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.
Tuesday, October 11, 2011
When Women Didn't Do Science and Technology
How short a time that was. A post from the winner of the Google Science Fair--all three winners were female, meeting the President.
A Generalization Too Far
I've taken to following the comments at Ta-Nehesi Coates' blog at the Atlantic. Today he wrote a true sentence:
The disease of presentism, looking up the past from the strict moral, legal, cultural, political and economic context of our time, is a constant problem.There's another disease which I often see, which I can't name, except as in the title of this post. It's generalizing too much, too far. For example: the status of women. In today's America they have one status; in the America of 1850 they have another--right? I'd say wrong. Forgetting about the past, the status of women in the Amish culture, the Hasidic Jewish culture, the Hollywood culture, the Mormon culture, the Salvadoran culture of recent immigrants, etc. etc. is very different. There's some continuities, but we always have these different groups in the bigger society. The best we can do, perhaps, is to recognize we're probably making generalizations about middle and upper middle class mainstream American society.
Tell Me What You Really Think (of 9-9-9)
Via Tyler Cowen, Bruce Bartlett assesses Herman Cain's 9-9-9 tax plan rather soberly. He concludes:
Even allowing for the poorly thought through promises routinely made on the campaign trail, Mr. Cain’s tax plan stands out as exceptionally ill conceived.
Monday, October 10, 2011
I Remember Hitchhiking
Freakonomics explores a couple reasons for the decline in hitchhiking: fear and the rise of women drivers and an associated rise in car ownership and multi-car families. I'd add a couple: the rise of limited access highways and the diversion of traffic to them--even if hitchhiking is not explicitly prohibited it's harder to stop and pick up person in the midst of 70 mph traffic; the tipping point phenomena--if it's not often done it feels riskier.
I used to hitchhike on my way home from cross-country practice, though mostly I ended up walking all the way. Modern kids are spoiled.
I used to hitchhike on my way home from cross-country practice, though mostly I ended up walking all the way. Modern kids are spoiled.
Sunday, October 09, 2011
FSA Progress on Civil Rights
This press release claims progress. This demonstration presumably counters the claim, though the news report doesn't link the two.
Saturday, October 08, 2011
What The? Used Cars Increase in Value
VA has a tax on the value of the car(s) you own (don't get me started on it) which means they have to determine the car's value each year, for which they use some standard NADA manual. The Herndon Patch just has a post forwarding info from Fairfax County--15,000 cars increased in value over last year.
??? I guess it must be times are so tight that people are bidding up the value of used cars rather than buy new? Strange times.
??? I guess it must be times are so tight that people are bidding up the value of used cars rather than buy new? Strange times.
European Agricultture versus US
Haven't linked to posts at CAP Health Check recently. One subject the Euros are dealing with is whether to move to flat rate payments (paying the same rate per acre hectare regardless of the historical crop grown). For someone steeped in US farm programs that's an astonishing idea--I can't imagine anyone in the US proposing it, much less a realistic possibility of enacting it, but it's seriously on the table across the sea.
Why? I suspect one answer is there's more variation in US agriculture than in Europe, particularly within a country:
Why? I suspect one answer is there's more variation in US agriculture than in Europe, particularly within a country:
- First of all each country is much smaller than the U.S.
- Second, there's much more climactic variation, consider dryland cotton and irrigated cotton. Irrigation isn't that important, I don't think, in the EU
- Third, there's a greater diversity of important crops. Specifically cotton and rice are much more important than in the EU. And those are the high value crops, meaning thy get the biggest support payments.
Friday, October 07, 2011
Hatch Act Violations and FSA
A Politico piece on proposals to change the Hatch Act says:
Lerner also said the standard penalty dictated by the Hatch Act — termination of employment — is too harsh in most instances and may even encourage agencies not to report violationI'm too lazy to research, but if memory serves the ASCS employees in the 1990's were found guilty of violating the Hatch Act and paid $1,000 fines, but didn't lose their jobs. One of them solicited me for money on the phone during work hours, not that I was ever asked to testify nor did I volunteer the information. Since the Dems were in power and the solicitation was on behalf of a bundling organization giving to Clinton, I doubt the agency reported the violation. I think we can thank a whistleblower.
Sen McCaskill and MIDAS?
The Alaskan Native Corporation act permits Bering Straits to be the prime contractor for MIDAS. Another ANC corporation has just been tarnished by the indictment of one of its officials in a contracting scandal. Federal Computer Week has an article on whether other corporations will be tarred with the same brush, including this comment:
"The Alaska Native Corporations should compete for these large contracts and further should not be allowed to ‘front’ for other corporations that are actually doing the work,” McCaskill said in her statement.
Thursday, October 06, 2011
I Was Wrong--Palin
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