Specifically:
"Although mostly I suspect it was because my mother raised me badly, so I
didn't have the good manners to show proper gratitude in a normal way.
Definitely my mother's fault, one way or another."
That's from an InsideHigherEd post, interviewing Prof. Pietsch, the guy whose acknowledgments in his book have gone viral, thanks to John Fea's spotting them at the AHA convention.
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.
Monday, January 11, 2016
Sunday, January 10, 2016
Republican Split--What's New?
NYTimes has a piece today on a split in the Republican party, between the Trump-Cruz faction and the "establishment". I think it's overdone. I remember the Republicans were split:
- between the Taftites and Eisenhower Republicans in the 1950's.
- between Rockefeller and Nixon in 1960 (the Treaty of Fifth Avenue)
- Goldwater and establishment in 1964
- Ford and Reagan in 1976
- Reagan and John Anderson in 1980
- Bush and Buchanan in 1992
- etc. etc.
Economy a Reason for Primary Anger?
I noticed a title on a post somewhere saying that farmers' income would be down by 28 percent this year. Commodity prices are down across the board with no relief in sight. I wonder if the changes in the outlook for agriculture fuel a little bit of the anger which seems to be showing up in the primaries, particularly on the Republican side?
Saturday, January 09, 2016
Shame on Tom Davis: the Cost of Being Wrong
I sometimes contact my representative and senators, but not often. Never did before I retired. I think the first time I did was to write Tom Davis, the Republican who was then my representative, supporting the idea of authorizing needle exchanges, perhaps in DC, perhaps nationally. This was in the late 90's, when AIDS was still a terror. Congress had banned funding for needle exchanges and for research on needle exchanges.
Davis was a moderate Republican, who'd work across party lines, though shortly after I think he became chair of the Republican Congressional Campaign committee. He later retired at a relatively early age. He's well respected for his knowledge of politics and has often been interviewed on TV on various issues. All in all, he was the sort of Republican who might have supported needle exchange.
But he didn't. He wrote back with an explanation of why he couldn't support the proposal.
It's now close to 20 years after my letter. Congress, controlled by Republicans, has just removed the ban on funding needle exchange programs (see this fivethirtyeight post). There's no telling how many lives were cost by the decision not to research exchanges.
Davis was a moderate Republican, who'd work across party lines, though shortly after I think he became chair of the Republican Congressional Campaign committee. He later retired at a relatively early age. He's well respected for his knowledge of politics and has often been interviewed on TV on various issues. All in all, he was the sort of Republican who might have supported needle exchange.
But he didn't. He wrote back with an explanation of why he couldn't support the proposal.
It's now close to 20 years after my letter. Congress, controlled by Republicans, has just removed the ban on funding needle exchange programs (see this fivethirtyeight post). There's no telling how many lives were cost by the decision not to research exchanges.
Friday, January 08, 2016
Chinese Agriculture Is a Mess
That's the message I get from this interesting blog post. It seems they have excess corn inventories and screwed up prices and programs. It's a compendium of reports from Chinese officials and media. This is just a taste:
The Caixin journalist observes that reforms of agricultural subsidies and procurement policies have been brewing over the last two years. Chinese officials have laid out a principle of detaching subsidy support from prices, but they have no clear policy to replace market-distorting price supports. The Caixin journalist observes that the government has put its hope in target price subsidy policies they have been testing for cotton in Xinjiang and soybeans in northeastern provinces since 2014, but many industry experts are pessimistic that these policies can be expanded to other commodities due to the extremely high administrative costs and other problems.It sounds as if they're where we were in the 1980's. [I've added the blog to my RSS feed.]
Wednesday, January 06, 2016
Farming as a Living and a Way of Life
Via the Rural Blog, this essay in Salon. The writer grows 10 acres of organic vegetables in California, made $2500. (I'm not clear, that may be $2500 in addition to roughly $100 a week.)
I remember my mother grousing about the land-poor farmers, who'd be better off by selling and investing the money at 6 percent. (I don't think that's particularly right--land values in upstate NY in the 1950's weren't that high. And maybe it was my high school ag teacher who made the point in accounting for farming you needed to charge the cost of capital (land) and labor cost, before you got to management income.)
As she says, almost all small farmers these days have "city" jobs as my mother would have called them. The full-time small farmer is mostly gone, or just surviving because she has the land and the house paid for, so low cash flow isn't that bad.
The rewards of a small farm are a degree of control and independence (though cows and hens are a ball and chain, and being a slave to the market counters the illusion of control). It's also great for raising kids--they get loads of time with their parents, and all sorts of learning experience, plus blisters.
Without lots of small farmers you don't have much rural life or community, because there's no one to support the churches, the farmers organizations, the community suppers, etc
I remember my mother grousing about the land-poor farmers, who'd be better off by selling and investing the money at 6 percent. (I don't think that's particularly right--land values in upstate NY in the 1950's weren't that high. And maybe it was my high school ag teacher who made the point in accounting for farming you needed to charge the cost of capital (land) and labor cost, before you got to management income.)
As she says, almost all small farmers these days have "city" jobs as my mother would have called them. The full-time small farmer is mostly gone, or just surviving because she has the land and the house paid for, so low cash flow isn't that bad.
The rewards of a small farm are a degree of control and independence (though cows and hens are a ball and chain, and being a slave to the market counters the illusion of control). It's also great for raising kids--they get loads of time with their parents, and all sorts of learning experience, plus blisters.
Without lots of small farmers you don't have much rural life or community, because there's no one to support the churches, the farmers organizations, the community suppers, etc
Tuesday, January 05, 2016
Defining "Engaged": Farming Versus Selling Guns
For several days we've known that Obama was going to announce actions on gun regulation which he could take on his authority, without relying on Congress to pass new laws. I've been curious to see what they would be. Remember that his actions on immigration are currently tied up in court because, it is claimed, he needed to follow the rule-making process in the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) and didn't So my question was: would he try the same sort of thing on guns, or could he find some other ways to affect the sale and possession of guns.
It seems that he mostly has, and partially by definition of "engaged", which I find to be a parallel with the "actively engaged in farming" issue in payment limitation regulations. (Search for "actively engaged" to see prior posts on this.)
From this Post piece (currently with 1430+ comments):
The open question at the moment is a comparison of how Obama is promulgating his interpretation of "engaged" (i.e., proposed rule under APA or simply instructions to the bureaucrats) versus FSA's use of the regulatory procedure. More to follow.
It seems that he mostly has, and partially by definition of "engaged", which I find to be a parallel with the "actively engaged in farming" issue in payment limitation regulations. (Search for "actively engaged" to see prior posts on this.)
From this Post piece (currently with 1430+ comments):
That distinction centers on the phrase "engaged in the business." Those who are engaged in the business of selling firearms, such as firearm dealers, need to conduct background checks. Those who aren't, such as individuals selling guns, don't.The Post piece includes an interview with a law professor, whose discussion could equally apply to the "actively engaged" issue. To recall: as Sen. Grassley can testify, some in Congress want the USDA to interpret "actively engaged" very strictly, others want a very loose interpretation. Typically because the farm state legislators are more continuously involved, USDA tends to follow the loose interpretation. This favors the farm interest: everyone actively engaged can receive payments up to the limit. For gun control, the politics reverse themselves: everyone actively engaged in gun dealing faces the regulations on sales.
The open question at the moment is a comparison of how Obama is promulgating his interpretation of "engaged" (i.e., proposed rule under APA or simply instructions to the bureaucrats) versus FSA's use of the regulatory procedure. More to follow.
The Past Was Different
Via Brad DeLong, from Eleanor Roosevelt, a list of some of things not available in Britain in January 1946 (Roosevelt was about to travel to the UK):
"Then came these little items among the things the traveler must be sure to take to England.It took a long time for the Brits to get back on their feet and end rationing. In comparison the U.S. was in good shape.
- 'Women's hose—none available.'
- 'Low-heeled walking shoes—repairing impossible.'
- 'Clothes hangers.'
- 'Soap (hand, laundry, shampoo)—none available.'
- 'Razor blades—none available.'
- 'Shaving material of all kinds.'
- 'All cosmetics, creams, perfumes, colognes, nail polish, etc.'
- 'Bath towels, face towels, wash cloths, any necessary medicines, vitamin tablets, sugar, cigarettes, matches, chocolate candy, fruit juices, flashlight, personal stationery.'
Sunday, January 03, 2016
The Importance of Grinding, Even Today
Got an interesting book for Christmas: Cuisine & Empire, Cooking in World History. It's a survey of different cuisines over several thousand years. I've read part of the part. One of the early surprises was the discussion of grinding grain. What's really involved is a shearing action. With hand tools, like the metate, it takes a long long time for the woman to grind the grain for a family
The Times has an article on the ways in which solar electricity is coming to areas of India which don't have power lines. It includes this quote:
"“We still have to do manual grinding of grains and spices,” Mr. Kalayya said. “It takes up a lot of time. The next loan can be for a machine that will do this.”
The Times has an article on the ways in which solar electricity is coming to areas of India which don't have power lines. It includes this quote:
"“We still have to do manual grinding of grains and spices,” Mr. Kalayya said. “It takes up a lot of time. The next loan can be for a machine that will do this.”
Saturday, January 02, 2016
Love Letter to Public Services
It would be nice to know how public services operate in Turkey, but here's a love letter to public services in the US.
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