I'm old enough to remember when the sports jinx haunted the Brooklyn Dodgers. They'd make it to the World Series nearly as often as the NY Yankees, but always lose. Gil Hodges, their elite first baseman, wouldn't hit and so was often the goat. Their motto was "Wait Til Next Year". That streak lasted until 1955, when Johnny Podres led them over the Yankees in seven games.
I write this because the Washington Capitals, who I sort of follow, have a streak of losing in the playoffs, so they've never made the conference finals. This may change. This must change. This will change, but will it be this year?
(Someone has observed, what can't last forever, won't. I think that applies here.)
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 07, 2018
Sunday, May 06, 2018
The Swamp, John McCain and President Carter
Sen. McCain is attracting favorable articles now, for pure and understandable reasons. After his death, whenever it comes, more commendations will come and slight criticism will be unbecoming.
So let me offer a bit of criticism and context now.
There's been much discussion of "the swamp" in DC and the need to drain it. Very laudable I'm sure. But I've a vague memory, I think based on Timberg's book, that McCain was a denizen of that swamp for a while. After his release from the POW camp, and recuperation from his injuries, and before he retired from the Navy and entered electoral politics, he was assigned to the Pentagon as a liaison to the Senate.
Now the Ford and Carter administrations had a project for medium-sized aircraft carriers, conventionally powered and cheaper than the nuclear carriers the Navy and Rickover had been building. As a naval officer McCain's ultimate commander was President Carter, but his real allegiance was to his bureaucracy, the Navy. And the Navy, or at least many of the big shots, wanted the biggest and best of everything (pardon my cynicism). McCain was an effective lobbyist with the Senate for the nuclear carriers, operating against the official policy of the administration. It was a little reminiscent of the "revolt of the admirals" of 1949, except that McCain and the others were able to achieve their goal with less publicity.
That's how the swamp works, and Sen. McCain was once a swamp dweller.
So let me offer a bit of criticism and context now.
There's been much discussion of "the swamp" in DC and the need to drain it. Very laudable I'm sure. But I've a vague memory, I think based on Timberg's book, that McCain was a denizen of that swamp for a while. After his release from the POW camp, and recuperation from his injuries, and before he retired from the Navy and entered electoral politics, he was assigned to the Pentagon as a liaison to the Senate.
Now the Ford and Carter administrations had a project for medium-sized aircraft carriers, conventionally powered and cheaper than the nuclear carriers the Navy and Rickover had been building. As a naval officer McCain's ultimate commander was President Carter, but his real allegiance was to his bureaucracy, the Navy. And the Navy, or at least many of the big shots, wanted the biggest and best of everything (pardon my cynicism). McCain was an effective lobbyist with the Senate for the nuclear carriers, operating against the official policy of the administration. It was a little reminiscent of the "revolt of the admirals" of 1949, except that McCain and the others were able to achieve their goal with less publicity.
That's how the swamp works, and Sen. McCain was once a swamp dweller.
Friday, May 04, 2018
Wendell Berry Meet Westby Cooperative Creamery
Washington Monthly had a piece on the Westby:
Westby is the exception, not the rule. It’s a holdout from an earlier era when co-ops helped farmers and rural communities keep a much larger share of the nation’s wealth than they do today. Most everywhere else across rural America, the powerful cooperative movement has either faded or, worse, become co-opted by giant monopolies that prey off the very small-scale producers they’re supposed to protect. In that way, they reflect a broader change in the economy. While pretending to represent farmers’ interests, these co-ops in fact dictate prices to farmers just as Amazon dictates prices to book publishers and Walmart to its suppliers. Cooperative Creamery in WIWendell Berry writes for the Henry County Local on the recent spate of creameries and distribution channels dropping dairy farmers and includes this:
The person interviewed in these several articles who makes clear and admirable sense is Gary Rock, a dairyman, one of Dean’s terminated, in LaRue County: “He would like to see a base program across the nation that sets production quotas in line with market demands.” He thus sees through the problem to its solution. He is advocating the only solution to the problem of overproduction. Kentuckians don’t have to look far for an example of the necessary solution, for we had it in the Burley Tobacco Growers Co-operative Association. That organization effectively controlled production, maintained fair prices, and gave the same protections to small producers as to large ones. The history of the Burley Association disproves, as its membership conscientiously rejected, the “inevitability” of the destruction of family farms by agribusiness corporations.Of course Berry is wrong. Production wasn't controlled by the co-op, but by your faithful USDA/ASCS bureaucracy (operating in conjunction with the co-op). "Supply management", one term for the sort of program involved, is something Canada still uses for dairy and eggs and maple syrup. We dropped the tobacco and peanut supply management programs after I left, not that there's any relationship. :-)
Thursday, May 03, 2018
Working at USDA Is Injurious to Your Health?
Apparently USDA's South Building, where I used to work, is undergoing lead abatement work. (Makes sense, given when it was constructed.) Now employees are reporting health problems and tying it into the (non)availability of telework under Sec. Perdue's new policies. See this GovExec piece.
Wednesday, May 02, 2018
Farmers Feeling Blue
From an outlook post from Purdue:
The undercurrent of concern expressed by producers in March became more pronounced in April as the trade dispute with key export customer China continued. For example, compared to February of this year, producers in April were more negative about future agricultural export prospects. In February 2018, when asked to look ahead 5 years, 13 percent of producers said they expected agricultural exports to decline. When the same question was posed in April, the share of producers expecting lower exports increased to 17 percent.
Those Stuck-in-the-Past Old Fogeys
Like me, many elderly don't like change. But it varies, and we can surprise you if it's to our benefit:
"Elderly participants were most excited about the idea of autonomous vehicles, but only 36 percent of young adults were comfortable with the idea of riding in one. "
From the Rural Blog, discussing research into attitudes to self-driving cars.
"Elderly participants were most excited about the idea of autonomous vehicles, but only 36 percent of young adults were comfortable with the idea of riding in one. "
From the Rural Blog, discussing research into attitudes to self-driving cars.
Monday, April 30, 2018
Korean Tidbits: the Wall and High Speed Rail
Two bits from the blog on the Winter Olympics:
1 Korea once imitated China in many things, including building a wall (on top of the hill in this photo):
2 On high speed rail:
1 Korea once imitated China in many things, including building a wall (on top of the hill in this photo):
2 On high speed rail:
The amazing thing to me coming from California is that they built this 120 km extension and built six new stations in less than 4 years. So far, we have been working for 3+ years on a 191 km section of high speed rail (the first such project in the US) along highway 99 in the Central Valley (as part of an eventual system running from Los Angeles to San Francisco). So far, we have no continuous track or working trains at a projected cost of $10.6 B. To be fair, most of the rise in costs has been a pile of lawsuits by opponents designed to slow down progress and increase costs until they are so high that everyone will give up. Having ridden on these types of train in Italy and Japan, I hope we will persevere.
Saturday, April 28, 2018
The Enemies of the Old
Thin pages of magazines and particularly newspapers which cling together, so you go from page 3 to page 7.
Shoelaces which have to be knotted.
Collar buttons which no longer seem to fit through buttonholes.
Eyeglasses with tiny screws which come out.
Attractive nuisances when driving, distracting one.
Shoelaces which have to be knotted.
Collar buttons which no longer seem to fit through buttonholes.
Eyeglasses with tiny screws which come out.
Attractive nuisances when driving, distracting one.
Wednesday, April 25, 2018
The Mines of France
Interesting tweet here on the lasting effects of WWI, particularly the former trench lines and the explosives buried there. A quote: "Today, French government démineurs still recover about 900 tons of ordnance every year, & in Belgium the amount is around 200 tons."
Tuesday, April 24, 2018
Society Learns
I believe society learns (and forgets). I was struck by the learned reaction to the crack epidemic of the 1980's. Usage of crack declined over time, as young people saw its impact on the older. Since then, I've seen the learning phenomena in other areas.
One such area is comfort with technology. Consider the cellphone camera--there's now an assumption that everyone knows how to operate one. Strangers will ask you to take a picture of them with their cellphone. How many years did it take for society to learn this operation--10 years maybe? Society learning means a critical mass of people have all learned the same thing, creating the presumption that everyone knows/believes it. This can be technique, as with cellphones, or beliefs, as with the idea that crack is bad.
For someone on the fringes of society this can be difficult. I don't use my smartphone as a phone that much, so I'm conscious of having a fragile attachment to society. On the other hand, I know a lot about American history, and have experienced more of it than most everyone living, so there I feel a strong attachment.
One such area is comfort with technology. Consider the cellphone camera--there's now an assumption that everyone knows how to operate one. Strangers will ask you to take a picture of them with their cellphone. How many years did it take for society to learn this operation--10 years maybe? Society learning means a critical mass of people have all learned the same thing, creating the presumption that everyone knows/believes it. This can be technique, as with cellphones, or beliefs, as with the idea that crack is bad.
For someone on the fringes of society this can be difficult. I don't use my smartphone as a phone that much, so I'm conscious of having a fragile attachment to society. On the other hand, I know a lot about American history, and have experienced more of it than most everyone living, so there I feel a strong attachment.
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