Trump will end with at least one undeniable achievement--he is disrupting institutions and norms. He may and likely will become less disruptive as time goes on, but disruptive he has been.
The economists have a favorite concept for market economies: "creative destruction". Among the things it means is the corporations and technologies dominant in 1950 are mostly gone by now: United States Steel, Bethlehem Steel, AT&T, Kodak, A&P, Sears and Montgomery Ward, etc. etc.
There's an easy parallel to make: creative disruption. Is Trump triggering a political realignment? We'll see.
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.
Monday, May 01, 2017
Sunday, April 30, 2017
The Difference a Job Makes for Marriage
A higher proportion of ever enlisted men (born 1980-1984) are marrying than their civilian counterparts. Find out more at #PAA2017 #CFDR pic.twitter.com/GLReTHLnWi— Paul Hemez (@hemezp) April 25, 2017
That's a tweet which I probably could have better incorporated in this post. Anyhow, the graph shows the marriage rates for whites, Hispanics and blacks, divided between "ever enlisted" and "civilians". What caught my eye were the rates for enlisted blacks, very much the same as enlisted whites, and enlisted Hispanics, significantly higher than enlisted whites and blacks. The rates for all enlisteds were significantly above those for civilians.
What I take from this is that secure jobs enable marriages. I may be wrong, there may be significant differences between the men and women who enlist and those who don't. But I like the idea that a steady salary leads to marriage.
Saturday, April 29, 2017
Habituation in Everything
AP reports a study of interest in Trump's tweets:
Is it too much to hope that process is operating with Trump's tweets, and that declining responses will lead to fewer of them?
"His "FAKE NEWS" tweets don't rocket like they once did. His exclamation points (!) don't excite quite the same old way.Psychologists have the concept of "habituation" , meaning our (i.e., animals) response to a repeated stimulus diminishes over time. We get bored. We look for the next new thing.
Donald Trump's 140-character volleys helped define the first 100 days of his presidency. But the traction on his medium of choice has slipped a bit as his tone and button-pushing tendencies have cooled."
Is it too much to hope that process is operating with Trump's tweets, and that declining responses will lead to fewer of them?
Friday, April 28, 2017
Saint Jimmy and Bad Barack
Barack Obama is taking some heat from the left for giving a speech for $400,000. As usual I've mixed feelings:
On the one hand I wish the Obamas had followed the example of the Carters in sending their daughters to a public DC school. They didn't. I also wish the Obamas would follow the example of the Carters in "rarely" giving paid speeches. They won't.
On the other hand where do you draw the line? Is a $10,000 fee for a speech at an alumna mater okay while $400,000 would be wrong? Or is the issue who the speech is to? We don't want the Obamas talking to "bad" people but it's okay to talk to "good" people? Won't "bad" people benefit more by listening to them?
On the third hand, I disdained Reagan's speeches in Japan.
My bottom line is while I wish we were a nation of saints, and I wish the president were the highest-paid, best compensated American executive, neither is true, so we live in the world we have.
On the one hand I wish the Obamas had followed the example of the Carters in sending their daughters to a public DC school. They didn't. I also wish the Obamas would follow the example of the Carters in "rarely" giving paid speeches. They won't.
On the other hand where do you draw the line? Is a $10,000 fee for a speech at an alumna mater okay while $400,000 would be wrong? Or is the issue who the speech is to? We don't want the Obamas talking to "bad" people but it's okay to talk to "good" people? Won't "bad" people benefit more by listening to them?
On the third hand, I disdained Reagan's speeches in Japan.
My bottom line is while I wish we were a nation of saints, and I wish the president were the highest-paid, best compensated American executive, neither is true, so we live in the world we have.
Thursday, April 27, 2017
Dirty Jeans
Paul Mirengoff at Powerline repeats and expands on the Nordstrom dirty jeans (for $425), which Sen. Ben Sasse has called the end of the American experiment.
Paul's not a whippersnapper, but Sasse is, so he doesn't know the true end of the American experiment was not selling dirty jeans, but pre-washing jeans, particularly stone-washing, where people paid a premium for jeans with an artificially shortened life. It's been down-hill ever since.
"Nordstrom advertises the jeans this way:
These heavily distressed medium-blue denim jeans embody rugged, Americana workwear that’s seen some hard-working action with a crackled, caked-on muddy coating that shows you’re not afraid to get down and dirty.Sen. Ben Sasse tweeted that selling dirty jeans signals the end of the American experiment. Mike Rowe describes the dirty jeans as “a costume for wealthy people who see work as ironic.”
Paul's not a whippersnapper, but Sasse is, so he doesn't know the true end of the American experiment was not selling dirty jeans, but pre-washing jeans, particularly stone-washing, where people paid a premium for jeans with an artificially shortened life. It's been down-hill ever since.
Tuesday, April 25, 2017
The Influence of the Past
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.
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.
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.
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