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.
Monday, November 10, 2008
My Rule 1, Only for Americans, Not Germans [Rev]
The German commented that the German crews he had worked with expected less "leeway" compared to the Americans, that is, the Germans expected to get it right on the first take. The Americans, by implication, believed in my first rule: "You never do it right the first time."
[Added] Cultures differ. Perhaps it relates to the idea that the U.S. has always had plentiful natural resources, so we could afford a fast and sloppy effort, refined by trial and error, whereas in Germany the emphasis has been on precision, following rules and not wasting resources. (I believe Germany is maybe the second or third leading exporter in the world, much of it based on its machine tools and similar products.
Geezers Don't Give a ....
The association with age confirms other research suggesting that older people are less susceptible to social pressure.I think it's true, for me, as I grow more and more conscious of my waning days, I sometimes feel freer to say "what the hell" and venture where I wouldn't have gone before ("venture" that is, in a very safe and intellectual, not physical, way).
Sunday, November 09, 2008
Supermarket Pharmacy and Farmers Markets
Why have a pharmacy in a supermarket? Come to think of it, why have a bakery, a delicatessen, and a bank in the supermarket? Why have a meat counter and a fish counter? After all, in many European countries you have (or had) separate butcher shops and patisseries, etc.
The answer, in my mind, augurs ill for any idea of vastly expanding farmers markets. Americans, mostly, seem to have voted for convenience, for saving time, and we see the results of that election in the design of our supermarkets. I'd guess that going to any farmers market is going to cost the consumer 40 minutes of driving time and shopping time. Add that to higher prices and it's going to limit your sales potential, even if the produce is healthier and tastier.
Another Web Site for Agriculture
Saturday, November 08, 2008
Government Management
The Four Thousand Dollar Cellphone
Friday, November 07, 2008
Handling Comments
I never had to deal with anything like 200,000 comments, but I would give the EPA a break. 200,000 of anything can be sorted into categories. So reviewing the comments would be a relatively simple process:
- take a random sample of comments, say 500 or so, and develop a set of categories, including a "further review" category
- have your "reviewers" sort the remaining 199,500 comments into the categories
- analyze each category and develop a response
- analyze each "further review" comment and handle appropriately.
I might challenge the Obama administration: what are you going to do with the input to your website? How will the process be better than what the EPA is doing?
[Note to self: Obama's been elected 3 days and I'm already challenging him?]
Thursday, November 06, 2008
Dissing Bush
One propensity of political partisans is to refuse to believe the good about their opponents. (I earlier blogged about the comparison between Bush's house at Crawford and Gore's place in Tennessee.) It means humans are hypocrites.
Bob Bergland Advises
This I want to watch. It's going to be a fight within the agricultural community--Obama doesn't/shouldn't have a dog in the fight.“He also wants to turn his attention to re-organizing the U.S. Department of Agriculture. He said former agriculture secretary Bob Bergland told him ‘good luck.’ An audience member asked Peterson about the National Animal Identification System. Peterson said he’s not sure it’s the No. 1 fight he wants to take on at this time.
“The United States will probably have to have NAIS if it wants to be in export markets, he said, and if a terrorist introduces Foot and Mouth Disease in this country, the U.S. will wish it had NAIS.
Obama's Rural Change Page
(Don't get all excited, I think they just copied the rural page from their campaign website, not that there's anything wrong with that.)