Apparently our snow storm last week resulted in a slow degradation of the phone line, meaning first the loss of dial tone and finally the loss of DSL. Verizon promises a fix by 9 pm Wednesday night. If you see this post before, you'll know they've made good on their promise.
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.
Wednesday, December 30, 2009
Monday, December 28, 2009
The Next War and Security Works
Two thoughts coming out of the airline incident:
- I'm not clear on who handles security in Amsterdam, whether it's TSA for US flag airlines or the Dutch. Assuming it's TSA, I think we should credit their rules as successful. Apparently terrorists believe the screening process is good enough that they went to some lengths to evade the process--sewing the explosive into underwear. And the attempt to use it to bring down the plane failed, presumably because of the difficulties of turning the hidden explosive into an effective bomb. I'd compare it to a football defense like Carolina showed Sunday--effective enough to force the Giants into low-return and/or risky pass plays. If the terrorist had been able to get an effective weapon on board, it would be a different matter. And it's a separate issue of whether procedures should have identified and prevented the guy from boarding in the first place.
- I noted Sen. Lieberman now wants to attack Al Qaeda in Yemen. That's the downside of Obama's policy in Afghanistan. He may be right that his new strategy can work and avoid the problems of using lesser force. But, as long as the strategy is sold as attacking terrorism and preventing a safe haven for terrorism, it's doomed to failure. The number of failed or impaired states in the world far exceeds the capability of DOD.
Sunday, December 27, 2009
SURE: A Christmas Present for Whom?
The regs on the SURE program were published, and FSA issued the notice announcing the start of signup as Jan. 4.
I give FSA management credit for having the handbook published on the same date. I don't give the Obama administration much credit for their start time--apparently there's not been any training provided and because everyone will be in use or lose status on annual leave, the start of signup will find people trying to play catchup. (Of course, FSA people are used to that.)
I see by the handbook the program is being implemented using stand-alone Excel worksheets. I hope the county people have climbed the learning curve on Excel, that this is not the first time such a process is used.
I give FSA management credit for having the handbook published on the same date. I don't give the Obama administration much credit for their start time--apparently there's not been any training provided and because everyone will be in use or lose status on annual leave, the start of signup will find people trying to play catchup. (Of course, FSA people are used to that.)
I see by the handbook the program is being implemented using stand-alone Excel worksheets. I hope the county people have climbed the learning curve on Excel, that this is not the first time such a process is used.
How To Get Back to DC
Via Ann Althouse, who used Google Maps to find the distance between DC and Obama's vacation site in Hawaii:
9. | Kayak across the Pacific Ocean Entering Washington | 2,756 m |
The Problem With Lists
Blogs like Ann Althouse and Powerline are suggesting problems in the Obama administration's handling of terrorism as a result of the Detroit incident. Maybe, maybe not.
I do want to comment on one aspect: according to the Post today Abdulmutallab's father grew worried about his radicalism and notified authorities a month or two ago. However, he may have applied for his tourist visa to the US in 2008. All of the following is tentative, based on assumptions: assume the various lists, the "no-fly list" and the broader "Terrorist Identities" list really are "lists", that is static databases which are updated with adds and deletes periodically. So the person processing the visa request checks the appropriate lists, gets no hits, and goes ahead and approves the request.
Ideally, of course, one would like two-way communication, if not in real-time, at least daily, between the various lists/ If visa requests are checked by matching against the terrorist list, any changes to the terrorist list should be matched back to the approved visa list. So when Abdulmutallab is added to the list of possible terrorists, a process is triggered that results in putting his previously approved visa into question.
Achieving that sort of two-way communication is probably about 10 times more bureaucratically difficult than the one-way communication.
I do want to comment on one aspect: according to the Post today Abdulmutallab's father grew worried about his radicalism and notified authorities a month or two ago. However, he may have applied for his tourist visa to the US in 2008. All of the following is tentative, based on assumptions: assume the various lists, the "no-fly list" and the broader "Terrorist Identities" list really are "lists", that is static databases which are updated with adds and deletes periodically. So the person processing the visa request checks the appropriate lists, gets no hits, and goes ahead and approves the request.
Ideally, of course, one would like two-way communication, if not in real-time, at least daily, between the various lists/ If visa requests are checked by matching against the terrorist list, any changes to the terrorist list should be matched back to the approved visa list. So when Abdulmutallab is added to the list of possible terrorists, a process is triggered that results in putting his previously approved visa into question.
Achieving that sort of two-way communication is probably about 10 times more bureaucratically difficult than the one-way communication.
A Conservative Isn't Good at Math
Each year Maureen Dowd, the liberal columnist for the Times, turns her last column over to her conservative brother (it was an Irish Catholic cop family after all). This year he shows a deficiency in math, as he gives shots to various personalities:
"To Al Franken: So, 250 years of Senate tradition trashed. Stuart Smalley would have done better." (1789 is when the Constitution took effect, so it's 220 years of Senate tradition. Not to mention that industrious liberal dwarves have found a similar case in which McCain denied his consent to extend remarks, just as Franken did.)
"To Al Franken: So, 250 years of Senate tradition trashed. Stuart Smalley would have done better." (1789 is when the Constitution took effect, so it's 220 years of Senate tradition. Not to mention that industrious liberal dwarves have found a similar case in which McCain denied his consent to extend remarks, just as Franken did.)
Most Incredible Sentence Today
"In this column, I was not advocating arming passengers on airplanes (though I would not rule out such a policy if properly regulated)." Randy Barnett at Volokh.com
Saturday, December 26, 2009
Bureaucrats Plan Ahead
Friday, December 25, 2009
I Don't Do Personal, But Others Do
I'm a Presbyterian (by half heritage, if not belief). But Dirk Beauregarde does personal, and here he has some memories of Christmases past.
And Erin Slivka has her Christmas letter up--a different sense of humor than Dirk. Her site, like Dirk's, features some nice photos (but I want to see the cats).
And Life on a Colorado Farm also has some cute and some good pictures up.
Not personal, but beautiful: Sugar Mountain frosted window.
[Multiple updates]
Merry Christmas
And Erin Slivka has her Christmas letter up--a different sense of humor than Dirk. Her site, like Dirk's, features some nice photos (but I want to see the cats).
And Life on a Colorado Farm also has some cute and some good pictures up.
Not personal, but beautiful: Sugar Mountain frosted window.
[Multiple updates]
Merry Christmas
Thursday, December 24, 2009
Dairy in the Cold
Via NAL, here's a description of running a dairy farm in cold weather (brings back memories). I was surprised a bit--the farm milks 700 cows, and has 20 employees, for a ratio of 1 per 35 cows. That's roughly the ratio I remember from my youth (my uncle had more and did most of the work himself, until his heart attack). I would have expected a bit more improvement in productivity.
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