- I don't think the Russians were really motivated to elect Trump as president; I think they wanted to cause trouble and weaken Clinton. That fits my judgment that there wasn't serious collusion/conspiracy between Trump and the Russians--Trump himself is too disorganized and his campaign so catch as catch can that conspiracy doesn't work. Instead, I'll fall back on Murphy's law, and a corollary: different people doing different things and not knowing what they were doing. (If an alternate history could swap the personalities of the candidates, I'd judge there was collusion between Clinton and the Russians.)
- I hope Congress doesn't act on gun control between now and November. I well remember Clinton's crime bill in 1994, which included stuff for the right and an assault weapon ban for the left. We lost Congress that fall. The last thing we liberals need this year is anything which increases energy on the right. (Yes, I may be misreading the climate of opinion; we may finally have reached that Holy Grail of a turning point on guns. But I doubt it.)
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, February 20, 2018
Contrarian Time: Trump, Russia, Guns
I'm feeling contrarian today so I'll voice two opinions which will be unpopular with my fellow liberals (most of them):
Monday, February 19, 2018
Blast from the Past: J.K. Galbraith
Paul Campos at Lawyers, Guns and Money posts about reading J.K. Galbraith's "The Affluent Society" (it's been 60 years since its publication). That was a very influential book for liberals back in the days of the New Frontier. But then came Michael Harrington and his "The Other America" which (re)discovered poverty. Between the two, they shaped much of my thinking back then.
Saturday, February 17, 2018
Trump Budget Proposal
From here:
The Budget supports the Secretary’s efforts to reorganize Agency functions to improve the customer and consumer experience. Under the new structure, the Farm Service Agency, Risk Management Agency, and the Natural Resources Conservation Service would be merged under the Under Secretary for Farm Production and Conservation. In addition, the Secretary has established an Under Secretary of Trade and Foreign Agricultural Affairs to sharpen USDA’s focus on increasing agriculture exports to foreign markets. The Budget also supports consolidating fair practices, standards work, and commodity procurement within the Agricultural Marketing Service. These, and other related reorganizations, are expected to improve the way USDA delivers its services. In addition, the Budget supports the creation of a business innovation center in each mission area that would handle support activities in order to avoid duplicative functions and maximize collaboration between agencies.The Budget proposes to optimize and improve crop insurance and commodity programs in a way that maintains a strong safety net. The Budget does this while also achieving savings, eliminating subsidies to higher income farmers, and reducing overly generous crop insurance premium subsidies to farmers and payments made to private sector insurance companies. The Budget includes a bold set of proposals, including those that would reduce the average premium subsidy for crop insurance from 62 percent to 48 percent and limit commodity, conservation, and crop insurance subsidies to those producers that have an Adjusted Gross Income of $500,000 or less. In addition, the Budget proposes reductions to overly generous subsidies provided to participating insurance companies by capping underwriting gains at 12 percent, which would ensure that the companies receive a reasonable rate of return given the risks associated with their participation in the crop insurance program. The Budget proposes to eliminate an unnecessary and separate payment limit for peanut producers and limit eligibility for commodity subsidies to one manager per farm.
Improves Customer Service. Modernizing program delivery and improving customer service at USDA is an important focus of the Administration. USDA is partnering with the White House Office of American Innovation to modernize its systems undertaking four key strategies: strengthening strategic IT governance; consolidating end-user services and data centers; enabling a strategic approach to data management and introducing data-driven capabilities; and improving the USDA customer experience. The Budget supports these efforts to improve service delivery by requesting funds to develop a centralized customer service portal for customers served by the Department’s three service center agencies. This single, integrated, producer-centric web portal would provide expanded and more effective and efficient access to useful online USDA services to meet the needs of agricultural producers. By optimizing service delivery, USDA can support agricultural producers to reach their productive potential and advance the U.S. economy
Friday, February 16, 2018
An Originalist Second Amendment Proposal for Gun Control
A quick sketch of a contrarian position on gun control.
The Supreme Court's interpretation of the Second Amendment abstracts it from the original context in which the amendment was adopted. Returning to its history would permit us to control guns effectively.
In the 18th century America, guns were a necessity for life on the frontier, if not in the cities. But colonial governments, and I assume state goverments,were concerned that all militia members be well armed, going so far as to buy muskets and furnish them to the militia.
Militias were geographically based; you went to war with your friends and neighbors, with your kin and fellow church members. You typically I believe elected your officers, the captain of your company.
My point: militia members knew the capabilities and limitations of their fellows. They knew who were the klutzes and who the sharpshooters, who was slightly touched in the head, who drank and who was dangerous when drunk.
These networks provided a social control on gun possession, a social control which current jurisprudence does not provide.
My Modest Proposal: We require all gun owners to either:
The Supreme Court's interpretation of the Second Amendment abstracts it from the original context in which the amendment was adopted. Returning to its history would permit us to control guns effectively.
In the 18th century America, guns were a necessity for life on the frontier, if not in the cities. But colonial governments, and I assume state goverments,were concerned that all militia members be well armed, going so far as to buy muskets and furnish them to the militia.
Militias were geographically based; you went to war with your friends and neighbors, with your kin and fellow church members. You typically I believe elected your officers, the captain of your company.
My point: militia members knew the capabilities and limitations of their fellows. They knew who were the klutzes and who the sharpshooters, who was slightly touched in the head, who drank and who was dangerous when drunk.
These networks provided a social control on gun possession, a social control which current jurisprudence does not provide.
My Modest Proposal: We require all gun owners to either:
- have the signature of a person who knows them and has some status in the community. For example: an adult relative, a fellow church member, an NRA club member, a government official (Senator, congressperson, state rep). The list can be expanded.
- maintain his or her weapons in a repository operated by a gun club, NRA club, or firing range.
Requiring a co-signature on a gun purchase application could provide a better check on gun purchases than a database check, since it makes the co-signor liable for the misdeeds of the gun owner. By putting the NRA in the loop, there's assurance that the measure isn't aimed at confiscating weapons.
Thursday, February 15, 2018
Phantom Thread
Thursday and time for another short movie review. This week it was Phantom Thread, with my spouse's favorite actor (excluding beefcake types), Daniel Day Lewis. As usual, he was very good, as were the two women. The cinematography was great. It's getting lots of nominations for awards, and good reviews from critics. Having said all that, I was rather bored. I'd give it 2 1/2 out of 4 stars.
My reaction to the writer/director's last film with Day-Lewis, There Will Be Blood, was similar.
My reaction to the writer/director's last film with Day-Lewis, There Will Be Blood, was similar.
Wednesday, February 14, 2018
Program Costs and Farm Bill
From Illinois extension on farm bill:
Spending on Farmers: Commodities and Crop Insurance
The main components of the support system for commodity farmers are the farm programs in Title I of the Farm Bill and crop insurance. The information from CBO in Table 1 indicates that farm programs are currently on track to spend roughly $13 billion more than forecast in 2014. At the same time, the outlays for crop insurance are expected to be $11 billion less. Chart 4 provides a comparison of the outlays as projected in 2014 with outlays as reported and updated by CBO. Again year 1 corresponds to crop year 2014 and fiscal year 2016 for farm programs, but fiscal and crop years match for crop insurance.
What's Good for the Poor Isn't Good for Native Americans?
As I noted yesterday, what's proposed for SNAP in the way of food baskets seems similar to some existing programs, most notably one for Native Americans. Liberals are mocking the administration proposal, which is fine, but why aren't we pushing to cash out the existing program?
Tuesday, February 13, 2018
Infoshare: Once More Unto the Breach
Thought I was quoting The Charge of the Light Brigade, but it turns out it's Shakespeare's Henry V.
This is triggered by an FCW piece/ report on a GovExec conference, quoting Chad Sheridan, the CIO of RMA, discussing USDA's plans to consolidate CIO's, combine mission support functions of FSA, NRCS, and RMA, and serve as the pilot for a GSA program. See also this FCW piece.
The new website, farmers.gov, went online February 1. They're starting small, very small, which is good.
This is what they promise:
"Check back monthly for new features, including:
This is triggered by an FCW piece/ report on a GovExec conference, quoting Chad Sheridan, the CIO of RMA, discussing USDA's plans to consolidate CIO's, combine mission support functions of FSA, NRCS, and RMA, and serve as the pilot for a GSA program. See also this FCW piece.
The new website, farmers.gov, went online February 1. They're starting small, very small, which is good.
This is what they promise:
"Check back monthly for new features, including:
Mobile-friendly service center locator
Program descriptions with an interactive requirements tool
Improved account login process for easy access to USDA accounts
Customer and mobile-friendly digital forms
Calendar of local events and program due dates
Customizable data dashboard
And much more"
Changing SNAP (Corrected)
Just posted my guess on the SNAP proposal from the Trump administration--turns out I'm wrong. There are existing programs to distribute staple foods:
"Search here to find product information sheets for USDA Foods available to households through the Food Distribution Program on Indian Reservations (FDPIR), the Commodity Supplemental Food Program (CSFP), and The Emergency Food Assistance Program (TEFAP). Staff who operate USDA Foods programs and participants often use this information to help prepare healthy meals. Each fact sheet includes a description of the USDA Foods product, storage tips, nutrition facts, and two recipes that use the product."So the proposal is to expand the existing programs, not to piggyback on school lunch. (The website even has recipes for using the staples, though the ratings on most of them are 3 stars out of 5.)
Changing SNAP (Food Stamps)
The Trump administration's budget includes a proposal to provide a portion of SNAP (food stamp) benefits to families in the form of a monthly food package of staples.
The proposal won't go anywhere--the grocers will see to that--so I'm not going to spend time on researching. Instead, I'll offer the guess, only a guess, that within the USDA bureaucracy someone looked at the existing setup to buy and provide staples to schools (used to be government surplus commodities) and suggest piggybacking on the arrangements to expand and provide packages to families. For anyone who wants to go further, here's the FNS link.
The proposal won't go anywhere--the grocers will see to that--so I'm not going to spend time on researching. Instead, I'll offer the guess, only a guess, that within the USDA bureaucracy someone looked at the existing setup to buy and provide staples to schools (used to be government surplus commodities) and suggest piggybacking on the arrangements to expand and provide packages to families. For anyone who wants to go further, here's the FNS link.
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