Despite my druthers, I've been a tiny bit open to the possibility our president will do okay in his four years. This is based mostly on the idea that people learn, and surely the presidency is an intensive educational institution. Trump has a notoriously thin skin, which perhaps makes it more likely that he will learn, that the pain of public opprobrium and criticism will cause him to change his ways, maybe even adopt different ideas and goals. As they would have said in the days before political correctness took over: to teach a mule sometimes you have to go upside his head with a 2 x 4.
We don't know the answer to my question today; we just need the patience to wait and see, meanwhile administering 2x4's as appropriate.
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.
Sunday, March 12, 2017
Saturday, March 11, 2017
Revisionists of the One-Third Thesis
I learned relatively early, perhaps even in high school some 60 years ago, that one-third of the white American colonists supported independence, one-third supported Britain, and one-third were confused moderates.
From this review of a book on the American Revolution comes a counter, arguing that the support for the Revolution was only about one-sixth and:
From this review of a book on the American Revolution comes a counter, arguing that the support for the Revolution was only about one-sixth and:
In their light, the Revolution looks less like a popular uprising than a coup d’etat. The always-mystifying questions of how a band of ragtag rebels dared challenge the mightiest martial power on the planet and how they succeeded in doing so loom even more mystifyingly in the light of such modest popular support. And the role of coercion and violence in the maintenance of the war effort seem more than ever in need of serious examination.Looking at the Revolution in the context of modern use of violence, maybe one-sixth is more accurate. Certainly a lot of revolts seem to have been the work of minorities (i.e., the "Troubles" in Ulster, Tunisia, Libya, Syria, etc.
Friday, March 10, 2017
Obama Versus Trump
Our Laws So Weak
Virginia has a thriving export trade, a trade in guns. The Brooklyn district attorney announced indictments of 24 people according to the Times:
Wiretaps recorded comments such as:
“There is no limits to how many guns I can go buy from the store, you know what I mean?” he said."
"The indictment of 627 counts charged 24 people, some of whom have violent criminal records and ties to the Bloods street gang, with conspiracy and illegal weapons sale and possession. In all, the authorities recovered 217 guns, including 41 assault weapons like AK-47s, AR-15s and a Thompson submachine gun."
Wiretaps recorded comments such as:
“There is no limits to how many guns I can go buy from the store, you know what I mean?” he said."
Thursday, March 09, 2017
Delay on Perdue II
I blogged earlier about the delay in getting Sonny Perdue's nomination for Secretary of USDA to the Senate. Today the Times had an article suggesting he has less than sparkling clean ethical history.
Terrorists Capture Building Blocks from White House
John Kelly writes a local column for the Post. Today he excavates a page from ancient history, 40 years ago today, the takeover of the DC Municipal Building, past which I'd walk home every night, up to a year before, and two other buildings by the Hanafi Muslim group.
It's a reminder of the turmoil of the late 60's and 70's, and a caution not to take current times too seriously.
It's a reminder of the turmoil of the late 60's and 70's, and a caution not to take current times too seriously.
Wednesday, March 08, 2017
Specialty Crops and Technology
A good piece on produce which avoids the usual crunchy critique that produce and specialty crops are so expensive because they haven't been subsidized by the government.
Mainly the piece is about the technology which is impacting the harvesting and marketing of these crops, kicking off with the recent advent of packaged spinach.
The idea that junk food is cheaper than produce because of farm subsidies is so often repeated by food movement leaders like Michael Pollan that almost everyone assumes that it’s true. But the reality is more nuanced.
Subsidies on their own don’t explain why processed foods are cheaper than produce, calorie for calorie. Fruits and vegetables, first and foremost, are highly perishable, which makes everything about growing, harvesting, storing and shipping them infinitely more complicated and expensive. Many of these crops also take a ton of labor to maintain and harvest. Economists who’ve crunched the numbers have found that removing agricultural subsidies would have little effect on consumers’ food prices, in part because the cost of commodities like corn and soybeans represent just a tiny share of the cost of the food sold in the grocery store.
Mainly the piece is about the technology which is impacting the harvesting and marketing of these crops, kicking off with the recent advent of packaged spinach.
Tuesday, March 07, 2017
The Delay on Perdue
A piece on AGweb notes the delay in getting Sonny Perdue's nomination to the Senate, but doesn't explain why he hasn't gotten his act together.
[Update: Here's another piece which suggests either it's Perdue's fault or the Office of Government Ethics is snowed under in clearing the paperwork.]
[Update: Here's another piece which suggests either it's Perdue's fault or the Office of Government Ethics is snowed under in clearing the paperwork.]
Today's Great Sentence
" if there's anything we native-born Americans excel at, it's crime."
Kevin Drum in a long discussion on the statistics of immigrant crime rates.
Kevin Drum in a long discussion on the statistics of immigrant crime rates.
Monday, March 06, 2017
Contra Free Market From Israel?
Conservatives tend to be more supportive of Israel these days. The nation has long since put the kibbutz behind them and is now a booming economy, with particular expertise in IT, high tech and military equipment. The World Bank has a piece on how that's happened, including this:
Hasson highlighted the key role played by public-private partnerships over the last 40 years. Those partnerships have resulted in the establishment of an innovation infrastructure — including educational and technical institutions, incubators and business accelerators —anchored within a dynamic national innovation ecosystem built around shared social goals.
Specifically, to reduce the risk for investors, the government has focused on funding technologies at various stages of innovation — from emerging entrepreneurs and start-ups to medium and large companies. Strengthened by that approach, the Israeli ecosystem is maturing: according to Hasson, mergers and acquisitions have increased and exit profits have almost tripled over the last three years, with more and more new projects being started by returning entrepreneurs.
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