Cottonseed will be a program crop in the farm bill according to Keith Good.
I've lost any expertise I once had in this area, but this might be a way for the cotton people to get more federal money, without raising what we used to call the target price for cotton. They might be trying to get around Brazil and the WTO, but that's only speculation.
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, February 12, 2018
Saturday, February 10, 2018
Harshaw Rule at the Olympics
From the blog of a relative, who attends almost all Olympic games and writes about them for friends and relatives:
"A lot of people over the years have asked me how I tell which are the best Olympics. I usually tell them that a lot of things just don't go well for the first few days when 7 years of planning meet the first day of reality, but the good Olympics are the ones that spot the problems and rapidly fix them. We will see whether POCOG (PyeongChang Olympic Organizing Committee) can rise to the challenge."(The Harshaw rule is: "you never do things right the first time". Maybe there's a corollary: spotting the problems and rapidly fixing them is essential?)
Wednesday, February 07, 2018
The Great Switcheroo: Republicans
A quote:
"
"
Second, the Republican policy reversals are staggering:
- Members of Congress who once claimed to be committed to debt reduction would increase debt by more than $2.7 trillion in just seven weeks.
- Congressional Republicans would increase government spending by 50% more than they cut taxes two months ago.
- The self-labeled fiscal conservatives in Congress, who had once insisted that all government spending increases be offset by spending cuts, would abandon that principle.
- A party that just a few years ago proposed reforming old-age entitlement spending, the principal driver of government spending growth, would have no proposals to do so. If press reports are true, this bill may even increase Medicaid spending.
- The Republican Congressional Majority, which built last year’s balanced budget plan on deep future cuts to nondefense discretionary spending, would be supporting big increases in that spending."
Trump's Parades and Nixon's Uniforms
Post had an article saying President Trump has told DOD to come up with plans for a military parade in D.C. The idea is getting a fair amount of mockery among liberals.
Because it's such a serious topic :-) I want to offer a historical parallel, President Nixon's new uniforms for the White House police. Nixon supposedly found the old uniforms to lack class, whereas uniforms on honor guards he saw overseas were classy. The new uniforms didn't last long, because he was mocked for having a palace guard. See Megan McArdle some years ago. And the NYTimes on the unveiling
Because it's such a serious topic :-) I want to offer a historical parallel, President Nixon's new uniforms for the White House police. Nixon supposedly found the old uniforms to lack class, whereas uniforms on honor guards he saw overseas were classy. The new uniforms didn't last long, because he was mocked for having a palace guard. See Megan McArdle some years ago. And the NYTimes on the unveiling
Tuesday, February 06, 2018
Imprisonment and Clemency: Two Examples
The Washington Post has two articles which offer perspectives on punishment and clemency:
This Metro article reporting on MD judges concerns about life sentences for juveniles:
The contrast between the situations is stark, mind-blowing in fact.
This Metro article reporting on MD judges concerns about life sentences for juveniles:
A central question for the Maryland Court of Appeals is whether a young person can be sentenced to life without what prison reform advocates say is any realistic chance of release. The cases follow several Supreme Court rulings that distinguish between adult and juvenile offenders, who the court says are not as culpable and have a “heightened capacity for change.”Then there's this Chico Harlan article about a North Korean spy who successfully bombed a South Korean airliner, killing 115 people, during the run-up to the Seoul summer Olympics. She's living quietly as the mother of two teenagers.
The high court in 2016 prohibited mandatory life sentences for juveniles without parole and has said young offenders must have a “meaningful” chance to show they have matured and to be released.
The contrast between the situations is stark, mind-blowing in fact.
Monday, February 05, 2018
Inflation and Rising Interest Rates
After the events of 2008, as Congress passed the stimulus bill and the Obama administration took charge, conservative bloggers such as those at Powerline started to worry about inflation. Liberals such as Kevin Drum and the liberal economists mocked the concerns. I have to admit that while I mostly agreed with the liberals, my memory of the inflation of the 1970's caused occasional qualms.
Turns out the liberals, and Bernanke and Yellen were right--we didn't have inflation over the Obama years. Interest rates remained low.
But, with today's news of the stock market fall, there's more discussion of inflation. Maybe finally inflation will hit and pass the 2 percent a year benchmark the Fed has used. I'm no economist and I'm not panicking about the stock market. But I do want to point out something I've not seen mentioned.
The federal deficit is projected to rise very significantly this year. Trump's tax cut will hit revenues, and even if he's correct it will stimulate the economy, any increase in revenues will take a while to show up. But what if it doesn't? And what if inflation is at the door, and the Fed raises rates faster than expected? The net result of higher interest rates is greater budgetary pressure and a larger deficit. (We know that from Clinton's early years.) That's not a good formula.
(A parenthetical note: I've not seen the Powerline bloggers raise any concerns about the deficit since January 19, 2018.)
Turns out the liberals, and Bernanke and Yellen were right--we didn't have inflation over the Obama years. Interest rates remained low.
But, with today's news of the stock market fall, there's more discussion of inflation. Maybe finally inflation will hit and pass the 2 percent a year benchmark the Fed has used. I'm no economist and I'm not panicking about the stock market. But I do want to point out something I've not seen mentioned.
The federal deficit is projected to rise very significantly this year. Trump's tax cut will hit revenues, and even if he's correct it will stimulate the economy, any increase in revenues will take a while to show up. But what if it doesn't? And what if inflation is at the door, and the Fed raises rates faster than expected? The net result of higher interest rates is greater budgetary pressure and a larger deficit. (We know that from Clinton's early years.) That's not a good formula.
(A parenthetical note: I've not seen the Powerline bloggers raise any concerns about the deficit since January 19, 2018.)
Sunday, February 04, 2018
Cows Don't Have Privacy Any More
The Internet for Things also applies to dairy cows. This piece describes 4 ways in which cows are being tracked: movement and location, behavior, activity, and lactation.
Saturday, February 03, 2018
140 Birds a Minute
From a Politico wrapup of weekly events in the government, on the subject of the speed of meat packing lines processing chickens:
The meat processors wanted permission to speed it up. USDA said no.
"Under current rules, meat packers cannot exceed 140 birds per minute"Now the image I have is of a conveyor belt with chickens hanging by the feet from it, dead, and being processed. And there's different workers, each doing a different job. And that means they have less than 30 seconds to, say, remove a wing. Seems incredible to me that people can do that, hour after hour, but they do. (Although my imagination may have significant faults in the image.)
The meat processors wanted permission to speed it up. USDA said no.
Thursday, February 01, 2018
Robots and Dairy
Nathaniel Johnson has a piece at Grist, which also links to a Bloomberg piece, discussing the increasing use of robots in dairy farming, particularly with Trump's desire to reduce immigration.
As Johnson observes, the more robots the smaller the rural population.
As Johnson observes, the more robots the smaller the rural population.
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