We liberals had a long and eventually unsuccessful fight against various anti-ballistic missile systems. Back in the 60's it was the Nike-Zeus system which eventually got cancelled. Then it was Reagan's Star Wars and finally it's the system now in place. Part of the argument was that the technology couldn't work, wouldn't work, or at least could be overwhelmed by counter-measures.
These days we seem comfortable with the idea it works, perhaps because our faith in technology is greater these days? That faith is boosted by reports such as this, which describes the test of a system of cameras and laser beams for zapping insects, specifically psyllids which attack citrus. Somehow that seems more impressive to me than attacking ballistic missiles, which as the name states have a path determined by gravity (though modern ICBM's launch maneuverable warheads so are no longer solely ballistic.)
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.
Thursday, March 02, 2017
Donal Trump Wants Me to Work
As a retiree, I'm included in the 93+ million people he considers to be unemployed. NOT.
Wednesday, March 01, 2017
Oscars and Butterfly Ballots
Vox has a good piece by Benjamin Bannister analyzing the design of the Oscar card. It, along with the infamous "butterfly ballot" of 2000, shows the importance of design. I won't say the Oscar card is a bureaucratic "form", but I won't say it isn't.
When I joined ASCS in 1968 it had a strong form design shop, with Chet Adell, Tom Sager, and Linda Nugent. I remember Chet's pride in some of the forms they'd designed, particularly the Farm Record Card (ASCS-156) which moved historical data to a farm-based form from a series of listing sheets, so the clerk, as they were known then, could refer to one document for a farm rather than several.
As someone has said, the "devil's in the details", and good forms designers sweat the details.
When I joined ASCS in 1968 it had a strong form design shop, with Chet Adell, Tom Sager, and Linda Nugent. I remember Chet's pride in some of the forms they'd designed, particularly the Farm Record Card (ASCS-156) which moved historical data to a farm-based form from a series of listing sheets, so the clerk, as they were known then, could refer to one document for a farm rather than several.
As someone has said, the "devil's in the details", and good forms designers sweat the details.
Tuesday, February 28, 2017
Why I'm a Liberal
Take two bloggers, one liberal, one conservatish, and give them the snafu at the Oscars to analyze. What happens:
- Kevin Drum, the liberal, does a failure analysis, identifying five separate failure points.
- Ann Althouse, the less-liberal, comes up with a weird conspiracy theory.
Sunday, February 26, 2017
Washing Machines and Dog-Powers
Bloomberg has a piece on the long, long history of washing machines, as in 250 years + long. (If I remember correctly, Hans Rosling credited the machines as one of the bigger improvements in our living standards.) My mother would recall that the family dog would disappear on Mondays because that was wash day and he was expected to toil on the "dog power" to run the washing machine. See this for an image and description.
Conservatives Surprise: Movie Reviews
Scott Johnson, a conservative at Powerline, is someone I rarely, perhaps never, agree with. So his reviews of Fences, Hidden Figures, and Hell or High Water were surprising.
Saturday, February 25, 2017
The Old and the New Republicans
Back in my youth the lines of division in the Republican party ran between Bob Taft and Dwight Eisenhower. Roughly speaking the former was more isolationist/nationalist/anti-communist/anti New Dealer and the latter was more international, more free trade, more open to talks with the USSR, and more willing to swallow hard and keep Social Security. In 1960 Nelson Rockefeller represented the latter (the Wall Street Republicans) and Richard Nixon the former (the Main Street Republicans). The Goldwater movement put the former on top, for a while, while Nixon in 1968 merged the two pretty well. Reagan also blurred the lines by the way he governed.
Jumping ahead to now, it's fascinating to look at the divisions Trumpery is creating. George Will and Charles Krauthammer are anti-Trump, though Krauthammer's last column acknowledged possible benefits in foreign policy from a good-cop, bad-cop approach. Some economists, like Don Beaudreaux of GMU at Cafe Hayek and Keith Hennessey, former CEA member, are somewhat horrified by Trump's trade and economic thoughts/tweets.
Jumping ahead to now, it's fascinating to look at the divisions Trumpery is creating. George Will and Charles Krauthammer are anti-Trump, though Krauthammer's last column acknowledged possible benefits in foreign policy from a good-cop, bad-cop approach. Some economists, like Don Beaudreaux of GMU at Cafe Hayek and Keith Hennessey, former CEA member, are somewhat horrified by Trump's trade and economic thoughts/tweets.
Friday, February 24, 2017
McArdle on "Authentic Food" and Church Suppers
Megan McArdle writes on "authentic food". I agree with most of what she writes, except for the bit about "drying off" cows, which shows she didn't grow up on a dairy farm. However there are times and places where "authentic food" is good eating, at least in memory. For example, church/grange suppers in my youth. The point there was each woman was bringing a dish which she was proud of, with which she wanted to impress the neighbors, hopefully even to field requests for the recipe. (I've still got my mother's card file of recipes, many gathered from her friends.) So the food was good.
Thursday, February 23, 2017
Fake Mustaches--Dangerous to Health
Margaret Soltan links to a wikipedia piece on the president of Argentina (perhaps he'll be a soulmate of ours?):
He wore a fake moustache and impersonated singer Freddie Mercury during the party. He accidentally swallowed the moustache, and Minister of Health Jorge Lemus performed first aid to save his life.
Wednesday, February 22, 2017
I'm a Born Civilian
That's what I joke to my wife, as a description of my time in the Army.
With that perspective, may I offer a small caveat to the praise being
heaped on the President's new national security adviser, Gen. McMaster?
I don't know when having a Phd became the automatic basis for being an
intellectual? I suppose it partly reflects our (liberals) general
incredulity that a military man could earn one.
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