
Casey Hoff: UW free speech bill: Protecting rights essential
Wisconsinites ought to be cautious about any bill that implicates free speech rights in any way.
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Wisconsinites ought to be cautious about any bill that implicates free speech rights in any way.

It may well be easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God, but just try to find a Republican in the UW-Madison sociology department.

Four golf professionals recently learned they can now sue the city of Madison over claims their contracts with the city were terminated in 2012 without good cause.

Wisconsin’s income taxes are among the highest in the country, as are its property taxes.

Wigderson is now owner/editor but Charlie says he’s still “conservative.”

Prior to the ACA, Wisconsin consumers could choose from over 20 individual insurance companies offering coverage in our state. These included for-profit and not-for-profit companies; HMO’s and PPOs; and local and national insurers. There were a variety of plan options to meet a range of coverage needs.

As the U.S. Senate prepares to vote on a Republican proposal to repeal the Affordable Care Act, the possibility looms that Wisconsin could lose billions of dollars over time for the very reason the GOP hated Obamacare in the first place.

Obamacare doesn’t work. It’s failing before our eyes. And as bad as it has been in Wisconsin, some other states have seen even higher price increases and more limited options.

A closer look at the public option

Smart politicians could find a safe harbor in programs that work — expand Medicare Advantage and let employers keep their plans if they so choose.

If the state Senate and governor embrace Vos and Kremer’s wrongheaded way of thinking, an ugly combination of intimidation and uncertainty will define the discourse on campuses where avid debate, and serious competition in the battle of ideas and ideals, should be the order of the day.

Knee-jerk reaction to school choice legislation.

Current school funding proposals add up to a future that is increasingly unequal.

When will Wisconsin choose a course correction that no longer encourages increasing milk production in a glutted market, or further expansions of CAFOs that require land-spreading of millions of gallons of liquid manure over known vulnerable land, or the drilling of ever-more high-capacity wells?

Given that Sensenbrenner won his first election to the state legislature before both Woodstock and Neil Armstrong’s moon landing, he has seen the Republican Party undergo numerous identity crises.

This week the WisOpinion.com Insiders, Chvala and Kanavas, make a bet Congress will develop and pass a huge infrastructure bill this fall. Sponsored by the Wisconsin Counties Association and Michael Best Strategies.
The WisPolitics.com Book Club this week talks to Mark Johnson, of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and a co-author of “One in a Billion: The Story of Nic Volker and the Dawn of Genomic Medicine,” about how Wisconsin doctors using bold new methods helped save the life of a Monona child.

On a subject as complex and as grave as health care reform, there is no substitute for honest accounting. And when the health of millions is at stake, the burden of proof is a heavy one.

The disastrous Donald Trump/Paul Ryan scheme on health care proposes to gut protections for consumers from abuses by health insurance companies, would make many Americans pay more for less insurance coverage and could cost an estimated 23 million people their insurance altogether.

Public officials in Marquette County apparently know how to get the biggest bang for their buck when it comes to transportation. They have the best roads in the state, while receiving almost the smallest amount of state aid per mile, according to the DOT and the Legislative Fiscal Bureau.

Wisconsinites ought to be cautious about any bill that implicates free speech rights in any way.

It may well be easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God, but just try to find a Republican in the UW-Madison sociology department.

Four golf professionals recently learned they can now sue the city of Madison over claims their contracts with the city were terminated in 2012 without good cause.

Wisconsin’s income taxes are among the highest in the country, as are its property taxes.

Wigderson is now owner/editor but Charlie says he’s still “conservative.”

Prior to the ACA, Wisconsin consumers could choose from over 20 individual insurance companies offering coverage in our state. These included for-profit and not-for-profit companies; HMO’s and PPOs; and local and national insurers. There were a variety of plan options to meet a range of coverage needs.

As the U.S. Senate prepares to vote on a Republican proposal to repeal the Affordable Care Act, the possibility looms that Wisconsin could lose billions of dollars over time for the very reason the GOP hated Obamacare in the first place.

Obamacare doesn’t work. It’s failing before our eyes. And as bad as it has been in Wisconsin, some other states have seen even higher price increases and more limited options.

A closer look at the public option

Smart politicians could find a safe harbor in programs that work — expand Medicare Advantage and let employers keep their plans if they so choose.

If the state Senate and governor embrace Vos and Kremer’s wrongheaded way of thinking, an ugly combination of intimidation and uncertainty will define the discourse on campuses where avid debate, and serious competition in the battle of ideas and ideals, should be the order of the day.

Knee-jerk reaction to school choice legislation.

Current school funding proposals add up to a future that is increasingly unequal.

When will Wisconsin choose a course correction that no longer encourages increasing milk production in a glutted market, or further expansions of CAFOs that require land-spreading of millions of gallons of liquid manure over known vulnerable land, or the drilling of ever-more high-capacity wells?

Given that Sensenbrenner won his first election to the state legislature before both Woodstock and Neil Armstrong’s moon landing, he has seen the Republican Party undergo numerous identity crises.

This week the WisOpinion.com Insiders, Chvala and Kanavas, make a bet Congress will develop and pass a huge infrastructure bill this fall. Sponsored by the Wisconsin Counties Association and Michael Best Strategies.
The WisPolitics.com Book Club this week talks to Mark Johnson, of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and a co-author of “One in a Billion: The Story of Nic Volker and the Dawn of Genomic Medicine,” about how Wisconsin doctors using bold new methods helped save the life of a Monona child.

On a subject as complex and as grave as health care reform, there is no substitute for honest accounting. And when the health of millions is at stake, the burden of proof is a heavy one.

The disastrous Donald Trump/Paul Ryan scheme on health care proposes to gut protections for consumers from abuses by health insurance companies, would make many Americans pay more for less insurance coverage and could cost an estimated 23 million people their insurance altogether.

Public officials in Marquette County apparently know how to get the biggest bang for their buck when it comes to transportation. They have the best roads in the state, while receiving almost the smallest amount of state aid per mile, according to the DOT and the Legislative Fiscal Bureau.