I think government websites should post their metrics online. Usa.gov takes the first step towards that--a journey of a 1000 miles begins with one step.
I suppose I'm being a little hypocritical, since I don't give my own stats.
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.
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
Apparent Inconsistency: Rebecca Felton
Who was Rebecca Felton? The first woman to serve in the US Senate. Also "a prominent society woman; an advocate of prison reform, women's
suffrage and educational modernization; and one of the few prominent
women who spoke in favor of lynching." She was from Georgia.
Mentioned in "American Tapestry, The Story of the Black, White, and Multiracial Ancestors of Michelle Obama" by Rachel Swarns, which I'm finding interesting.
Mentioned in "American Tapestry, The Story of the Black, White, and Multiracial Ancestors of Michelle Obama" by Rachel Swarns, which I'm finding interesting.
The Paradox of "Food Insecurity"
ERS has its annual report on food insecurity.
There's a paradox here: the number of people receiving food stamps is at an all-time high. The number of "food insecure" people is high. The number of obese people is high, with the poor having the highest proportion of obesity. This seems to me to amount to a paradox.
What's going on? To analyze it, there's four characteristics of people:
It seems we don't have good data to map the distribution of people into those 16 combinations. We can assume we know how the world works:
In one conception, the people getting food stamps are the poorest of us; everyone who is really poor gets food stamps and only the poor get food stamps. In that world, everyone who is poor and obese gets food stamps. Implications:
What's my point: the ERS work lacks essential information. Of course, in their defense I can imagine their surveyors would be reluctant to carry a scale and tape measure with them on their interviews so they could check the BMI of the respondents. One of the prices we pay for privacy is the lack of information to make good policy.
There's a paradox here: the number of people receiving food stamps is at an all-time high. The number of "food insecure" people is high. The number of obese people is high, with the poor having the highest proportion of obesity. This seems to me to amount to a paradox.
What's going on? To analyze it, there's four characteristics of people:
- poverty
- "food insecure"
- obese
- receive food stamp
It seems we don't have good data to map the distribution of people into those 16 combinations. We can assume we know how the world works:
In one conception, the people getting food stamps are the poorest of us; everyone who is really poor gets food stamps and only the poor get food stamps. In that world, everyone who is poor and obese gets food stamps. Implications:
- food stamps are well distributed
- the food insecure get food stamps but don't manage them well.
- the food insecure are also obese, perhaps because they binge eat.
- food stamps are poorly distributed
- food stamps fill their role of preventing hunger and the only social problem is getting all the poor to participate in the food stamp program.
- NOTE: the missing issue is where are the obese in this conception.
What's my point: the ERS work lacks essential information. Of course, in their defense I can imagine their surveyors would be reluctant to carry a scale and tape measure with them on their interviews so they could check the BMI of the respondents. One of the prices we pay for privacy is the lack of information to make good policy.
Monday, September 10, 2012
The Country It Is Changing
Two factoids, with no credit to sources:
New York City and Washington DC are among the metropolitan areas which are now majority minority.
Over half the students in the Fairfax county school system use a foreign language.
New York City and Washington DC are among the metropolitan areas which are now majority minority.
Over half the students in the Fairfax county school system use a foreign language.
Sunday, September 09, 2012
Standing Staff Meetings
Too soon old, too late smart. Somewhere this week I read of some guy who does meetings standing up, and I realize that's the way I should have done my meetings.
The idea is, people get tired of meetings so there's an incentive to be brief and to the point.
The idea is, people get tired of meetings so there's an incentive to be brief and to the point.
Saturday, September 08, 2012
The Dispersion of Takent and Character
Barking Up the Wrong Tree has a post on a study showing how widely dispersed are talent and character.
What they found is that in low complexity jobs, workers’ outputs do not vary much, and the best worker is usually not much better than the average worker. As the jobs become more complex however, there’s more and more variation, and the difference between the best worker and the average grows. For example, in low-complexity jobs the top 10% of workers produce 25% more than the average, and 75% more than the bottom 10%. For high-complexity jobs, such as professional and sales jobs, the difference is much larger. The top 10% of workers produce 80% more than the average, and 700% more than the bottom 10% (8).That's no surprise to any manager. Unfortunately it makes performance appraisals, which are difficult in the best of circumstances, even more difficult.
Friday, September 07, 2012
Selection of Hens by Combs
National Geographic (hat tip owed somewhere) has an article which says:
Farmers and other breeders of poultry have long known that the comb, that reddish display of spiky skin on top of chicken heads, can be a reliable indicator of health and vigor. Now scientists have demonstrated that hens with the largest combs produce the most eggs — and roosters have it all figured out.
“Hens with the largest combs are like to get a bigger dose of sperm from roosters,” according to a paper presented this week in the science journal PLoS Genetics by scientists at Linköping University in Sweden.We raised our hens from day-old chicks in brooder houses, then they went outside on the range until they started laying. In the fall we'd cull the old hens and bring in the best of the pullets from the range. Mom would select the pullets, and mostly used comb size for the selection. We'd start with 900 chicks and end up with maybe 750 layers, with the remainder sent off to NYC as fryers.
A Form for Autonomous Vehicles
Be still my heart--a form, a sure-enough honest to goodness form.
I'm eagerly awaiting the day when I can turn my driving over to an autonomous vehicle like Google's. As I may have said previously here or in some comment somewhere, I'm aware my capabilities are diminishing: my attention span is shorter, I'm more easily distracted and upset, and my reactions are slower. All of which means the day is coming when I should no longer drive, which means a considerable blow to our lifestyle.
But it seems the great state of Nevada, blessed be its name, has actually come up with a form, an application for permission to test autonomous vehicles. As any good bureaucrat knows, once you have a form, the rest is downhill all the way.
[Update: hat tip, Eugene Volokh at Volokh Conspiracy.}
I'm eagerly awaiting the day when I can turn my driving over to an autonomous vehicle like Google's. As I may have said previously here or in some comment somewhere, I'm aware my capabilities are diminishing: my attention span is shorter, I'm more easily distracted and upset, and my reactions are slower. All of which means the day is coming when I should no longer drive, which means a considerable blow to our lifestyle.
But it seems the great state of Nevada, blessed be its name, has actually come up with a form, an application for permission to test autonomous vehicles. As any good bureaucrat knows, once you have a form, the rest is downhill all the way.
[Update: hat tip, Eugene Volokh at Volokh Conspiracy.}
Thursday, September 06, 2012
How Soon We Forget
Watching the Newshour tonight Judy Woodruff suggests President Clinton faced less opposition than President Obama. I disagree. Clinton squeaked some stuff (taxes, gun control) through his first session with no Republican support; then he faced Newt and the Republicans. The vehemence of the opposition to Clinton, with the suggestions of murder and drug dealing, Filegate, etc. matches the birther nonsense.
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