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#wisconsin

113 posts38 participants1 post today

Cana Island Lighthouse Door County Wisconsin Lake Michigan Great Lakes Upper Midwest

Cana Island Lighthouse stands as one of the most iconic and picturesque landmarks in Door County, Wisconsin, offering breathtaking views of Lake Michigan and the rugged shoreline of the Great Lakes.

fineartamerica.com/featured/ca

#DoorCounty #Wisconsin #Lghthouse #architecture #minnesota #photography #travel #travelphotography

A couple of years ago a food discussion erupted in Italy. A provocation: "The best Parmesan cheese comes from Wisconsin"

Long story short: Italian migrants kept doing the original recipe

Why Wisconsin? Because it's the land of the cheese. It makes over 600 different varieties

So it's not only Parmesan. They have also Asiago, Fontina, Gorgonzola, Provolone, Mozzarella, Ricotta, Stracchino... all of this, from Wisconsin!

wisconsincheese.com/our-cheese

Continued thread

State by State Pending and recently passed #AntiProtestLaws: #Wisconsin

AB 426: New penalties for protests near gas and oil pipelines

Creates new potential penalties for protests near oil and gas #pipelines and other property of "energy providers." The law expands existing provisions related to trespass and property damage to broadly include the property of all companies in the oil and gas industry. Under the law, trespass onto the property of any "company that operates a #gas, #oil, petroleum, refined #petroleum product, renewable fuel, water, or chemical generation, storage, transportation, or delivery system" is a Class H felony, punishable by six years in prison and a fine of $10,000. Accordingly, protests in a range of locations may be covered, whether on land containing a pipeline or the corporate headquarters of an oil company. Any damage to property of such a company, with the intent to "cause substantial interruption or impairment of any service or good" provided by the company, is likewise a Class H felony under the law.

Full text of bill:
docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/2019/

Status: enacted

Introduced 12 Sep 2019; Approved by Assembly 11 October 2019; Approved by Senate 5 November 2019; Signed by Governor Evers on 21 November 2019

Issue(s): Infrastructure, Trespass

AB 88: BROAD NEW DEFINITION OF "RIOT" and related felony offenses and civil liability

Would broadly define "riot" under Wisconsin law and create #vague new felony offenses as well as expansive civil liability that could cover #PeacefulProtest activity. The bill defines a “riot” as a “public disturbance” involving an act of violence or the threat of violence by someone in a gathering of 3 or more people. No actual damage or injury need take place for a gathering to become a “riot,” only a “clear and present danger” of damage or injury. As such, a large street protest where a single participant threatens to push somebody could be deemed a "riot," with no actual violence or property damage being committed by anyone. The bill creates a Class I felony offense—punishable by up to 3.5 years in prison and a $10,000 fine—for anyone who intentionally incites another “to commit a ‘riot.’” The bill defines “incite” as “to urge, promote, organize, encourage, or instigate other persons.” As drafted, the incitement offense is not limited to urging actual violence against people or property, but could seemingly cover any expression of support for demonstrators in a crowd that had been deemed a “riot.” The bill also creates a Class H felony—punishable by up to 6 years in prison and $10,000—for someone who intentionally "commits an act of violence” (not defined) while part of a “riot.” Finally, the bill makes civilly liable protesters who allegedly commit a “riot” or “vandalism” offense, as well as any person or organization that provides “material support or resources” intending that they be used to engage in such conduct. Civil liability would apply regardless of whether anyone was criminally charged or convicted of “riot” or “#vandalism.” The bill’s definition of “material support” is similar to the broad federal law definition of material support for terrorism, and includes funding as well as “communications” and “training.” As such, the civil liability provisions could make individuals and groups even indirectly involved in organizing or otherwise supporting protests vulnerable to lawsuits and extensive monetary damages.

Full text of bill:
docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/2025/

Status: pending

Introduced 28 Feb 2025.

Issue(s): Civil Liability, #ProtestSupporters or Funders, #Riot

#FirstAmendment #CriminalizingDissent
#Authoritarianism #Fascism #Clampdown #CriminalizingProtest
#CharacteristicsOfFascism #USPol #AntiProtestLaws #PipelineProtests #BigOilAndGas #Oiligarchy

docs.legis.wisconsin.gov2019 Assembly Bill 426

It’s been a wonderful first half-day in #MadisonWI. We got to check out some of the old stomping grounds from our time in graduate school 25 years ago, especially State Street and the Capitol Square. We spent some time at the #Wisconsin #IceCube Particle #Astrophysics Center (WIPAC) and met with colleagues of ours there. It’s good to be in our academic home, where we first met.

I am excited for @jodi’s #colloquium in the #Physics Department tomorrow afternoon!

wipac.wisc.edu/

Last week's supreme court election in Wisconsin has been decided (the Democrat-aligned candidate, Susan Crawford, was elected) but there are still more down-ballot elections taking place in the U.S. this month. Here's @taniel's breakdown for @bolts of what's happened, and what's still to come.

flip.it/rOuWN6

BoltsThe 20 Elections to Watch This April - BoltsA Democratic candidate who railed against Elon Musk and his spending cuts flipped an ancestrally Republican district in Pennsylvania’s state Senate on Tuesday, March 25. Democrats, who will now represent... Read More