For example, women who got divorced often thrived. Even women who were widowed often did exceptionally well. It often seemed as if women who got rid of their troublesome husbands stayed healthy—most women, it seemed, can rely on their friends and other social ties. Men who got and stayed divorced, on the other hand, were at really high risk for premature mortality. It would have been better had they not married at all.
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.
Sunday, March 13, 2011
On the (Lack of ) Value of Husbands
From an Atlantic article on a study of longevity, hat tip Marginal Revolution:
Saturday, March 12, 2011
Scariest Paragraph Re: Boston and Earthquake
From a Post article on earthquakes:
"We do tend to focus on the expected events. We're going to get blindsided by unusual events. . . . But uncommon events happen," Hough said. "The analog that's worrisome is Boston. Put a 6.1 [earthquake] under Boston. You have all that un-reinforced masonry."
A Sentence To Be Rethought
Gail Collins has fun in the Times trashing Newt, but she got carried away with the last sentence in this paragraph:
Of course, Gingrich is being a better husband this time around. He’s 67! By then, most men have not just finished sowing their wild oats. The oats have been harvested, ground up, reprocessed and turned into soggy cornflakes.
How Old Am I?
Old enough to remember when some college basketball teams would choose between the NCAA and NIT tournaments.
Friday, March 11, 2011
Confirmation of My Opinions
(Don't hold your breath waiting for a post entitled: "My Opinions Are Controverted by Fact".) Today's Farm Policy includes a couple bits in line with what I've blogged:
- a discussion by former chief USDA economist Keith Collins on the budgetary impacts of crop insurance, the increased prices and the exposure to RMA.
- Sheila Bair of FDIC talkiing about the dangers of the bubble (my word) in farmland prices
Great Recession: It Was All Reagan's Fault
Long time readers of this blog may have noticed I've certain people whom I'm prejudiced against: Michael Pollan, John Hinderaker, and Ronald Reagan being 3 of them. So I was very happy yesterday to discover the true cause of the Great Recession: Ronald Reagan.
I'm reading, sporadically, a book called Reforms at Risk, partly because one of its chapters deals with Freedom to Farm. Another chapter deals with the 1986 tax reform act, the best achievement of Reagan's second term. To describe the logic which connects the tax reform act to the Great Recession:
I'm reading, sporadically, a book called Reforms at Risk, partly because one of its chapters deals with Freedom to Farm. Another chapter deals with the 1986 tax reform act, the best achievement of Reagan's second term. To describe the logic which connects the tax reform act to the Great Recession:
- in the old days, before the reform act, a taxpayer could include interest on personal loans when she itemized her expenses.
- the tax experts in the Treasury wanted to end itemizing all interest (and to include fringe benefits like employer-paid health insurance in income, but that's a story for another day)
- the experts got shot down before Reagan submitted his proposal to Congress, but the 86 act did end the itemizing of interest on personal loans.
- so one effect of the act was people reduced their personal loans, and increased their loans secured by real estate, because that interest was still deductible. This meant not only reducing the amount of down payments (fewer 20 percent down loans) but also taking out second mortgages, and taking equity out of the house by refinancing for higher amounts.
- so the effect of the 1986 tax reform act was turn up the heat under the housing market by increasing the relative advantage of housing loans. Where once the housing market was just simmering away, over 15 years it came to a rapid boil, and then popped.
Star Spangled Gene Weingarten
Thursday, March 10, 2011
Hybrid Generators
Technology Review has this piece on hybrid generators for the Marines. Instead of sizing a diesel generator to meet peak power demand, the idea is to use batteries capable of meeting the peak demand, recharging them by running a smaller generator when they're drawn down. My Army career ended by running 45KW diesels supporting telecommunications trailers. As I remember it, we ran them at roughly 30KW much of the time, though it varied. The new concept sounds good, though the equipment is significantly more complex, both the batteries and the charging and control software. That may be a problem: though I was obviously a great operator, the Army didn't expect us to do much. We could start them, shut them down and change the oil and not much more.
I Call for Immediate Action on Global Warming
I've been mildly supportive of action to reduce the amount of global warming, and more dismissive of those who deny the science. But I've felt no urgency until today. Today is different. Today is serious. Today we must act.
Today the NYTimes connects high prices for coffee to global warming. So--I can handle hotter temperatures, I can handle rising sealevels (although Old Town Alexandria is being flooded tonight, so I'm not sure how they'd feel about a .5-1 foot rise), but I cannot handle losing my coffee.
ACT NOW
Today the NYTimes connects high prices for coffee to global warming. So--I can handle hotter temperatures, I can handle rising sealevels (although Old Town Alexandria is being flooded tonight, so I'm not sure how they'd feel about a .5-1 foot rise), but I cannot handle losing my coffee.
ACT NOW
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