Good morning.

Thursday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 69. Sunrise is 6:11 and sunset is 7:38 for 13 hours 27 minutes of daytime. The moon is a waning crescent with 1.3 percent of its visible disk illuminated.
The Whitewater School Board’s Calendar Committee meets at 4:30 PM and Whitewater’s Community Development Authority meets at 5:30 PM.
On this day in 1963, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. writes his open letter from Birmingham Jail, sometimes known as “The Negro Is Your Brother,” while incarcerated in Birmingham, Alabama, for protesting against segregation.
This April saw the election of Judge Chris Taylor to the Wisconsin Supreme Court. She will take office this August. There will be another election for a seat on Wisconsin’s high court in April 2027. (Justice Ziegler has announced that she will not run for re-election.)
The campaign for the 2027 Wisconsin Supreme Court election has begun:
Barely a week after this year’s Wisconsin Supreme Court election, a candidate has entered the race for next year.
Clark County Judge Lyndsey Boon Brunette declared Thursday that she’ll run to replace outgoing Justice Annette Ziegler, who announced her retirement from the court in March.
In a video, Brunette highlighted her background as a former prosecutor and said she’d work to apply the law “fairly and equally.”
See Anya van Wagtendonk, Liberal Judge Lyndsey Brunette announces 2027 Wisconsin Supreme Court campaign, Wisconsin Public Radio, April 16, 2026.
Brunette is one of two circuit court judges in Clark County. Clark County is a small county east of Eau Claire, with its largest city (and county seat) at Neillsville. The county has voted Republican by large margins both in presidential elections and in the 2026 Wisconsin Supreme Court race. Although Judge Brunette is described as a liberal, she’s served on the bench in one of Wisconsin’s reddest counties.
There will be other candidates, likely both liberal and conservative.
If Judge Brunette’s announcement seems premature, then one hasn’t considered the conditions of ceaseless political conflict in which we now live.
Donald Trump isn’t the origin of our endless politics, but he is its leading exemplar: his evident character disorders compel him to inflict himself, and federal power, into every discussion (political, religious, cultural) that wanders through his cluttered mind.
Those who want a less intrusive and less incessant politics should start by voting for national leaders with well-ordered minds.
Upcoming posts (in no decided order): The Regents, Economic Demand, Claims of Legacy, a Particular Species of Democrat, a Whitewater Comparative Analysis, and Whitewater’s Workforce.
Robots crack jokes and grab items at Humanoid Robot Expo in Tokyo:



