Category: news
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Anti-choice laws topple
The U.S. Supreme Court on June 27 struck down anti-choice legislation in Texas with a decisive 5-3 ruling, imperiling similar measures in other states. By June 28, the high court had ruled against Wisconsin and Mississippi, where Republican leaders sought to appeal lower court rulings on their anti-choice provisions. Also, the Alabama attorney general announced…
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Supreme Court deadlocks on immigration case
Karla Cano faces uncertainty. She had expected to qualify for deferred action under the Obama administration’s executive orders on immigration. But a tied decision by the U.S. Supreme Court creates uncertainty for Cano and her family. “All that is unjust about my situation will continue,” said Cano, 21, a senior at Mount Mary University and the…
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House Democrats stage sit-in, demand vote on gun control
Democrats staged a 1960s-style sit-in on the U.S. House floor June 22–23, chanting, “No bill. No Break.” The protest was intended to call attention to Republicans’ inaction against gun violence in the wake of the largest mass shooting in modern history at a gay dance club in Orlando. House Speaker Paul Ryan responded by shutting…
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Terror in the ‘Happiest Place on Earth’
An act of terror. An act of hate. The world responded with love and compassion, fury and fight. Early on the morning of June 12, a gunman armed with an assault rifle and a handgun went on a rampage at the gay nightclub Pulse in Orlando, Florida. He killed 49 people and wounded more than…
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Voters go to court over ‘worst partisan gerrymander’
A dozen Wisconsin voters and their attorneys will go to federal court in May to present their case challenging one of the worst partisan gerrymanders in modern American history. They count among their supporters Republican and Democratic politicians, good-government forces, First Amendment advocates, progressive philanthropists and fellow citizens who want their votes to count. To…
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Wise words: Commencement season to begin
Students may be shaking spring-break sand from their flip-flops, but commencement celebrations are just weeks away for colleges and universities. Many Wisconsin colleges and universities — public and private — plan commencement ceremonies in May and are lining up speakers. NFL quarterback Russell Wilson will deliver the spring commencement address on May 14 at the University…
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To veg out is in: Activists organize Milwaukee Veg Expo
The moment for Pete Woodward of Milwaukee came when he read the bumper sticker, “Eat plants for the planet.” Something clicked, said the 29-year-old mechanic, and he began the cycle to following a vegetarian diet. For Molly Risser of Madison, the commitment came after an afternoon in a dog park. The 34-year-old office assistant recalled, “A…
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Birding for bigger budgets: Wisconsin birdathon benefits conservation programs
Those who venture into the woods on a weekend in May might spot an “Old Coot” or a “Lower Chippewa River Titmouseketeer.” These are not new species to add to the Sibley Guide to Birds, but rather team players in the Great Wisconsin Birdathon, an annual event that brings hundreds of birders outdoors for spring scoping…
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Growing hemp, seeding a market for farmers and consumers
“Hemp for victory” once was a rallying cry in the United States, back when Wisconsin dominated the hemp industry. The market for the 12-foot-tall plants was strong a century ago and reached its height during World War II, when Wisconsin led the nation in producing hemp for rope and twine. Growers in Fond du Lac,…
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WiG Endorsement: Hillary Clinton for president
Without question, Bernie Sanders is mad as hell. And so are we angry as we struggle with wages that remain unchanged while living expenses rise and the American Dream seems to fade. We bemoan the billions thrown at campaigns to manipulate our minds and lament the popularity of billionaire bigots hurling insults and blame at…
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U.S. hunters import 126,000 wildlife ‘trophies’ annually
U.S. hunters import about 126,000 “wildlife trophies” annually and killed about 1.26 million animals between 2005 and 2014, according to the Humane Society International and The Humane Society of the United States. Trophy hunting is the killing of animals for body parts, such as the head and hide, for display or decor rather than for…
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Civil liberties groups challenge StingRay surveillance
A StingRay or cell-site simulator is a surveillance device about the size of a suitcase that acts like a cellphone tower, sending out signals and tricking cellphones in the area into transmitting their locations and other identifying information. The device can round up data, collecting information from a suspect’s cellphone and also the phones of…
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Eyes in the sky: Drone growth elevates fun, raises privacy concerns
As many as a million kids and kids-at-heart had their wishes take flight when they unwrapped a drone during the holidays. Consumer technology took a turn in 2015 and propelled domestic drones to new heights in popularity in late 2015 and early 2016. But policymakers and privacy advocates see gray areas as more and more…
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Big gulp: GOP advances water privatization
“Aqua America” sounds like a water park on the shore of a great lake. Rather, Aqua America is the second-largest publicly traded water utility company in the United States, and someday the company — or Veolia or Suez — could take control of municipal water systems in Wisconsin. Republican lawmakers fast-tracked AB 554/SB 432, legislation…
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Proposed hog farm prompts Bayfield County to tighten regs
UPDATED: With a proposed factory farm threatening to foul Wisconsin’s “Crown Jewel,” the citizens of Bayfield County are not turning away from the stink or running from the fight. State law prohibits the local jurisdiction from saying “no” to the proposed “concentrated animal feeding operation” in the town of Eileen, but the county on Jan.…
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Wisconsin Republicans declare open season against environment
Republicans took target practice in early January after declaring open season on Wisconsin’s environmental resources. The new year began with a bang, bang in the Capitol, where in just two days Republicans presided over a series of hearings on bills aimed at rolling back protections for air, land and water and at the same time…
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Island of seduction
The way a kid feels that day before the last day of school before summer vacation? That’s the way Fire Island fans feel before the long Memorial Day weekend. The way a kid feels that day before the first day of the new school year? That’s the way Fire Island fans feel about Labor Day…
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Calling Ms. Candidate
Emerge Wisconsin is training runners – female runners who will sprint to a seat on the school board, dash to city hall, finish the marathon to the Capitol. EW is an affiliate of Emerge America, which is dedicated to encouraging and preparing Democratic women to run for elected office and, in the course of that…
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Pregnant women shackled, jailed for alleged substance use
A pregnant woman tumbles down a flight of stairs and is arrested for attempted feticide. A pregnant woman about to be released from prison is re-incarcerated when the judge learns she is pregnant and HIV-positive. A pregnant woman informs health care workers that she previously used drugs but has kicked her habit and is clean.…
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Climate change imperils major U.S. landmarks
The president marked the centennial of Harriet Tubman’s death a year ago by designating 25,000 acres on Maryland’s Eastern Shore as a new national monument. By 2050, if sea levels in the Chesapeake Bay continue to rise at twice the global rate because of climate change, the monument to the legendary abolitionist could be largely…
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Meanwhile in Mecca: an illustrated story of San Francisco
The place “has always been a refuge for anyone to come to, whatever status in society. For people, intellectuals, pseudo-intellectuals, for lonely people. For every walk of life.” Wendy MacNaughton is referring to the San Francisco Public Library, maybe not a stop on every vacationer’s itinerary, but the population of the library “mirrors the population…
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From protest to preservation: | Federal government identifies historic LGBT sites and events
On a warm night in June 1969, outside the Stonewall Inn, rioters rebelled against the continued persecution and harassment by government officials. On a sunny day in late May, government officers — the highest-ranking among them a member of the U.S. cabinet — gathered outside the unobtrusive brick building that stands as the symbolic birthplace…
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In the game… WiG’s annual Pride pop quiz
No doubt you know the words to “Go! You Packers! Go” and the name of that guy who wears No. 12 — maybe you know his career passing yards. And probably you know which Major League Baseball team is No. 1 in the National League’s Central Division and how many games are left until the…
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Legal limbo
As gay couples in Wisconsin waited in legal limbo in mid-June, equality foes continued working to defend anti-gay amendments in the courts and marched on Washington. But those foes are caught in a losing streak. The march on Washington on June 19 fell flat, and there have been 21 consecutive court rulings for marriage equality…
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We can be heroes: In pursuit of equality in the courts
Eight same-sex couples — with a team of lawyers — committed earlier this year to overturn Wisconsin’s constitutional amendment barring gays and lesbians from the freedom to marry in the state. Their fight continues, but already their pursuit of equality has resulted in the marriages of at least 555 same-sex couples in Wisconsin. “These families…