Blogging on bureaucracy, organizations, USDA, agriculture programs, American history, the food movement, and other interests. Often contrarian, usually optimistic, sometimes didactic, occasionally funny, rarely wrong, always a nitpicker.
Friday, August 29, 2008
It's Diversity at Work
So now our national tickets include an African-American with an Indonesian-American half sister married to a Chinese Canadian, a woman with an Eskimo husband and a Downs child, two WASP codgers, and our Wheaties boxes celebrate a Russian-American gymnast and a Japanese-African-American decathlete.
Thursday, August 28, 2008
Carbon Tax and Locavore
Kevin Drum comments on an NPR piece on the carbon footprint of food, observing a carbon tax would help, probably more than voluntary changes in diet.
Wednesday, August 27, 2008
Little League Causes Obesity?
Eugene Volokh blogged on the 9-year old who's been banned from Little League because he's too good. It got a lot of comments because it straddles some key issues: the right of an individual to try to excel, the safety of others, etc. I offered a comment remembering the old days before organized youth sports when you scraped together whatever kids in the neighborhood were available and willing, whatever the differences in age and ability.
I got to thinking, resulting in the question which is the title. In the old days, kids stayed in the neighborhood unless they could bike elsewhere (our rural roads weren't favorable for biking, even if I'd ever learned). They didn't rely on parents, particularly mothers, for transportation. Now it's different--mothers spend all their time transporting kids so they don't have time to cook, meaning they go for the fast food and carryouts, leading to our obesity epidemic.
So the solution is to ban Little League.
I got to thinking, resulting in the question which is the title. In the old days, kids stayed in the neighborhood unless they could bike elsewhere (our rural roads weren't favorable for biking, even if I'd ever learned). They didn't rely on parents, particularly mothers, for transportation. Now it's different--mothers spend all their time transporting kids so they don't have time to cook, meaning they go for the fast food and carryouts, leading to our obesity epidemic.
So the solution is to ban Little League.
Analyses of Locavore and Organic
James McWilliams analyzes problems with locavore logic at Freakonomics, Stephanie Page Ogburn analyzes the problems with making a full-time living from organic gardening at Grist.
Both are valuable correctives to books such as Kingsolver's and McKibben's, which tend to play up the possibilities and play down the problems.
Both are valuable correctives to books such as Kingsolver's and McKibben's, which tend to play up the possibilities and play down the problems.
Tuesday, August 26, 2008
AIDS in Rural Areas
The Daily Yonder reports on increasing AIDS cases in rural areas. I've some reservations, because I assume the rural areas started with no AIDS (the whole country started with no AIDS) so we're talking about a percentage increase over a very small base. Of course, it's surprising to find AIDS outside the big cities because the propagation pattern for a virus would seem to require a concentrated population. So maybe the rise is in aging boomers moving to the sticks, a few of whom happen to have HIV/AIDS, as opposed to transmission in rural areas. Who knows?
[Updated--had a senior moment on the proper acronym for AIDS.]
[Updated--had a senior moment on the proper acronym for AIDS.]
Slips of the Tongue
I've never been particularly articulate, tongue-tied and shy is more like it. So I tend not to laugh at people who misspeak, with the possible exception of the current President, for whom I like to find excuses to laugh at.
I'm also interested in how the brain works, so this analysis of recent miscues, with links to past analyses of past errors on both sides of the aisle was good reading. Hat Tip: Eugene Volokh
I'm also interested in how the brain works, so this analysis of recent miscues, with links to past analyses of past errors on both sides of the aisle was good reading. Hat Tip: Eugene Volokh
Monday, August 25, 2008
Animal Processed Fiber
Erin today has a great post on that staple of agriculture and bureaucracy: animal processed fiber.
(I should add that bureaucrats and politicians collaborate in erecting vast edifices of same.)
(I should add that bureaucrats and politicians collaborate in erecting vast edifices of same.)
Sunday, August 24, 2008
American Mobility
Michael Powell wrote in today's NYTimes Week in Review on the mobility and unrootedness of American life. The usual references, keyed off Obama's life. Allow me to be a bit contrarian--it's easy to overemphasize how much Americans move. That's my impression from researching my genealogy. There are lots of people who stay in the same place, the same area, for most of their lives. There are still descendants of Captain John Rippey and Mary Orson living in the York, PA area, some 250 years later. And my cousin has mentioned a resident of Ipswich, MA who traces his ancestry back to the town's founding, some 360 years ago.
None of this means we Americans don't have a (physically) mobile society compared to others. (After all, some Arabs trace their ancestry back to the Prophet.) But mobility is not something everyone experiences.
None of this means we Americans don't have a (physically) mobile society compared to others. (After all, some Arabs trace their ancestry back to the Prophet.) But mobility is not something everyone experiences.
Saturday, August 23, 2008
Food Safety, Raw Milk Revisited
Ethicurean has a long post describing the back and forth over a bill to regulate raw milk in California. Now I've mixed feelings on all this. As a retired bureaucrat, I almost always believe there's a role for government regulation. As a long-ago farm boy, I remember the milk inspectors coming and forcing my father to change his operation (install refrigeration for the milk cans), put hot water in the milk house (we had hot water there when we didn't have it in the house), changes not always appreciated. As someone who drank raw milk until college, I liked the taste, but can't take the sometimes quasi-religious fervor mustered on its behalf.
But leaving all that aside, I'm a bit bemused by this thought: suppose a big food processor, a monster multinational corporation, said: we have this brand new product that provides essential minerals and vitamins and tastes great. Oh, we'll promise that it will be almost pure, no more than 10 coliform bacteria per unit.
How far do you think that proposal would get?
Just saying.
But leaving all that aside, I'm a bit bemused by this thought: suppose a big food processor, a monster multinational corporation, said: we have this brand new product that provides essential minerals and vitamins and tastes great. Oh, we'll promise that it will be almost pure, no more than 10 coliform bacteria per unit.
How far do you think that proposal would get?
Just saying.
Friday, August 22, 2008
The Housing Slump
182 Manassas Drive, Manassas Park, VA recently sold for $105,000. It was appraised in 2007 for $342,000. That's the measure of the housing slump, and the impact of the Prince William crackdown on illegal immigrants.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)