identifies eight issues she thinks are important:   “Healthcare, the Farm Crisis, Education and Children, Standing up for Working People and Protecting Equality, The ...

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REGARDING OUR VERY OWN STAR: THE SUN

  We are going through very heartbreaking times. As we continue to see increases in the spread of the corona virus, we are likely to overlook the wonderful things all around us. Consider this:   On a clear night we are able to see thousands of stars shining above. Each star is a nuclear furnace. Most stars are busy crushing hydrogen atoms, creating helium atoms and releasing incredible amounts of energy in the process. Our sun is an example of this sort of star.   We are lucky to have the sun. It is a steady star, shining and energizing our ...

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FROM EMERGENCY TO EMERGENCE

  (This article is reprinted from YES magazine under the Creative Commons License.)   The COVID-19 emergency has exposed our societies’ failure to address the needs of billions of people. Simultaneously, we are witnessing a fundamental truth about human nature: There are those among us eager to exploit the suffering of others for personal gain. We can be reassured, however, by how few of them there are. Their actions contrast starkly with the far greater numbers at all levels of society demonstrating their willingness, even eagerness, to cooperate, ...

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FIFTY EARTH DAYS LATER

Photo by Dan Barth   Wisconsin and Earth Day go back a long way together. Truth be told, without Wisconsin, Earth Day might not even exist. Horrified by a disastrous oil spill off the coast of California in 1969, our own Senator Gaylord Nelson conceived and set in motion the gears that made Earth Day 1970 a phenomenon to be reckoned with.   Twenty million Americans marched proudly in their streets and parks that first year to protest the piecemeal destruction of the beautiful, life-nurturing planet we had so recently seen from space for the very first ...

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OBJECT IN THE SKY

  "The International Space Station (ISS) made at least two visible passes over Wisconsin (taking sky cover into consideration) at around 9:00 PM (0200 GMT or Zulu) during the latter part of March and early April. It is difficult to mistake the ISS for any other object in the sky. Often passing high in the sky, it appears brighter (magnitude between –2.0 and –3.6 during these passes) and faster than an aircraft but much steadier and slower than a meteor. Depending on the time and the season, it fades as it enters Earth’s shadow and disappears from sight. As ...

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EARTH DAY IS EVERY DAY

Art by Jennifer Dolan   It’s 2020. This year marks 100 years that women have had the vote in the United States. It also marks the 50th Earth Day, and this woman voter who was born on Earth Day has a few things to say about that.   On April 22nd, 1970, former US Senator and Governor of Wisconsin Gaylord Nelson organized a teach-in about environmental issues that was the first Earth Day. Nelson planted the seeds for so much environmental policy and activism, as did John Muir and Aldo Leopold. Environmentalism has so many of its roots in the state of ...

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SEVENTEEN MORE COMMUNITIES VOTE TO AMEND THE U.S. CONSTITUTION

  In the April election, Wisconsin residents in seventeen communities voted to amend the U.S. Constitution to clarify that only human beings should have inalienable human rights and money is not the same thing as free speech. All referenda passed with overwhelming majorities in the cities of Rhinelander (89%) and Eagle River (87%) and the towns of Wescott (86%), Newbold (87%), Crescent (83%), Pelican (85%), Woodruff (85%), Pine Lake (86%), Hazelhurst (86%), Arbor Vitae (81%), Presque Isle (79%), Winchester (79%), Boulder Junction (86%), Phelps (81%), Lac du Flambeau ...

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EVERY LIFE IS IMPORTANT

  I’m pro-life. I believe that every life is important. That means that a 22-year-old does not have any more right to a ventilator than a 77-year-old. That means that life is more important than the stock market. That means that the life of a banker is not worth more than the life of someone with an intellectual disability. If a person is really pro-life, then they believe that every person has a right to receive adequate healthcare. So many people who have described themselves as pro-life in the past are now calling for medical rationing during the Covid-19 ...

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CORONAVIRUS AND ECONOMICS

Humans, us, we, are at a crossroads, a critical juncture in our evolution on a lonely planet, voyaging through the Universe. A mindless, moral-less, belief-less, dangerous, microscopic virus is bringing us great clarity if we allow ourselves to see. It cares not what we “believe,” cares not our “economic” ideology, cares not our ethnicity or location on the globe, cares not who thinks themselves a “chosen,” a “special” people. A mindless virus is telling us - - - we, the people of Planet Earth, travel together. We succeed together – we fail together. No ...

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