Sunday, December 14, 2025

Cool Ideas: “1936 Delimal Le Carabe — The Tiny French Car That Shouldn’t Exist!”

Video shows bystander tackling and disarming one of the shooters at Sydney’s Bondi Beach

What's behind the reported ambition gap between men and women, and how can we close it?

Kyle Rittenhouse Gets HITCHED, Pictured With Bride Wielding AR-15

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Drones dropping contraband into prisons fuel scams targeting Americans

What AI means for the future of car buying, selling

Retro Car: Jaguar Pirana: The Car Built by a Newspaper - and Admired by Supercar Legends

Saturday, December 13, 2025

Daily Dose of Internet: Birthday Boy Catches on Fire

Cool Ideas: 1952 Solyto: The Micro Van That Borrowed Formula-1 Engineering!

Cement cars form new coral reef park: Miami reef revival driven by art and science

Thailand vows to keep fighting Cambodia despite Trump's ceasefire claim • FRANCE 24 English

OpenAI and Disney Team Up: What it Means for Iconic Characters

US House Democrats release new photos of Trump, other prominent figures from Epstein's estate

After Australia, Denmark plans strict social media ban for under-15s

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Least Reliable Car Brands of 2026 | Consumer Reports

Retro Car: Jaguar Ascot: Jaguar’s Most Radical Concept Car That Never Reached Production

Friday, December 12, 2025

Atomic Snack Bar: Equinox (1970) - Stop Motion & Crazed Sci-fi Writers

Qxir: HEAR the Sound of Ancient Pharaoh’s 3,000-Year-Old Trumpets | Tales From the Bottle

Daily Dose of Pets: The Funniest Pet Videos of 2025

China restarts talks with EU on minimum price plan for EVs | REUTERS

Holiday shoppers navigating affordability concerns | Morning in America

Venezuela denounces US oil tanker seizure as ‘barefaced robbery’

As Paramount and Netflix battle, Trump’s focus turns squarely to CNN

Time magazine names 'Architects of AI' as its person of the year for 2025 • FRANCE 24 English

Ukrainian Zelensky rejects Washington peace plan • FRANCE 24 English

Trump administration orders U.S. national park gift shops to purge merchandise promoting DEI

Rivian Bets Big on Autonomy With New AI Chip and Lidar

French Intermarché ad goes viral for not using AI • FRANCE 24 English

Trump Selling Gold Card for U.S. Citizenship & Scrambles to Come Up with a Health Care Plan

Retro Car: Citroën Osée: 2001 Geneva Motor Show Icon with Futuristic Design

Thursday, December 11, 2025

How Minnesota fraudsters blew millions of taxpayer dollars intended for hungry kids

Daily Dose of Internet: Parents are Gaslighting Children Now

Mark Felton Productions: Skorzeny's Last Battle - The Schwedt Bridgehead 1945 (Ep.3)

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Caledonia man changes plea in April child pornography case

From The Journal Times.com:

Milana Doné


RACINE — A Caledonia man pleaded guilty to possessing child pornography Tuesday.

Christopher Dufay, 24, was facing 20 counts of possession of child pornography.

Each count is a class D felony which, upon conviction, can result in up to 25 years in prison, a maximum fine of $100,000 or both.

On Tuesday, Dufay pleaded guilty to five counts. The remaining counts were dismissed but read in to the court record.

Allegations

According to previous Journal Times reporting, Dufay was arrested after the Caledonia Police Department received a cyber tip from Internet Crimes Against Children.

The tip included eight videos and a Kik account with an IP address associated with a residence in the 2700 block of Holly Grove Court and an account name of Christopher Dufay.

CPD served a search warrant for the account, which showed 209 images/videos had been downloaded or shared by the account owner. CPD reportedly found 20 distinct videos containing child pornography.

Investigators also searched Dufay’s residence and seized several items as evidence, according to previous reporting.

Dufay originally pleaded not guilty to all charges at an arraignment in April.

He is scheduled for a sentencing hearing Feb. 17, 2026.

From: https://journaltimes.com/news/local/crime-courts/article_33bfd3ad-3b5f-40fc-926d-b28335c26fd5.html#tracking-source=home-top-story

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Retro Car: Abarth Scorpione 1300 Corsa: Carlo Abarth's Last Independent Sports Car Project

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Mt. Pleasant residents will see lower tax rates in 2026 because of net new construction

From The Journal Times.com:

Holly Gilvary

MOUNT PLEASANT — The village tax rate will decrease in 2026 because of the amount of property value added by Mount Pleasant's net new construction in 2025.

The Mount Pleasant Village Board on Monday heard a presentation on the 2025 progress report for the village's Public Works and Community Development departments, during which Village Administrator Tamara Simons showed that Mount Pleasant had the second-highest net new construction value in the state in 2025.

According to the Wisconsin Department of Revenue, Mount Pleasant added more than $996 million in net new construction value in 2025, second to the City of Madison with about $1 billion.

The village tax rate will decrease from 2025's rate of $6.09 per $1,000 to $5.67 in 2026 because of the large property value added by new construction, according to the progress report.

Mount Pleasant Community Development Director Samuel Schultz said the village permitted 930 multi-family housing units this year, a 1,228% increase from last year, as well as 50 single-family homes, a 62% increase from last year.

He added that many development projects that began in 2025 were part of village Tax Increment Districts and that the average return on investment for Mount Pleasant's seven active TIDs is 130.9%.

Staff also highlighted the following work completed by the village in 2025: the Mount Pleasant Sewer Utility and Racine Wastewater Utility building; a 1.7-million-gallon underground storage tank near Chicory Road to contain the flow of water into sewers during heavy storms; the village installing permanent generators at seven village sewer lift stations to keep pipes flowing away from homes, even during power outages; building three miles of sanitary sewer; replacing 1,700 feet of storm sewer along Deerfield Road; and conducting its first tree inventory in 2025, during which the village inventoried 6,200 trees in village parks and rights-of-way.

In other business, the board:

• Approved the following roads in Mount Pleasant to be accepted as public/village roads: Hunter Drive; Independence Road; Rosewood Lane from Spring Street to the south terminus; Hoods Creek Path from Gittings Road to the north terminus; Gwendolyn's Way from Hoods Creek Path to its west terminus; Arden Road from Hoods Creek Path to its west terminus; Arden Road from Hoods Creek Path to its east terminus; and Carrington Boulevard from Spring Street to its south terminus.

Mount Pleasant Community Development Director Samuel Schultz said the village permitted 930 multi-family housing units this year, a 1,228% increase from last year, as well as 50 single-family homes, a 62% increase from last year.

He added that many development projects that began in 2025 were part of village Tax Increment Districts and that the average return on investment for Mount Pleasant's seven active TIDs is 130.9%.

Staff also highlighted the following work completed by the village in 2025: the Mount Pleasant Sewer Utility and Racine Wastewater Utility building; a 1.7-million-gallon underground storage tank near Chicory Road to contain the flow of water into sewers during heavy storms; the village installing permanent generators at seven village sewer lift stations to keep pipes flowing away from homes, even during power outages; building three miles of sanitary sewer; replacing 1,700 feet of storm sewer along Deerfield Road; and conducting its first tree inventory in 2025, during which the village inventoried 6,200 trees in village parks and rights-of-way.

In other business, the board:

• Approved the following roads in Mount Pleasant to be accepted as public/village roads: Hunter Drive; Independence Road; Rosewood Lane from Spring Street to the south terminus; Hoods Creek Path from Gittings Road to the north terminus; Gwendolyn's Way from Hoods Creek Path to its west terminus; Arden Road from Hoods Creek Path to its west terminus; Arden Road from Hoods Creek Path to its east terminus; and Carrington Boulevard from Spring Street to its south terminus.

From: https://journaltimes.com/news/local/government-politics/article_04ccc703-777b-4228-bf3c-2a1ed2b11431.html

Racine declares apartment complexes and bar to be nuisance properties

From The Journal Times.com:

Holly Gilvary

RACINE — The City of Racine has formally declared four properties as nuisances, citing repeated building code violations and a "significant volume" of police calls.

In the past 60 days, the city has recorded 33 police calls and 11 building code violations at the Mitchell Wagon Factory Lofts, 815 Eighth St. 


The Mitchell Wagon Factory Lofts at 815 Eighth St., the Arcade Apartments at 413 Main St., and bar and restaurant Mahoffers on Main at 236 Main St. were declared nuisances this week. Last month, the city declared McMynn Tower Apartments, 110 Seventh St., a nuisance property.

In the past 60 days, the city has recorded seven police calls and 45 building code violations at the Arcade Apartments, 413 Main St.


In the past 60 days, the city has recorded 33 police calls and 11 building code violations at the Mitchell Wagon Factory Lofts, and seven police calls and 45 building code violations at the Arcade Apartments.

Journal Times

McMynn Tower has received more than 800 police calls since 2022.

According to the city, the ongoing building code violations and public safety issues at the properties "have reached a point where formal action is necessary to protect residents and the surrounding neighborhoods." 

City departments have attempted multiple interventions to resolve the issues at the Mitchell Wagon Factory Lofts and the Arcade Apartments, but the conditions have persisted, according to a news release.

With the nuisance declarations now in place, all properties must provide formal abatement plans to the city that outline specific corrective actions and timelines to address outstanding safety violations, reduce police-related incidents and ensure the properties are managed responsibly going forward.

The Mitchell Wagon Factory Lofts and the Arcade Apartments are both owned and managed by The Michaels Organization, a national housing operator based in Camden, New Jersey. The company is not affiliated with the Wisconsin-based Michels Corporation.

If the property managers do not meet the requirements laid out in the abatement plans, the city may pursue further enforcement actions, including municipal citations, cost recovery or additional legal remedies permitted under city ordinances.

"We expect The Michaels Organization to correct these issues quickly and demonstrate a renewed commitment to the people who live in their buildings," Mayor Cory Mason said in the release.

Unacceptable behavior

The police have received more than 50 calls for service at Mahoffers on Main since the establishment opened in July, with the calls including physical fights, disorderly conduct and loud music complaints, according to the city. Several of the incidents were categorized as "serious" and required "significant police response."

Mahoffers on Main, 236 Main St., has had more than 50 police calls for service since opening in July, according to the City of Racine.

Journal Times file photo

Racine Police Chief Alex Ramirez said the police department expects business owners to "operate responsibly and to be good neighbors in our community."

"This owner has not demonstrated that level of responsibility," Ramirez said in a statement. "The volume and nature of these calls — some of them serious — are deeply concerning from a public safety perspective. This behavior is not acceptable, and it places an unnecessary strain on police resources."

From: https://journaltimes.com/news/local/government-politics/article_2f5591a4-b8ff-4250-8bd3-6484bf518b04.html#tracking-source=home-top-story

Daily Dose of Pets: My Dog Is Cooler Than Me

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GZ PrintPak invests $7M in Mount Pleasant bag plant, creating 40 jobs

From JSOnline:

La Risa R. Lynch
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Holiday season shoppers might be bringing home a piece of Wisconsin – a shopping bag made in Mount Pleasant.

GZ PrintPak, a global printing and packaging company, this year began manufacturing paper bags for high-end retailers at its new facility, at 13505 Louis Sorenson Road.

The company now plans to expand its Racine County operation to produce collapsible and standard rigid boxes, along with co-packing services.

The company will invest $7.1 million into its 69,000 square-foot manufacturing facility, creating 40 jobs, according to a Dec. 4 announcement.

“We’re really proud to be here, because Wisconsin offers an ideal mix of workforce availability, infrastructure, and location advantages – enabling us to better serve our customers across North America,” said Peter Levenec, chairman and chief commercial officer of GZ Media, GZ PrintPak's corporate parent.

GZ Media, based in the Czech Republic, is the world’s largest vinyl record producer.

GZ PrintPak is the only U.S. manufacturer to have developed an automated system for producing fully recyclable luxury paper bags, according to the company.

The company says it offers an attractive alternative to overseas suppliers by leveraging tariff-free manufacturing and competitive pricing.

The Wisconsin Economic Development Corp. is supporting the expansion by authorizing up to $300,000 in state income tax credits over the next three years. The tax credits are contingent on the number of jobs created and the capital invested in the project.

“Wisconsin is known as a global leader in the paper industry, and GZ PrintPak is the kind of innovative international paper manufacturing company that belongs in Wisconsin,” said Sam Rikkers, WEDC deputy secretary and chief operating officer.

The expansion also was praised by officials from the Racine County Economic Development Corp., the Village of Mount Pleasant, and the Milwaukee 7 regional economic development agency.

From: https://www.jsonline.com/story/money/business/2025/12/10/czech-company-gz-printpak-making-high-end-paper-bags-in-wisconsin/87691347007/

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Tuesday, December 9, 2025

Daily Dose of Internet: Self Driving Cars Were a Mistake

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Monday, December 8, 2025

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Sunday, December 7, 2025

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