Though as a Democrat I don't wish success to Republicans, it's true that two parties are better than one. That's true even in the District of Columbia, as shown in this Post column. Briefly, a Republican candidate identified a case of fraud committed by his opponent. Though he didn't win the election, his efforts eventually sent a city councilman to prison for 3 years. As the columnist observes, Democrats in DC often tolerate corruption. I think that's endemic in situations where the unscrupulous politician can unite a majority against an outside threat: think of Mayor Curley in Boston in midcentury rallying the Irish against the WASPs or numerous Southern politicians in the last century rallying the whites against the blacks or Joe McCarthy pitting true Americans against the subversive unAmericans.
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, January 08, 2012
Saturday, January 07, 2012
Obama Welshes on Promise?
I realize "welshes" might get me in trouble with the politically correct types, but there's a serious question raised here--whether Obama really carried out his promse.
Friday, January 06, 2012
Life Expectancy
I was surprised to learn that Puerto Ricans and Virgin Islanders have longer life expectancies than the US.
Thursday, January 05, 2012
Indian Education
Ajay Shah has a discussion on the quality of Indian education. Makes an interesting contrast to the usual discussions in the US
Why Economists Are Free Marketers
Reading Daniel Kahneman's new book,Thinking, Fast and Slow, still in the early chapters. He discusses "priming", the idea that by association of ideas exposure to one thing will increase the relevance of others. For example, if you're given "W--H" and "S--P" to complete after being exposed to words like "dirt" you'll likely say "wash" "soap", while if you were exposed to "hunger" it would be "soup". This is imperceptible to the person, part of what he calls System 1, though well-established by experiments.
This would explain the saying: "to the boy with a hammer, everything looks like a nail". The boy is primed by the hammer to see things as items to be hit.
It also explains why economists and humanists think so differently: their priming is different. Economists talk money much of the time; humanists say, with Mr. Dodgson: "The time has come, the Walrus said,To talk of many things:Of shoes and ships and sealing-wax Of cabbages and kings And why the sea is boiling hot And whether pigs have wings."
This would explain the saying: "to the boy with a hammer, everything looks like a nail". The boy is primed by the hammer to see things as items to be hit.
It also explains why economists and humanists think so differently: their priming is different. Economists talk money much of the time; humanists say, with Mr. Dodgson: "The time has come, the Walrus said,To talk of many things:Of shoes and ships and sealing-wax Of cabbages and kings And why the sea is boiling hot And whether pigs have wings."
Wednesday, January 04, 2012
It's the Simple Things That Count: Like Concrete
Charles Kenny writes:
Starting in 2000, a program in Mexico's Coahuila state called "Piso Firme" (Firm Floor) offered up to $150 per home in mixed concrete, delivered directly to families who used it to cover their dirt floors. Scholar Paul Gertler evaluated the impact: Kids in houses that moved from all-dirt to all-concrete floors saw parasitic infestation rates drop 78 percent; the number of children who had diarrhea in any given month dropped by half; anemia fell more than four-fifths; and scores on cognitive tests went up by more than a third. (Perhaps unsurprisingly, mothers in newly cemented houses reported less depression and greater life satisfaction.)Concrete also works for highways, which improves economies in the third world.
Farmers Market as Intermediary
Jane Black writes in Wednesday's Post about a farmers market which serves as an intermediary between local farmers and their customers. Organized as a co-op, it sells the farmer's produce for a 10 percent cut of the proceeds, thereby saving the farmers from having to sell and enabling them to continue producing. It sounds good. It sounds like the Reston farmers market at the corner of Rte 7 and Baron Cameron back in the 70's, 80's, and 90's. That was run by a hippie who settled down and made his living by serving as a middleman between farmers and customers. He got into trouble with the zoning people by going too far a field for some of his products, but it worked for a long while.
Selling cooperatives go way back. They work, for a while, I think, but eventually something changes. The person who drove the enterprise gets old or tired, or both; free market forces drive expansion and conversion into something like Whole Foods, or the clientele ages, changes, or moves.
Selling cooperatives go way back. They work, for a while, I think, but eventually something changes. The person who drove the enterprise gets old or tired, or both; free market forces drive expansion and conversion into something like Whole Foods, or the clientele ages, changes, or moves.
French Brides Wear Bespoke Dresses
That's one fact in Dirk Beauregarde's piece on French weddings. Been a while since I married my wife, but my impression is that many if not most US brides wear off-the-rack.
Tuesday, January 03, 2012
That Christmas Tree Tax
Steve Sexton at Freakonomics has a post defending the "Christmas tree tax" of last year. Needless to say I agree with him.
Monday, January 02, 2012
The Omni-presence of Internal Politics
Read a biography of Gen. O. P. Smith, the commander of the First Marine Division in Korea. Also read the biography of Steve Jobs. In both cases, as pointed out in the case of Jobs by this Govloop post,
organizational politics played a big role in the subject's life. In any bureaucracy, military, civilian, private enterprise, what we call "politics" is always present.
organizational politics played a big role in the subject's life. In any bureaucracy, military, civilian, private enterprise, what we call "politics" is always present.
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