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.
Tuesday, August 30, 2016
Changes in History: Political and Gaming
John Fea at the Way of Improvement blogs about an op-ed claiming that political historians are a dwindling breed. Supposedly the rise of social and cultural history and the study of minorities and women has risen, while politics has declined. I've no opinion about that, but I was gob-smacked today to learn a relative, just beginning university at a good school, is taking the "history of gaming" in his first term.
Monday, August 29, 2016
So Long, Russians
I see by my blog statistics I'm no longer getting Russian visitors to the blogs. That's good, not that I have anything against Russian visitors, just hackers.
Amish Healthcare
Megan McArdle wrote a while back on healthcare problems and solutions. This past article
describes how the Amish handle their health care. While they accept modern medicine, they're exempt from Obamacare and the community self-insures, apparently effectively.
describes how the Amish handle their health care. While they accept modern medicine, they're exempt from Obamacare and the community self-insures, apparently effectively.
Sunday, August 28, 2016
Farewell to the Barbershop?
An article here at Jstor on the changing culture for men's hair:
The last two paragraphs:
I don't know what's happened to barbershops in small towns in rural areas--probably closed if the area has lost population.
The last two paragraphs:
They’re not signs of a disintegrating bygone culture of manhood. Rather, they signify a transformation of white, well-to-do masculinity. In the past, the barbershop was a place for these men. Today, while the old model may thrive in black or up-and-coming neighborhoods, white professional men are seeking a pampered experience elsewhere.For a while in my younger years I cut my own hair, but then I migrated back to a barbershop, finding a shop which was reminiscent of my boyhood shop in Greene, NY: patrons and barbers who knew each other and would talk about things like hunting and cars. My Herndon shop was bigger, not a two-man operation, and it had trophy heads and military memorabilia on the walls. Still it seemed the patrons and barbers mostly knew each other, or at least made small talk (not my forte). Over the years it's downsized and become less of a conversation center.
And they’re creating intimate relationships in these new men’s salons. But instead of immersing themselves in single-sex communities of men, they’re often building one-on-one confidential relationships with women hair stylists. Stylists often explained this intimacy as part of their jobs. For white men with financial means, though, the men’s salon becomes an important place where they can purchase the sense of connection they may otherwise be missing in their lives.
I don't know what's happened to barbershops in small towns in rural areas--probably closed if the area has lost population.
Saturday, August 27, 2016
Vilsack Undermining Rural Values
This has gotten a lot of attention from the right, including giving Rush Limbaugh a lot of laughs (and showing he doesn't understand rural life very well).
Our neighborhood store was run by two middle-aged women, who lived behind the store (until it burned). What was the nature of their relationship? Who knew, certainly not I. Nor did we care. I remember being astonished when a co-worker at my summer job (who'd had surgery for ulcers which didn't improve his disposition any) commented on them with a sneer.
Our neighborhood store was run by two middle-aged women, who lived behind the store (until it burned). What was the nature of their relationship? Who knew, certainly not I. Nor did we care. I remember being astonished when a co-worker at my summer job (who'd had surgery for ulcers which didn't improve his disposition any) commented on them with a sneer.
Friday, August 26, 2016
Do You Buy From Amazon?
I do, so I found this bit amusing:
"“People will buy it,” Treibel said. “Amazon customers generally are affluent and irrational and they just want it quick.”
It's from an Atlantic piece on how someone is exploiting the Trump and Sanders campaigns.
"“People will buy it,” Treibel said. “Amazon customers generally are affluent and irrational and they just want it quick.”
It's from an Atlantic piece on how someone is exploiting the Trump and Sanders campaigns.
Thursday, August 25, 2016
An Early Lost and Found Service
Who knew that town criers ran a lost and found service?
John Fea at the Way of Improvement links to another blog on a preRevolution town crier:
They would make public announcements, but also served as a sort of lost and found,
John Fea at the Way of Improvement links to another blog on a preRevolution town crier:
They would make public announcements, but also served as a sort of lost and found,
Wednesday, August 24, 2016
Dairy Innovation in Brazil
An interesting piece in the World Bank blog:
Later in the article there's a reference to technology leading to a tripling of milk production in the state in 10 years. IMO improved breeding and increased numbers would be the biggest contributors to such an increase, with better technology enabling the bigger herds. But who knows--it's interesting; Brazil may become as a big a competitor of the US in dairy as it is in soybeans.
Within 20 minutes, all 40 cows were milked with new equipment the family acquired two months before with support from the SC Rural Program. Prior to this, they’d had to endure the laborious and time-consuming process of milking the cows by hand. “We decided to adopt this automated system not only to improve productivity and quality of the milk, but because Zenaide and I were having back problems,” said Osni.I have to say I'm not real comfortable with the writer and the "12-hour internship". Consider the paragraph above. Milking cows by hand is time-consuming; even using the milking machines we had on the farm it would take around an hour and a half. I don't think cows let down their milk much faster these days. 40 cows seems too big an operation for two or three people to manage. And going from hand milking to an elaborate robotic operation (though the nature of the equipment is never specified) seems a rash decision--too big a capital investment, too big of a leap.
Later in the article there's a reference to technology leading to a tripling of milk production in the state in 10 years. IMO improved breeding and increased numbers would be the biggest contributors to such an increase, with better technology enabling the bigger herds. But who knows--it's interesting; Brazil may become as a big a competitor of the US in dairy as it is in soybeans.
Tuesday, August 23, 2016
Administrative Procedure and Bathrooms
Jonathan Adler at Volokh posts on the federal judge's order blocking the administration's guidance to schools on bathrooms, finding that they didn't comply with the Administrative Procedure Act beloved of all bureaucrats. Adler doesn't note that similar problems arose with the administration's effort to change the rules on undocumented immigrants. The bottom line is the executive branch didn't go through a rule-making procedure, allowing the public to comment, before issuing the document. To be cynical, the executive thought if the document wasn't labeled a "regulation", rule-making wasn't required.
So the Obama administration has suffered two defeats this year on issues dear to liberal hearts. There's some small consolation in this idea: if the Trump administration (:-( should try similar tactics in order to undo or change liberal policies, liberals would have a stronger case to force the Trumpites into the long rule-making process.
Just as a matter of history, I suspect these two episodes are just another step in the long history of changing administrative procedure into formal regulations. The lawyers have to make work for themselves.
So the Obama administration has suffered two defeats this year on issues dear to liberal hearts. There's some small consolation in this idea: if the Trump administration (:-( should try similar tactics in order to undo or change liberal policies, liberals would have a stronger case to force the Trumpites into the long rule-making process.
Just as a matter of history, I suspect these two episodes are just another step in the long history of changing administrative procedure into formal regulations. The lawyers have to make work for themselves.
Monday, August 22, 2016
Best Paragraph I Misread Today
From Walt Jeffries at Sugar Mountain, explaining why a pig was in hospice care:
"Also, pigs are rather mean to each other. They will target and kill the weak amongst them. This is a herd behavior because the weak may attract predators and scavengers. By killing or leaving behind the weak the herd survives. So a pig’s strategy is to beat up the weak individuals. Pigs do not do altruism. Pigs are not kind. Pigs are not loyal. But Hollywood and animal nut groups have made them out to be much like us. They are not. Or rather they are like the worst of us, the Trumps and the Clintons.†"I swear when I first read it this morning, I missed the last three word. I guess it's called Freudian omission. :-) (The footnote invites the reader to insert her own preferred politician--I missed that as well.)
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