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, December 31, 2017
Land Titlles and Drones
According to this piece only about 30 percent of land in Africa is titled and recorded. The plan is to use drones to map in detail enough to be useful for recording titles. Apparently in some parts of Africa hedges often delineate ownership.
Saturday, December 30, 2017
Things Are Getting Better
The Council for Foreign Relations has a post listing 10 ways things got better in 2017, a reminder that the dust Trump has raised in the US shouldn't get in our eyes.
Friday, December 29, 2017
Degrees of Separation
Turns out there were three degrees of separation between a Swiss/German scientist and an American aristocrat. Einstein wrote a letter to FDR on the feasibility of nuclear fission and bombs, which was transmitted because Szillard knew Sachs who knew FDR. That's based on Isaacson's recent biography of Einstein--very good, though I'm listening to the Audible version,not reading it.
Wednesday, December 27, 2017
Reston in the News
Turns out the top ranked story in the Times for the day was this one, reporting on the killing of a Reston couple, allegedly by the boyfriend of the daughter, who has expressed racist and pro-Nazi opinions.
Tuesday, December 26, 2017
Changes in National Issues
I wrote a post on how the parties have flip-flopped since my youth, including a partial list of issues which have changed and faded out of the national discussion. Some additional thoughts:
Some new issues include:
Some other old issues:
Some new issues include:
- Abortion. The debate owes much to the civil rights debate.
- Gay rights.
- Animal rights and welfare.
- Inequality (seems to be an easier way to discuss economic issues than poverty.
- A slew of foreign relations issues.
Some other old issues:
- Gambling is now legal most everywhere. When I was growing up it was only in the Catholic bingo nights and Nevada, so it wasn't really much of an issue.
- Poverty (which has come in and out of national consciousness--from FDR's one-third of the nation, to the War on Poverty.
- Decolonization, which was followed by the Third World.
- Blue laws and restriction of trade.
- Doctors and lawyers advertising for business.
Farm Bill Time?
According to the House Ag committee, which has a website for it. Hattip to Northview Dairy.
You'd think after 20 years I'd be able to divorce myself from any interest in such doings. Can't teach an old dog...
You'd think after 20 years I'd be able to divorce myself from any interest in such doings. Can't teach an old dog...
Saturday, December 23, 2017
Unrest Within the Organic Community
The Post did an investigation of a big "organic" dairy a while back. I put in the quotes because the article raised questions about whether it met the requirements for being organic, especially whether the cows were grazing or not. Here's a piece questioning whether USDA's subsequent investigation which found no big problems were sufficiently thorough (apparently the dairy was warned before the investigators showed up).
This would be a good episode for some academic to write on, because it involves several issues: efficiency from scaling up, the tradeoffs of grazing versus grain (and the simple logistics of grazing), the bureaucracy of writing and enforcing regulations, capture of bureaucracy by interest groups, strategies of interest groups of various kinds (the "organics" wage a media war, the industry wage a guerilla war of lobbyists).
This would be a good episode for some academic to write on, because it involves several issues: efficiency from scaling up, the tradeoffs of grazing versus grain (and the simple logistics of grazing), the bureaucracy of writing and enforcing regulations, capture of bureaucracy by interest groups, strategies of interest groups of various kinds (the "organics" wage a media war, the industry wage a guerilla war of lobbyists).
Friday, December 22, 2017
The Decline of a Completist
"Completist" is a term used by the new publisher of the NYTimes in his interview with the editor of the New Yorker. It means someone who has to read everything in the paper.
I used to be a completist. Back on the farm we got the Binghamton Press delivered in the mailbox. But for really important things, like the first Soviet A-bomb test in 1949, we'd make a point of going to the Forks or Greene to pick up the Times (the stores might have 4 or 5 for sale). I think, with the assurance of old age, that's what we did for the bomb test. Probably the first time I read the Times, trying to understand the story.
Later we would get the Sunday Times to satisfy my sister's appetite for the news. Finally when I got to college I could fully indulge my completist obsession. After working breakfast at the dorm, I'd stop at Noyes Lodge overlooking Beebee Lake, pick up a Times and with a cup of coffee read the whole thing (assuming I didn't have an early class).
I think it was both psychological and sociological--i.e., I was a farm boy trying to figure out the big world and gain status within it by knowing about everything. So my reading life went.
But now I find I don't have the patience or interest to be a completist. I've read too many stories of the ways people mistreat each other, too many stories of the hungry and the sick, too many stories. I still read the Times (and the Post) every day, but I skip over a lot of stories. Such is life.
[Update: it's a good interview. A bit of humor from it:
"D.R.: I’m giving you a very important opportunity here. I just saw the new Steven Spielberg movie, “The Post.” And I hope this doesn’t hurt, but this is about the Washington Post’s experience vis-a-vis the Pentagon Papers. Now, the Times is given credit for breaking the story, but I’m told that people at the New York Times are really annoyed with this movie.
I used to be a completist. Back on the farm we got the Binghamton Press delivered in the mailbox. But for really important things, like the first Soviet A-bomb test in 1949, we'd make a point of going to the Forks or Greene to pick up the Times (the stores might have 4 or 5 for sale). I think, with the assurance of old age, that's what we did for the bomb test. Probably the first time I read the Times, trying to understand the story.
Later we would get the Sunday Times to satisfy my sister's appetite for the news. Finally when I got to college I could fully indulge my completist obsession. After working breakfast at the dorm, I'd stop at Noyes Lodge overlooking Beebee Lake, pick up a Times and with a cup of coffee read the whole thing (assuming I didn't have an early class).
I think it was both psychological and sociological--i.e., I was a farm boy trying to figure out the big world and gain status within it by knowing about everything. So my reading life went.
But now I find I don't have the patience or interest to be a completist. I've read too many stories of the ways people mistreat each other, too many stories of the hungry and the sick, too many stories. I still read the Times (and the Post) every day, but I skip over a lot of stories. Such is life.
[Update: it's a good interview. A bit of humor from it:
"D.R.: I’m giving you a very important opportunity here. I just saw the new Steven Spielberg movie, “The Post.” And I hope this doesn’t hurt, but this is about the Washington Post’s experience vis-a-vis the Pentagon Papers. Now, the Times is given credit for breaking the story, but I’m told that people at the New York Times are really annoyed with this movie.
A.G.S.: I wouldn’t say really annoyed.
D.R.: No, I mean, super annoyed at this movie.
A.G.S.: I think we’re all looking forward to the next Watergate movie. Focussing on the extraordinary reporting of the New York Times."
Wednesday, December 20, 2017
A Factor of Ten
According to NYTimes article on electric cars, there are less than 10 times the number of gas stations than the number of recharging stations and the operating cost of an gasoline car is about 10 times the cost of an electric car. I'm surprised by both: the number of charging stations and the operating cost differential.
Tuesday, December 19, 2017
What's Perdue Up to?
From FCW:
"The Trump administration announced the establishment of five centers of excellence at a Dec. 14 industry day hosted at the White House. The General Services Administration's Technology Transformation Service will lead the development of centers focused on cloud adoption, infrastructure optimization, customer experience, service delivery analytics and contact centers. The Department of Agriculture is the first customer.Not sure what area of USDA is being targeted here.
Wilmer said the decision to name Agriculture as the home of the first center of excellence came down to the commitment of Secretary Sonny Perdue.
"The secretary of Agriculture was extremely supportive of modernizing Agriculture, I think that's one of his major objectives, and I think [he] understands the importance of IT in all of this.... So Agriculture seemed like a perfect example." Wilmer said. "When you have secretary-level-down commitment in making this happen, we wanted to make sure the first one that we roll out is going to be a success... then we can follow up rapidly with others."
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