I've the Pollyana gene, no doubt inherited from my mother. In that spirit I'd like to remind people that things have been bad before. Erik Loomis at Lawyers, Guns and Money reposts a Kansas City Star reprint of a 1973 Art Buchwald column, providing a list of canned excuses to be used by defenders of Richard Nixon. The content and logic apply as well for today's defenders of our President.
Bottomline, we survived Tricky Dick regardless of the damage he did to our institutions; we'll survive Don the Despicable.
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, December 05, 2017
Monday, December 04, 2017
Trump Stumps Computers?
From the ever-reliable Kevin Drum, as the end to a post on AI advances:
"Alternatively, this merely represents the Donald Trump effect. News articles in 2017 are stuffed with bizarre Trump quotes, and even the best machine translation software probably chokes when it tries to make sense of them. When it comes to bafflegab, humans are still the world champs."
"Alternatively, this merely represents the Donald Trump effect. News articles in 2017 are stuffed with bizarre Trump quotes, and even the best machine translation software probably chokes when it tries to make sense of them. When it comes to bafflegab, humans are still the world champs."
Sunday, December 03, 2017
Republicans Favor Drunks?
Vox notes that the Senate tax bill cuts taxes on alcohol by 16 percent.
IMHO that's the wrong way to go. Taxes should be raised, simply because alcohol is dangerous to society. That's one principle the founding fathers believed in, witness the whiskey tax.
IMHO that's the wrong way to go. Taxes should be raised, simply because alcohol is dangerous to society. That's one principle the founding fathers believed in, witness the whiskey tax.
Friday, December 01, 2017
The Lessons of 1999
Somewhere I got this link to the Sixty Minutes piece on Amazon from 1999. Pelley's ambivalence about Amazon shows up. He and a Wall Street type are amazed that it's more valuable than Sears. And the standard of value cited for Internet companies is Yahoo.
(I note I was one of the 2 million new Amazon customers in 1998.)
(I note I was one of the 2 million new Amazon customers in 1998.)
Thursday, November 30, 2017
Newbie Farmers Risk Life and Limb?
From the Rural Blog:
"Bill Field, who has tracked farm fatalities for almost 40 years, says that almost a quarter of Indiana's farm fatalities over the past four years were on hobby farms, Rick Callahan reports for the Associated Press.
Part of the problem is that hobby farmers tend to be amateurs who were
lured to farming from other careers, and don't have the experience to
avoid common farm accidents
"Bill Field, who has tracked farm fatalities for almost 40 years, says that almost a quarter of Indiana's farm fatalities over the past four years were on hobby farms, Rick Callahan reports for the Associated Press.
USDA map; click on the image to enlarge it |
Wednesday, November 29, 2017
We Used To Be a Lily-White Nation
I exaggerate, of course, but...
I write of the "public nation", as opposed to the "real nation". The "public nation" is the nation reflected in the culture, the America which Trump wants to make great again, the America which liberals think is evolving to fulfill the promises of past history. Maybe I'll write more on the concept sometime, but this is mostly based on my personal history:
Take 1946 as an example: blacks (Negroes in the proper parlance of the time) were not seen on television--there wasn't much then. They weren't in sports, not visibly. Not in pro basketball, not in pro baseball, not in pro football, not in horse racing to name the major sports then. They were in evidence in track and field and in boxing (Joe Louis).
Negroes weren't in movies, much, other than as servants. They weren't in national politics, a couple representatives (William Dawson and Clayton Powell). Probably the most powerful Negro was the head of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters.
I write of the "public nation", as opposed to the "real nation". The "public nation" is the nation reflected in the culture, the America which Trump wants to make great again, the America which liberals think is evolving to fulfill the promises of past history. Maybe I'll write more on the concept sometime, but this is mostly based on my personal history:
Take 1946 as an example: blacks (Negroes in the proper parlance of the time) were not seen on television--there wasn't much then. They weren't in sports, not visibly. Not in pro basketball, not in pro baseball, not in pro football, not in horse racing to name the major sports then. They were in evidence in track and field and in boxing (Joe Louis).
Negroes weren't in movies, much, other than as servants. They weren't in national politics, a couple representatives (William Dawson and Clayton Powell). Probably the most powerful Negro was the head of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters.
Tuesday, November 28, 2017
Declension
Back in the day you could tell by the name whether the name was the first name or the last name. And you could tell whether the person was male or female. No longer.
Monday, November 27, 2017
Our Democracy
From a
Brad DeLong post:
- 178.4 million people are represented by the 48 senators who caucus with the Democrats.
- 144.1 million people are represented by the 52 senators who caucus with the Republicans.
- 65.9 million people voted for Hillary Rodham Clinton and Tim Kaine to be their president and vice president
- 63.0 million people voted for Donald Trump and Mike Pence to be their president and vice president.
Saturday, November 25, 2017
When Was the "Back-to-the Land Movement?"
Even academics don't know their history--there was a significant movement of people from cities back to the rural areas during the depression. So I beg to differ with the bolded quote from Jstor.
If historic recipes are a form of folklore, what do the cookbooks from the American communes of the 1960s and 1970s tell us about the communards and their influence? Quite a bit, writes Stephanie Hartman. Her survey of these cookbooks points out that our current interest in the slow food movement and “clean” eating are offshoots of that original back-to-the-land movement. The cookbooks created by communes were often informed by a counter-cultural critique of industrial food practices.Just another instance of the boomers self-absorption, I guess.
Friday, November 24, 2017
Jobs, Automation: Craft Brewing and Women's Cheesemaking
Had lunch Wed in a Herndon strip mall, next door to a craft brewery which throughout our lunch had a long line of people buying their new release. That's new, at least new to me. Back in the day we had a bunch of companies each brewing their own brand. Then the whole industry consolidated into a couple/three big conglomerates, killing most of the brand names. Then we saw the gradual growth of micro-breweries, and then a rapid expansion. See this page for statistics from the brewers association. It's going so fast wikipedia can't keep up.
Meanwhile the paper (NYTimes?) recently had an article on women farmers making cheese. Also a new thing. And finally today the Post has a piece on new young farmers, who are described as being part of what I'd call the "food movement" (i.e., small, organic, community supported ag).
Seems to me in the recent debate over AI and the likelihood of robots replacing humans in all jobs we forget the ability of humans to invent new desires and to invest their time in uneconomic ways. Can we create robots which are irrational?
Meanwhile the paper (NYTimes?) recently had an article on women farmers making cheese. Also a new thing. And finally today the Post has a piece on new young farmers, who are described as being part of what I'd call the "food movement" (i.e., small, organic, community supported ag).
Seems to me in the recent debate over AI and the likelihood of robots replacing humans in all jobs we forget the ability of humans to invent new desires and to invest their time in uneconomic ways. Can we create robots which are irrational?
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