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, July 21, 2010
15 Minutes of Fame, Zero to a Million Hits
Andy Warhol famously said everyone had 15 minutes of fame. Somewhat along the same lines, is anyone keeping records on how fast people get their fame--I'm thinking of the skyrocketing number of hits for "Shirley Sherrod"? Now it takes about 15 minutes for people to get their 15 minutes.
Tuesday, July 20, 2010
2 Cents on Shirley Sherrod
In response to a request from a reader, here's my two cents on Shirley Sherrod (Google if you haven't heard it). (I've started a longer post which takes off from the episode, but it's not really on point.)
Regardless of how the episode turns out,there's no way Fox News should have run the video with the obvious errors in the text.
- The subtitles added to the video, either by Breitbart or Fox, are clearly lies. The video excerpt dates the episode to the 1980's (right after Chapter 12 bankruptcy was passed for farmers), so Sherrod's talk is not describing her current work or attitudes.
- There's no way in hell that Rural Development spends $1.2 billion in Georgia each year. They might possibly have that amount in outstanding loans made in Georgia, but that would represent several years worth. RD has three categories, which are mostly making loans and guaranteeing loans: Rural Business, Rural Utilities (the old Rural Electrification Agency), and Rural Housing. Here's a link to the USDA budget for 2011, RD begins on page 56.
- It's not that clear from the video clip, but Sherrod is not describing a federal job--as she says she assumed the farmer was referred to her from USDA or the Georgia Department of Agriculture. So she probably had no legal obligation to treat applicants equally. (In the mid 80's there were lots of farmers going under.)
Regardless of how the episode turns out,there's no way Fox News should have run the video with the obvious errors in the text.
How Fast Is the Internet?
I googled Shirley Sherrod this morning about 8:30 and got about 880,000 hits. Did it again a few minutes ago and got 1,330,000 hits. Such is the pace of the Internet.
[Updated: at 9:23 am, 7/21/2010 it was 1,610,000 hits. Granted I didn't put the name in quotes, so it's not all that Shirley Sherrod, but it's an impressive jump.]
[Updated at 4:29 pm 7/22/2010 shows 158,000,000 hits. Guess that reflects all the tweets and blog post comments.]
[Updated: at 9:23 am, 7/21/2010 it was 1,610,000 hits. Granted I didn't put the name in quotes, so it's not all that Shirley Sherrod, but it's an impressive jump.]
[Updated at 4:29 pm 7/22/2010 shows 158,000,000 hits. Guess that reflects all the tweets and blog post comments.]
Overpaid Federal Bureaucrats, and Contractors
The Dana Priest/William Arkin series in the Post on the post 9/11 national security complex has many points of interest. But one today is as a counter to the idea that federal employees are overpaid. At least in the national security field, contractor employees get about 25 percent more than federal. Admittedly, this sounds like a top of the head estimate and probably does not include fringe benefits, but no federal employee ever got a BMW:
Contractors can offer more money - often twice as much - to experienced federal employees than the government is allowed to pay them. And because competition among firms for people with security clearances is so great, corporations offer such perks as BMWs and $15,000 signing bonuses, as Raytheon did in June for software developers with top-level clearances.
Raising Country Kids: Sweet Wheat
Raising Country Kids: Sweet Wheat
I've linked to The Cotton Wife posts of photos of her cute kids, so fairness demands I give equal time to the wheat growers of the nation.
I've linked to The Cotton Wife posts of photos of her cute kids, so fairness demands I give equal time to the wheat growers of the nation.
Unfair Comparison: 1940's Dairy (Organic) Versus Now?
From Farm Policy, quoting a release supporting production agriculture as environmentally friendly:
The update also pointed out that, “Dr. Jude Capper of Cornell University reported last year that more milk from higher-yielding cows that are fed more grain and less grass have helped reduce the carbon footprint of the U.S. dairy industry by 43% since 1944.I'm not sure that's a particularly fair comparison. I'm reacting because I was brought up on a 1940's dairy farm. We did use penicillin for mastitis, however. If I remember our production was about 11,000 pounds per cow, which was quite a bit above average. Today I think the average cow is much above that (more like 20,000 pounds). I suspect most of that increase is breeding, not feeding. If that's true, the comparison doesn't work, because there's nothing to prevent organic dairies from having the best-bred cows.
“‘Interestingly, many of the characteristics of 1940s dairy production — including low milk yields, pasture-based management and no antibiotics, inorganic fertilizers or chemical pesticides — are similar to those of modern organic dairy systems,’ Capper noted.”
Monday, July 19, 2010
Nature or Nurture--Sex-Based Differences
I like The Cotton Wife Blog. She has good pictures of attractive redheads, often in a rural, farm setting.
But the post I linked to raises the old nurture/nature question on the differences between boys and girls. Which came first, her son's behavior or her evident enjoyment of the differences?
But the post I linked to raises the old nurture/nature question on the differences between boys and girls. Which came first, her son's behavior or her evident enjoyment of the differences?
Returning Roads to Gravel
Political Animal comments on an apparent trend of cash-strapped states returning asphalt roads back to gravel. The theme is that this is an example of failure to spend money on necessary infrastructure, which all us good liberals support.
It's possible there's a knee-jerk reaction here. Many in the administration and in environmental community generally have bemoaned the drop in population in rural areas, particularly when it reflects the growing size of farms, "industrial agriculture". The fact is, as population thins out, there's less need for roads which can support high volumes of traffic, because there simply isn't the traffic. Roads may be used most by the farm operator who needs to move her equipment from one section to another; sections which used to support multiple families but which no longer have anyone living on them.
It's possible there's a knee-jerk reaction here. Many in the administration and in environmental community generally have bemoaned the drop in population in rural areas, particularly when it reflects the growing size of farms, "industrial agriculture". The fact is, as population thins out, there's less need for roads which can support high volumes of traffic, because there simply isn't the traffic. Roads may be used most by the farm operator who needs to move her equipment from one section to another; sections which used to support multiple families but which no longer have anyone living on them.
Let's Refudiate Twitter?
Sarah Palin illustrates one of the pitfalls of Web 2.0--you tweet a new word, like "refudiate" and you get mocked.
Sunday, July 18, 2010
Best News Today
Is contained in this NYTimes article. which describes how Greg Mortenson and the US military are getting together. (Actually, the print version of the headline specifically mentions Mortenson and "Three Cups of Tea", which makes Gene Weingarten's column in the Post more timely. Gene mourns the decline of headline writers, because headlines on the Web are intended to play into search engines, not for information or humor. Be sure to see his mention of Lady Gaga.)
I read Mortenson's book back when it was just getting a little word of mouth. Briefly, chance leads him into the mountains of Pakistan/Afghanistan and into building schools for girls, schools which are supported by the village elders and therefore protected against outside terrorists The book was well-written and moving. It gradually found an audience, getting onto the Times best seller list, finally selling 4 million copies, including to the wives of Gen. Petraeus and Adm. Mullen, which has led to some rapprochement between Mortenson and the military, a rapprochement described in the article.
So far his site says 70+ schools, the Times article 130+ schools have been built. Mortenson thinks educating females is the ultimate solution to the problem of terrorism in that part of the world. Makes sense to me.
I read Mortenson's book back when it was just getting a little word of mouth. Briefly, chance leads him into the mountains of Pakistan/Afghanistan and into building schools for girls, schools which are supported by the village elders and therefore protected against outside terrorists The book was well-written and moving. It gradually found an audience, getting onto the Times best seller list, finally selling 4 million copies, including to the wives of Gen. Petraeus and Adm. Mullen, which has led to some rapprochement between Mortenson and the military, a rapprochement described in the article.
So far his site says 70+ schools, the Times article 130+ schools have been built. Mortenson thinks educating females is the ultimate solution to the problem of terrorism in that part of the world. Makes sense to me.
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