"If Congress had rejected his request for authorization to liberate Kuwait, George H.W. Bush probably would have sent combat troops in anyway.
The most senior members of the former president’s national security team, here for a Thursday night event to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the first Gulf War, said Bush was already intent on moving ahead after August 1990 because he believed the United Nations charter gave him the authority he needed."
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, January 21, 2011
Not Your Father's GOP--Authority from the UN Charter!!
Some Republicans are turning over in their grave at the first two sentences of this Politico post:
Did Obama Benefit from "Tiger Parenting"?
Thursday, January 20, 2011
Republicans To Cut Farm Programs
According to this post, a group of Republicans wants to take the meat cleaver to programs, including farm programs. What's on their hit list?
The Mohair Program, for a savings of $1 million.
The Sugar Program, for a savings of $14 million.
Yes, that's it.
The Mohair Program, for a savings of $1 million.
The Sugar Program, for a savings of $14 million.
Yes, that's it.
How To Balance the Budget: the Republicans Modest Proposal
Via Kevin Drum, the info that Goldman Sachs changed their fiscal year begin date from Dec. 1 to Jan. 1. They just happened to do it back in 2008, when they stuffed a lot of losses and bonuses into December, which then didn't count.
This triggers my suggestion. Back in the days of old, the federal fiscal year began July 1. But Congress started having more and more difficulty getting appropriations bills passed by that date. So finally everyone agreed to move the fiscal year start date to Oct. 1, a date by which Congress surely would have no problem in passing appropriations. This all was in the late 70's or maybe early 80's.
It's a truth universally recognized that Congress no longer is capable of passing appropriations bills by Oct 1, so we have all the justification we need to move the start of the 2012 fiscal year to Jan 1, 2012. As we do that, we'll move all the expenditures we can into the transition quarter, between Oct 1 2011 and Dec. 31. That will enable us to balance the budget in FY 2012. We can then run for reelection to Congress and our Presidential candidate can run on the basis that we did the impossible: balanced the budget without raising taxes.
This triggers my suggestion. Back in the days of old, the federal fiscal year began July 1. But Congress started having more and more difficulty getting appropriations bills passed by that date. So finally everyone agreed to move the fiscal year start date to Oct. 1, a date by which Congress surely would have no problem in passing appropriations. This all was in the late 70's or maybe early 80's.
It's a truth universally recognized that Congress no longer is capable of passing appropriations bills by Oct 1, so we have all the justification we need to move the start of the 2012 fiscal year to Jan 1, 2012. As we do that, we'll move all the expenditures we can into the transition quarter, between Oct 1 2011 and Dec. 31. That will enable us to balance the budget in FY 2012. We can then run for reelection to Congress and our Presidential candidate can run on the basis that we did the impossible: balanced the budget without raising taxes.
True Sentence of the Day
From Yglesias: " But the fact of the matter is that it’s inherently difficult for a bunch of well-armed foreigners to obtain accurate information about what people think of the well-armed foreigner they’re talking to at the moment."
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Pity the Generator Operators
That was my MOS (military occupational specialty) in my Army days: operating generators. It was a good gig. First of all the generator sites were dispersed around the Saigon area. So the enlisted men were out from under the company hierarchy; there was very little control or leadership from on high--out of sight, out of mind. Second, a generator is pretty fool proof; once you do regular maintenance there's not much else to do. So there's plenty of time for pinochle games and napping. Third, electricity is vital, almost as vital as food and water. So people don't mess with you.
But sadly progress comes to all things, even the generator operators in Afghanistan according to this Grist piece.Solar panels are more reliable and they don't require an operator.
But sadly progress comes to all things, even the generator operators in Afghanistan according to this Grist piece.Solar panels are more reliable and they don't require an operator.
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Inadvertent Effects of Change: Old Sick Feds and a Haircut
Sen. Collins has gotten some press over the issue of Federal employees who are getting workers comp payments under the Federal Employees Benefit Act, even though they're old, I mean really old, I mean older thn me even (a few). I haven't seen any discussion but I'd guess this is a side effect of the change many years ago eliminating mandatory retirement (used to be 70 if I recall). The issue is whether the employee is able to go back to work. It's obvious to us that no Federal employee is going to return to the office when he's 90, so he ought to be involuntarily retired and given his pension. Of course, when I say it's obvious, it's not really obvious, because there are odd ball employees so dedicated they continue to work long after anyone else would retire.
Which brings me to my haircut. Got one today. A phone call came in from the shop owner saying he'd be back by 3:30. My barber explained that the owner's mother, living in WV, had health issues. She was 93, worked all her life in the local school cafeteria until they retired her at the age of 85, then went back on a volunteer basis. While she's not a federal employee, she illustrates my point. As does Bruno Mangum, the FSA employee who died in 2007 at the age of 90.
Having written all this, it makes sense to kick employees off the workers comp rolls when they're eligible for full retirement benefits. And remembering an article in the NYTimes a while back on abuses of the workman's comp rules (Long Island RR maybe? I forget), it makes sense to audit the enforcement of the rules because they're easily abused.
Which brings me to my haircut. Got one today. A phone call came in from the shop owner saying he'd be back by 3:30. My barber explained that the owner's mother, living in WV, had health issues. She was 93, worked all her life in the local school cafeteria until they retired her at the age of 85, then went back on a volunteer basis. While she's not a federal employee, she illustrates my point. As does Bruno Mangum, the FSA employee who died in 2007 at the age of 90.
Having written all this, it makes sense to kick employees off the workers comp rolls when they're eligible for full retirement benefits. And remembering an article in the NYTimes a while back on abuses of the workman's comp rules (Long Island RR maybe? I forget), it makes sense to audit the enforcement of the rules because they're easily abused.
Monday, January 17, 2011
Creeping (Grade) Inflation: Harvard and JFK
John Sides posts the grades in a Harvard government class, a class in 1940 with one JFKennedy earning a B-. (There's been a lot of Kennedy materials just released by the library.) What's interesting is in a class of about 55 students, there's two grades above B+.
It's also interesting the professor's specialty was nationalism in Africa and Asia, according to wikipedia
It's also interesting the professor's specialty was nationalism in Africa and Asia, according to wikipedia
Test of Civic Literacy
Report card from an interesting test of civic literacy is here (I owe a hat tip, probably to Monkey Cage). I'm proud to say I did better than most people on the test, but then most people didn't pass the test. I'm not sure how seriously one should take the results, but it's good ammunition for jeremiads.
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Mexico's Illegal Immigration Problem
RecoveringFed has a nice post pointing out Mexico's illegal immigration problem, about 190 years ago Americans crossing the Mexican border in search of a better life became a threat to Mexico's geographic integrity.
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