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.
Friday, September 02, 2016
Boydton
I've blogged often enough about John Boyd to have a tag for him. He lives near Boydton, VA, formerly a tobacco growing area. Now it's servicing another addiction, the Internet addiction as noted by Tyler Cowen at Marginal Revolution.
Thursday, September 01, 2016
Climate Change Is Real: The Northwest Passage Cruise
Lawyers, Guns, and Money has a post which covers an article on a cruise ship cruising through the Northwest Passage.
I follow Powerline, which is skeptical of climate change, along with some liberal sites which accept it pretty much without question. Though I've a knee-jerk reaction that things are probably more complicated than the public discussion makes out, it seems to me this is unambiguous proof of global warming. Real people, not scientists, are venturing real money to cruise through the Northwest Passage, the object of centuries of exploration.
IMHO the rate and extent of climate change may be debatable, but not the fact.
[Updated: Here's a discussion from Politico on how far behind we are in icebreakers--I guess Congress is assuming the ice will vanish on its own.]
I follow Powerline, which is skeptical of climate change, along with some liberal sites which accept it pretty much without question. Though I've a knee-jerk reaction that things are probably more complicated than the public discussion makes out, it seems to me this is unambiguous proof of global warming. Real people, not scientists, are venturing real money to cruise through the Northwest Passage, the object of centuries of exploration.
IMHO the rate and extent of climate change may be debatable, but not the fact.
[Updated: Here's a discussion from Politico on how far behind we are in icebreakers--I guess Congress is assuming the ice will vanish on its own.]
Wednesday, August 31, 2016
British Agriculture and US
I think one big difference between the UK and the USA is land tenure. Oversimplifying, to get people to work the land the USA mostly offered ownership, though in the South we used slavery. In the UK they always had enough people for the land and technology which were available, so they've always had tenants without ownership. Of course these days the US has lots of renters, but typically outside the South the renter has some owned land, and has expanded her operation by renting from the heirs of deceased owners. (I don't know how many errors I've written so far.)
To me this difference is shown in the Duke of Westminster, who just died. The pieces on his death noted he was one of the biggest landowners in the UK, including some 300 acres worth of London. I don't believe we would see similar stories in the US. Yes, we've some big owners, like Ted Turner, but their lifestory isn't centered around landowning.
Another big: the Tenant Farmers Association, a UK organization:
To me this difference is shown in the Duke of Westminster, who just died. The pieces on his death noted he was one of the biggest landowners in the UK, including some 300 acres worth of London. I don't believe we would see similar stories in the US. Yes, we've some big owners, like Ted Turner, but their lifestory isn't centered around landowning.
Another big: the Tenant Farmers Association, a UK organization:
The TFA is the only organisation dedicated to the agricultural tenanted sector and is the authentic voice on behalf of tenant farmers. The TFA lobbies at all levels of Government and gives professional advice to its members.
The TFA seeks to support and enhance the landlord-tenant system. It represents and advises members on all aspects of agricultural tenancy and ancillary matters. It also aims to improve the professional and technical knowledge of its members, to increase the flow of new tenancies onto the market and to help the farming industry best apply existing agricultural tenancy legislation.
The Virtues of Rural Life
I suspect my blogging has reflected my aversion to rural life, having left the rural area where I grew up as soon as I got a permanent job. Yet I'm ambivalent, as I often am, so I'll link to this piece in the Post, written by the guy who moved his family to Red Lake County, MN after describing it as the worst place in America to live, based on ratings of various criteria. A paragraph:
Nor, as far as I can tell, have we come up with a good way to quantify nostalgia. Red Lake Falls feels like the kind of town your grandparents would live in, and I mean that in the best possible way. The town's 1,400 residents keep tidy homes on tidy lawns with sprawling vegetable gardens out back. To an adult living here for the first time, it feels like the kind of place you remember visiting during summers in childhood, where memories are built on indolent afternoons spent in broad sunny lawns while the adults relaxed on a screened-in porch with cocktails in their hands.The author has children, BTW, and I don't, which might explain much.
Tuesday, August 30, 2016
Threats to USDA
Some USDA offices have been threatened and closed. This was in an e-mail to employees, but nothing on USDA's social networks I can find as of now. (My suggestion: having a twitter feed is a nod to the conventions of the present, but isn't yet incorporated in to the habits of the bureaucracy.
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.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)