Thursday, May 10, 2012

"Progressives" and "The Progressive Farmer"

Minds are funny.  I just Google+1ed a post at Casaubon's Book, something I rarely do.  (The writer Sharon Astyk is deep into the foodie movement: peak oil, locavore, sustainable, etc. but very articulate.) The post was about gay marriage, and noted the legal and property considerations involved in marriage--recommend it.  She would qualify as a political "progressive" in most people's books.

Anyway, the next post on my RSS feed was Chris Clayton's column at "The Progressive Farmer".  The conjunction of someone who's really progressive and the magazine, which isn't progressive at all, at least in the sense that some of the conservatives I follow would use it (i.e., as an epithet, a tad better than "socialist" but much worse than "liberal") struck me. 

"Progessive" as used in connection with farming used to mean the wide-awake, up-to-date farmer, someone who was on his way to being an "industrial" farmer, as the foodies would have it.  It's rather ironic to me to see the evolution of the term.

Soybeans: It Wasn't Franklin After All

Earlier I linked to a blog post at Boston 1775 describing how Ben Franklin, the great bureaucrat, was the first with soybeans in the colonies, specifically tofu. 

Turns out that was wrong.  The soybean types have got to Boston 1775 and he has corrected the account.  It was really Samuel Bowen of Georgia, who was first actually to grow soybeans here and describe their uses.  But Bowen didn't get to tofu, so Franklin can still be the patron of the foodies.

Aside: it surprises me to find the China trade existing back in 1758, but apparently it was well established.  Although my rapidly fading memory of the book 1493 says countries other than England were trading with the Chinese maybe by the end of the 16th century.

Not Another Cheerleader

Sorry, but my political prejudices are showing.  This sentence from a Post profile of the young Romney jumped out: "He was not a natural athlete, but found his place among the jocks by managing the hockey team and leading megaphone cheers for the football team."

Wednesday, May 09, 2012

Clay Christenson--Mormon and Incredible Person

One of my favorite books (listed way down the blog and not updated for years) is Clay Christensen's Innovator's Dilemma..  Now the New Yorker this week has a very nice profile of the guy, a professor at Harvard Business. Unfortunately only the abstract and beginning paragraphs are available online, but I recommend reading it somewhere somehow.  He sounds too good to be true, but judge for yourself.

Bowling Alone and Kids

Awhile ago Robert Putnam got lots of attention for his book "Bowling Alone", in which he argued there'd been a decrease in associations in American life over the years, with a concomitant decrease in social capital.

I wonder, whether there's not been an increase in associations centered around kids: the notorious soccer moms who spend their time chauffeuring kids from one activity to another, meaning they coordinate with other parents.  So there might be a decrease in associations like the Elks or bowling leagues which are with peers, and increase in associations with parents.  That would mean a division in society.

Bureaucrat Started as GS-5?

The article "Master of Bureaucracy" doesn't say, but it's likely Bob Gates started as either as GS-5 or 7.  Government Executive runs a long interview with him:
  • when he became Sec. of Defense, he didn't bring any assistants with him.  (That's amazing for anyone who's seen a transition at the top of a cabinet department.)
  • kept quiet in meetings
  • gave others credit
  • fired people
  • says DOD plans for war, isn't good at waging war, so had to go to task forces to accomplish things.
Recommended

Tuesday, May 08, 2012

Liberals Are Cheap

Kevin Drum admits he's an idiot and his commenters chime in noting how they drive cheap old cars.

Mankiw and I: CEO/Worker Compensation Ratios

Greg Mankiw, Harvard economics professor and adviser to Mitt Romney, posts a chart on his blog showing the ratio between the pay of a worker and the pay/compensation of the CEO's at top 350 firms.  (I assume the workers are the workers at the same firms, but whether it's mean or median or what, it's not clear--Prof Mankiw gets a "C" for copying the graph and failing to specify in his post.)

The professor seems must struck by the recent drop in CEO compensation--the ratio in 2000 was twice that in 2011.  I'm more struck though by the increase, the ratio has increased 10 times between 1965 and 2011. In the good old days just after George Romney had left his CEO job at American Motors CEO's got roughly 20 times the compensation of their employees, say $100,000 to $5,000; in the bad new days when his son is running for President CEO's in big companies make 209 times the compensation of employees. 

Cocoa Pops Is the Answer

What is the question: how did Baratunde Thurston climb his way up?

Monday, May 07, 2012

India Sets a Record

This article reports India has set a new record for production of wheat, rice, and cotton.
India will have a all-time high foodgrain production of over 252 million tonne in FY12 with a record output of wheat, rice and cotton, Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar said today.
Replying to supplementaries during Question Hour in Rajya Sabha, he said the record foodgrain production of 252.56 million tonne would be higher than the 235.88 million tonne output in FY11.