Social scientists, usually not historians, are investigating the influence of the past on the present. More accurately, they're finding correlations between conditions in the past and current conditions. A couple examples are the beer/wine division of Europe and the influence of past slavery on current political institutions (i.e. the US South).
Here's another in a tweet.--tracing the vote division in France to 12th century political divisions.
It's an interesting subject; I'd like to see something theorizing about the mechanics of such influences.
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, April 25, 2017
Monday, April 24, 2017
Learning Who You Are
I blew it. Had a nice quote, I think from the novelist Zadie Smith, quoting something from I think Salmon Rushdie, to the effect that we learn who we are from our actions. But I lost the citation, by which we can conclude that my identity is partially that of a slapdash reader with poor note-taking skills and worse memory.
Still I'll riff a bit on the idea:
“There is a line of Salman Rushdie’s, I think it’s an essay, where he says: our lives teach us who we are.| And I think that’s the case. It’s not that you have a set identity, it’s that by your actions you find out what sort of person you are. And the news is not always…lovely.” ]
Still I'll riff a bit on the idea:
- Identity comes after we act.
- As I grow old, I discover more things about myself, as I reconsider my memories, including whether they can be trusted.
- Or maybe it's not "identity" but constructing the narrative of your life, like a childhood puzzle with a bunch of numbered dots on the page, where if you drew lines linking them in order you'd see a picture.
- Perhaps typically "American", focusing on action, the pragmatism of acting as if you believe, which creates belief.
“There is a line of Salman Rushdie’s, I think it’s an essay, where he says: our lives teach us who we are.| And I think that’s the case. It’s not that you have a set identity, it’s that by your actions you find out what sort of person you are. And the news is not always…lovely.” ]
Sunday, April 23, 2017
Nostalgia: Small Pot Farms, Lesbian Bars, and Segregated Schools
Nostalgia is a seductive emotion, often the result of remembering a past with more niches than today's society/economy, even when the niches result from social barriers, like discrimination and prohibition. See:
lesbian bars
industrial pot
segregated schools
lesbian bars
industrial pot
segregated schools
Saturday, April 22, 2017
Rural Life: Improvements
The Rural Blog has a post on seven ways rural life has improved. The items:
- water service
- trash service
- private phone lines
- paved roads
- satellite TV
- Internet
- Apple, Amazon, Netflix
Friday, April 21, 2017
A Tale of Two Lakes
"Syracuse water comes in a gravity-fed line from Skaneateles Lake, a Finger Lake about 30 miles southwest of the city, and is considered by some to be one of the cleanest lakes in the U.S. Miner’s press secretary Alexander Marion notes that newcomers are offered a glass of “Skaneateles on the rocks”—tap water, in other words.
A quick reality check, though: Syracuse is also adjacent to Lake Onondaga, which the New York State Department of Energy and Conservation has named the “most polluted lake in America,” thanks to industrial waste related to the city’s salt-mining history and years of untreated sewage dumping."
From Politico
The article is about an effort in Syracuse to record data on underground utilities, water mains, etc. and use data analysis ("big data") to predict problems and improve the process of maintenance.
The article is about an effort in Syracuse to record data on underground utilities, water mains, etc. and use data analysis ("big data") to predict problems and improve the process of maintenance.
Wednesday, April 19, 2017
Blast From Past: Tractor [Cades]
Interesting piece here from FiveThirtyEight, comparing the upcoming science march with other collective action protests, especially the "tractors on the mall" protests. I remember them well. This was the time period when I moved from directives to programs, specifically the "normal crop acreage" concept (i.e., a base for the whole farm rather than crop specific, intended to give more flexibility to farmers) and a disaster payments program which was, in effect, competing with crop insurance to see which approach would become the one for the future (crop insurance won over the next 15 years).
It's significant, I think, that the 538 post links to the American Agriculture Movement website; the AAM was the organization behind the tractor cades, but in fact the website is defunct, with nothing updated since 2015. While commodity prices are down and have been down for the last few years, the farmers who are left aren't in as bad shape as they were at the end of the 70's.
[Tweaked the title and fixed the link]
It's significant, I think, that the 538 post links to the American Agriculture Movement website; the AAM was the organization behind the tractor cades, but in fact the website is defunct, with nothing updated since 2015. While commodity prices are down and have been down for the last few years, the farmers who are left aren't in as bad shape as they were at the end of the 70's.
[Tweaked the title and fixed the link]
Tuesday, April 18, 2017
Decompressing from Taxes: the Draft
Just finished doing taxes, so a few random thoughts:
There's a survey out showing that Americans have a sense of social cohesion from doing their taxes.
There's also a theory about the benefits of national service, including a thread today on Twitter.(I'm not sufficiently up on it enough to include a url but this tweet from Lyman Stone may help:"@tylercowen @dylanmatt @hyperplanes 1. it's not inherited, 2. you get paid a market wage, 3. it's temporary, 4. you can't be sold, 5. you can't be bought, 6. working conditions")
As someone who was drafted and didn't like it, I do recognize some benefits from it: in a sense it's creative destruction, disrupting established patterns and possibly promoting social mobility. It also might promote social cohesion, giving people a shared experience.
Unfortunately for its promoters a good bit of the possible benefits is bound up in the military aspect: the social cohesion bit derives from the pain the military inflicts, the basic training and the regimentation. It's like a fraternity, conventional wisdom probably says that the greater the hazing, the greater fraternal feeling.
There's a survey out showing that Americans have a sense of social cohesion from doing their taxes.
There's also a theory about the benefits of national service, including a thread today on Twitter.(I'm not sufficiently up on it enough to include a url but this tweet from Lyman Stone may help:"@tylercowen @dylanmatt @hyperplanes 1. it's not inherited, 2. you get paid a market wage, 3. it's temporary, 4. you can't be sold, 5. you can't be bought, 6. working conditions")
As someone who was drafted and didn't like it, I do recognize some benefits from it: in a sense it's creative destruction, disrupting established patterns and possibly promoting social mobility. It also might promote social cohesion, giving people a shared experience.
Unfortunately for its promoters a good bit of the possible benefits is bound up in the military aspect: the social cohesion bit derives from the pain the military inflicts, the basic training and the regimentation. It's like a fraternity, conventional wisdom probably says that the greater the hazing, the greater fraternal feeling.
Monday, April 17, 2017
Kudos for Carson
Not for his policy views nor for his managerial expertise at HUD, but for setting an example, as noted by Politico's Daybook:
" HUD Secretary Ben Carson sitting in a middle seat in coach from Palm Beach to DCA Sunday evening"
Examples aren't the only thing, but they are a thing.
" HUD Secretary Ben Carson sitting in a middle seat in coach from Palm Beach to DCA Sunday evening"
Examples aren't the only thing, but they are a thing.
Saturday, April 15, 2017
Is Our President Learning II
Trump has reversed his positions several times this week, suggesting that maybe he is learning.(See this previous post.) At least he got a 10-minute history lesson from President Xi, which caused him to become more sympathetic to China's position on controlling North Korea.
Maybe another question is whether he starts to learn what he doesn't know, as in considering the idea there's another couple hours of discussion to go before he truly understands 2000 years of Korean/Chinese history?
Maybe another question is whether he starts to learn what he doesn't know, as in considering the idea there's another couple hours of discussion to go before he truly understands 2000 years of Korean/Chinese history?
Friday, April 14, 2017
Farm Bill--Cotton Issues
Cotton producers are pushing for changes in the program when the 2018 farm bill is written. Oilseed coverage for cottonseed production, which was denied by Sec. Vilsack as being beyond his authority, is an issue, as is converting "generic" base acreages to cotton acreages to provide a basis for a new program.All this according to Keith Good's post here.
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