For weeks now, geologists have tried to identify the causes of the loud cracks and booms that are rattling the city of Clintonville, Wis.
Their original conclusion was that it was a baby earthquake measuring 1.5 on the Richter Scale. But the whole-lotta-shakinโ is still going on, debunking that assessment.
I would like to offer a figurative diagnosis. Perhaps the commotion is being caused by Wisconsinโs political psyche being fractured into two. Again.
I mean, letโs face it. When it comes to politics, Wisconsin is bipolar.
How can one state produce both Robert โFighting Bobโ La Follette and Joseph McCarthy? Russ Feingold and Ron Johnson? Paul Ryan and Tammy Baldwin? Frank Zeidler and Scott Walker? Itโs like we have two gene pools.
This year, it is entirely possible that Wisconsin will re-elect conservative Gov. Walker and help re-elect Democrat Barack Obama as president.
I will leave the merits of Walkerโs Act 10 for others to debate, but one thing is certain: It split Wisconsin into factions of us and them. I have seen families torn apart by the chasm. The seeds of the national โOccupyโ movement were sown in the Madison protests.
As I walk the streets of my neighborhood, I see yard signs proclaiming โI stand with Walkerโ right next to neighborsโ signs saying โRecall Walker.โ
As time goes by, I really miss the late Wisconsin Sen. William Proxmire. He was a fiscal conservative, the originator of the โGolden Fleece Awardsโ for government waste. And yet the man had a compassionate heart of gold and was the ultimate public servant for Wisconsin.
But politics aside, he did not need, nor did he seek, large campaign donations. He campaigned on his feet. You could not go to a Packer game, a Brewers game, Summerfest, the State Fair or a summer parade without running into Bill Proxmire.
People like the Koch brothers on the right or George Soros on the left would have no reason to call Proxmire. He would have none of that tomfoolery.
โProxโ was the first U.S. Senator I ever interviewed as a young journalist. He was a politician who responded to his constituentsโ needs, regardless of how they voted in the booth. He was honest. No one could buy his vote, because it was not for sale.
Contrast that to the way the political game is played today. The U.S. Supreme Courtโs Citizens United decision has completely polluted Americaโs democracy. The Super Political Action Committees (PACs) are spending more than the political parties and more than the candidates themselves.
The courtโs decision declared that companies and unions are people, and cash equals free speech.
I donโt know about you, but our homeโs phone rang off the hook with calls from PACs in the weekend before the April 3 Wisconsin primary.
I donโt get that. The only thing I can figure is there must be some large idiot voter bloc out there. Because what kind of idiot would give any consideration to a robocall from a PAC when deciding whom will get his or her vote?
We have reached a new low in which one political party is running โfakeโ candidates in the other partyโs primary, just to mess with the system.
I would venture a guess that you are as numb as I am to the campaign commercials on television and radio. I donโt hear them anymore. I refuse to. They are disgusting and condescending.
We have descended into our own corners, and we only trust the media outlets that are echo chambers that amplify our own political beliefs. Any media outlets that challenge those pre-held beliefs are considered suspect.
We are at once us and them. Shame on them. And shame on us.
Steve Jagler is executive editor of BizTimes.