Mea culpa. When I skimmed the first mention of this, I thought: there's one of those crazy Republican congressmen again.
Wrong. It's one of those crazy Democratic congressmen, earnestly telling Janet Yellen that God's plan is for interest rates to rise in the spring.
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, November 04, 2015
Erroneous Payments: Two Views
"If I were to tell you that the Social Security disability program was
99.88 percent accurate in issuing benefit amounts to recipients, you
might think they were doing an outstanding job. But if I told you the
program overpaid by $11 billion – while neglecting to mention how they
clawed most of it back – you might dust off your pitchfork and join your
local mob’s march to the nearest SSA satellite office."
From the Post
(The news accounts didn't explain that the overpayments were over a number of years and didn't cite the total payments made.)
From the Post
(The news accounts didn't explain that the overpayments were over a number of years and didn't cite the total payments made.)
Tuesday, November 03, 2015
Paperwork Reduction Act Takes Deserved Hit
From Github on the revision of OMB Circular A130:
Pretty much everyone who's responsible for designing digital information collections in Government knows the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) is one of the greatest barriers for making government simple, because of the obstacles (real or imaginary) it throws up between government researchers and the public. The idea that any structured information collection from 10 or more people, even if it is voluntary, even if the very purpose of the data collection is to reduce the burden of paperwork on the American public (whether digital or physical) has to go through a laborious, expensive, time-consuming, and rarely useful centralized process doesn't make any sense. The current implementation of the PRA defeats the very purpose of the law, and certainly defeats the objectives of the Government Paperwork Elimination Act (GPEA).I wish someone like my representatives in Congress would revise the Act.
Monday, November 02, 2015
Bush Replies, Who Was the Ohio Governor?
A blast from the past--there was an Ohio governor long ago who won some fame by his replies to constituent mail, often curt and funny, especially when the incoming letter was irate. Somewhat like Chris Christie's responses in some of his meetings with constituents.
Today Jeb Bush put out a book of email, one of the early messages quoted in the Politico piece reminded me of that governor, the rest not so much.
Today Jeb Bush put out a book of email, one of the early messages quoted in the Politico piece reminded me of that governor, the rest not so much.
Saturday, October 31, 2015
Reston From Nothing to Something
This post uses the example of Reston to show how USGeological Survey (home office in Reston) updates its maps, including the process of officially naming geographic features.
Friday, October 30, 2015
Guinness Record Set? Reversals in Congress
I doubt the Guinness people keep track of how quickly politicians reverse course. If they did they'd have to distinguish between individual politicians, who can reverse on a dime, if a dime lasts 12 hours or one news cycle, and governing bodies, like Congress, who naturally take a big longer.
I suspect Congress just set a new record: on Monday the big budget deal included a cut on crop insurance administrative costs; by the time the deal had passed early this morning (in the Senate), the cut was dead as a doornail.
Shows the clout of the insurance agents, and the usual hypocrisy of those who rail against government subsidies.
I suspect Congress just set a new record: on Monday the big budget deal included a cut on crop insurance administrative costs; by the time the deal had passed early this morning (in the Senate), the cut was dead as a doornail.
Shows the clout of the insurance agents, and the usual hypocrisy of those who rail against government subsidies.
Thursday, October 29, 2015
Second Hand Clothing
ThinkProgress has a piece on second-hand clothing in Kenya.
Two points:
Two points:
- the import of such clothing and the fact it's not taxed undermines the Kenyan clothing/textile industry (that's in the piece)
- the use and reuse of resources contributes to world efficiency, and thus is environmentally good (I'm assuming the costs of transportation from US to Kenya are more than offset by the reuse) (this is my point)
Wednesday, October 28, 2015
Humans Are Doomed: Robots Teach Each Other
That's my hysterical take-away from this Technology Review piece on how one robot at Cornell taught a different robot at Brown to do a task it had learned.
I've mentioned a point on self-driving cars before: once you get a car to handle a new situation, it's done, unlike humans who even if they don't forget what they've learned, only imperfectly learned the lessons of their elders. So learning for robots is one baby step, then another baby step whereas learning for humans is one step forward, one step forward, one step backward, and then the grave.
I've mentioned a point on self-driving cars before: once you get a car to handle a new situation, it's done, unlike humans who even if they don't forget what they've learned, only imperfectly learned the lessons of their elders. So learning for robots is one baby step, then another baby step whereas learning for humans is one step forward, one step forward, one step backward, and then the grave.
The Siamese Twins
Erik Loomis at Lawyers, Guns and Money has an interesting post on the original Siamese twins, who owned slaves and sired 21 children.
Tuesday, October 27, 2015
Farmers Take Two Hits
Two hits on farmers in the media:
- the World Health Organization declares processed red meat to increase the risk of cancer (not IMHO a really serious risk, but the media will play it up).
- the big budget deal between Boehner, McConnell, and Obama includes a hit on crop insurance companies, requiring renegotiation of the reinsurance agreement between RMA and the crop insurance companies.
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