Who is appointed and confirmed to the Supreme Court is very significant. My spouse is very concerned. The senators who seem to be key are Collins and Murkowski on the Republican side, who presumably would not want an appointee certain to overturn Roe. And on the Democratic side, the WV, ND, MO, and IN senators who might want to polish their non-partisan credentials by voting for a Trump appointee.
Ideologues on both sides want to oust the RINOs and DINOs in their party. The more they do so (no Jacob Javits or Hugh Scott in today's Republican party) the more power the remaining individuals have.
It's similar to the maneuvering within the Court itself. Back in the old days, Sandra Day O'Connor was the swing vote, and Kennedy was just a slightly less conservative than his fellows on the right. O'Connor retires, promoting Kennedy into the swing position. Kennedy retires, and the conventional wisdom is that Chief Justice Roberts becomes the swing.
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.
Thursday, June 28, 2018
Wednesday, June 27, 2018
Unions and Marketing Agreements
The Supreme Court struck down the ability of unions to charge fees to non-members for service rendered in representing them to management.
A couple comments:
A couple comments:
- FSA in DC became unionized before I retired. As a manager, it was another pain, another hoop to work through. But it wasn't really that big of a deal, as I remember it. My suspicion is that the union has become less effective over the years because of turnover in its members, meaning the original members who pushed to get the vote have retired and/or got tired. That's the way humans do. (Might be wrong, particularly as issues like Trump's attitude towards civil servants and more importantly Perdue's proposals for reorganization have come to the fore.)
- As I've been distracted by working on a book for a relative I've not read the decision or evern detailed discussion of it. But, not allowing that to stop me, I'd think the principles of the decision spell trouble for the agricultural marketing order/promotion system. I'd think the argument is the same: being required to pay fees to a union or promotion fees to a promotion organization is a violation of free speech and free association.
That's not to say I like the fact. While sometimes I lean libertarian I do think the government can appropriately encourage the formation of groups, like unions and marketing groups.
Tuesday, June 26, 2018
Chang and Eng or the Bonds of Affection
What's the more appropriate reference for today's political situation?
Is it Change and Eng, the original Siamese twins, forced to accommodate each other by their bond of flesh, or is it Lincoln's "bonds of affection", as he pleaded in his first inaugural address?
IMHO we're stuck with each other, and we just have to get along (with each other).
Is it Change and Eng, the original Siamese twins, forced to accommodate each other by their bond of flesh, or is it Lincoln's "bonds of affection", as he pleaded in his first inaugural address?
IMHO we're stuck with each other, and we just have to get along (with each other).
Monday, June 25, 2018
Chimps Jumping Up and Down
Lots of discussion on social media about Red Hen: pro or con civility.
Personally I'm pro, partly because I prejudiced against conflict and partly because of a viewpoint Megan McArdle voiced in a series of tweets: the most important thing is to take back the House in 2018 and the presidency in 2020 and everything should be judged by the measure of whether it helps or hurts achieving those goals. IMHO the current dispute is a distraction.
Drawing back a bit to gain more perspective, I'm reminded of descriptions, perhaps video, of two groups of chimpanzees facing off against each other, each jumping up and down and trying to intimidate the other. That seems to me to be the underlying dynamic of the current conflict: some on the left like Maxine Waters want to be nasty to all Trump supporters, some on the right claim the mantle of innocence.
Personally I'm pro, partly because I prejudiced against conflict and partly because of a viewpoint Megan McArdle voiced in a series of tweets: the most important thing is to take back the House in 2018 and the presidency in 2020 and everything should be judged by the measure of whether it helps or hurts achieving those goals. IMHO the current dispute is a distraction.
Drawing back a bit to gain more perspective, I'm reminded of descriptions, perhaps video, of two groups of chimpanzees facing off against each other, each jumping up and down and trying to intimidate the other. That seems to me to be the underlying dynamic of the current conflict: some on the left like Maxine Waters want to be nasty to all Trump supporters, some on the right claim the mantle of innocence.
Changing Standards: 10K for Bar Mitzvah
Carolyn Hax does an advice column in the Post, which I read. (What can I say, I used to read Ann Landers and Dear Abby.)
She answered a letter from someone worrying about the cost of a bar mitzvah. They'd budgeted $10,000 for it, but the husband's parents wanted to go higher--$40K IIRC. The in-laws threatened to boycott if they didn't get their way. Husband told his parents that was their choice.
Hax applauded the answer.
As a (former) country boy I was stunned. Who is willing to pay $10K for what I understand to be an elaborate birthday party/baptism celebration? Better to invest the money for college.
Then, I'm a geezer.
She answered a letter from someone worrying about the cost of a bar mitzvah. They'd budgeted $10,000 for it, but the husband's parents wanted to go higher--$40K IIRC. The in-laws threatened to boycott if they didn't get their way. Husband told his parents that was their choice.
Hax applauded the answer.
As a (former) country boy I was stunned. Who is willing to pay $10K for what I understand to be an elaborate birthday party/baptism celebration? Better to invest the money for college.
Then, I'm a geezer.
Sunday, June 24, 2018
Like Marrying Like: Petri and Stromberg
Ms. Petri usually does well in her humor columns, but Saturday's was very good. Then I see this notice in the NYTimes, explaining the marriage.
In the old days Mr. Stromberg would have married his secretary, who would have been his better half. Now he marries a columnist, who's still his better half. I can't complain, since the marriage produces the column, but it's assortative mating. Unfortunately it reduces social mobility.
But read Petri's piece.
In the old days Mr. Stromberg would have married his secretary, who would have been his better half. Now he marries a columnist, who's still his better half. I can't complain, since the marriage produces the column, but it's assortative mating. Unfortunately it reduces social mobility.
But read Petri's piece.
Saturday, June 23, 2018
How To Forget Occam's Razor: a Conservative Example
Scott Johnson at Powerline has a nice example of logic discussing an Andy McCarthy piece (which I did not read). He believes the "fix" was in from the beginning for the investigation into the Clinton emails (yes, the conservatives are still digging over that--pretty soon they'll be tying it into the Clinton Filegate scandal). His reasoning: Obama said Clinton didn't have any bad intent in using a private email server. Comey listened to Obama and said the same thing.
That's convincing, isn't it?
But apply Occam's Razor. Which is simpler:
That's convincing, isn't it?
But apply Occam's Razor. Which is simpler:
- There was no evidence of evil intent and two men of different political parties came independently to that conclusion.
- There was evidence of evil intent, Obama corruptly said there wasn't, Comey ran an investigation using FBI agents, usually considered conservative which was really just for show, made sure he didn't find any smoking gun evidence, and agreed with Obama.
The second alternative is simpler only if you believe in Clinton's guilt from the beginning.
Friday, June 22, 2018
The Improbability of Sustaining Sanctions on North Korea
I'm no expert in this area, but the Post had an article on Kim's visit to China which caused me to think.
Based on our experience with sanctions against various countries: Iran, North Korea, Russia, etc., I draw this lesson: to some extent imposing sanctions is a moral cascade--there's a triggering event which gets leaders of countries/the ruling class upset and determined that "something must be done". The answer is imposing sanctions. Sometimes the sanctions are more for show, rather like arresting a few prostitutes used to be back in the middle of the last century, or cracking down on gambling in a gin joint in Casablanca. But sometimes the outrage is enough to support strong sanctions, sanctions that hurt.
This seems to have been the result with Iran before the nuclear deal and North Korea after the tests of long range missiles and the hydrogen bomb. It's hard, however, to sustain outrage. It's particularly hard when the leaders who imposed the sanctions, Xi and Trump, are making nice with the leader of the sanctioned company. The sanctions may be in effect still, but the bureaucrats who have the job of enforcing them aren't going to have their hearts in it. They know there's not going to be calls from the leader's office asking them "what did you do today to make life hard for North Korea."
The analysis of the Singapore summit has been that Trump didn't give Kim anything which couldn't be reversed in the future, except the first meeting with the US president. But that analysis will be wrong if the sanctions are slowly eroding because of the change of attitude at the top,
Based on our experience with sanctions against various countries: Iran, North Korea, Russia, etc., I draw this lesson: to some extent imposing sanctions is a moral cascade--there's a triggering event which gets leaders of countries/the ruling class upset and determined that "something must be done". The answer is imposing sanctions. Sometimes the sanctions are more for show, rather like arresting a few prostitutes used to be back in the middle of the last century, or cracking down on gambling in a gin joint in Casablanca. But sometimes the outrage is enough to support strong sanctions, sanctions that hurt.
This seems to have been the result with Iran before the nuclear deal and North Korea after the tests of long range missiles and the hydrogen bomb. It's hard, however, to sustain outrage. It's particularly hard when the leaders who imposed the sanctions, Xi and Trump, are making nice with the leader of the sanctioned company. The sanctions may be in effect still, but the bureaucrats who have the job of enforcing them aren't going to have their hearts in it. They know there's not going to be calls from the leader's office asking them "what did you do today to make life hard for North Korea."
The analysis of the Singapore summit has been that Trump didn't give Kim anything which couldn't be reversed in the future, except the first meeting with the US president. But that analysis will be wrong if the sanctions are slowly eroding because of the change of attitude at the top,
Thursday, June 21, 2018
Caring for the Past: Cemeteries
The Rural Blog had this post--as rural communities dwindle in population there's less and less support for the institutions of the past. I've run into this in my own life: while the churches and cemeteries where my ancestors worshiped and are buried are still active, I can't be sure that's going to be true in another generation.
Personally, I'm going to be cremated. Because I have no children no one will miss my gravestone. But the church my Rippey ancestors helped found no longer has enough members to support a minister; it has been combined with another church. My parents church was already combined with two others when I was growing up. As the mainline denominations lose members the outlook is grim.
I think there is no answer. We can't preserve everything from the past, so many churches and cemeteries will gradually disappear, just as the evidence of the ways of life of previous residents of this continent have already disappeared.
Personally, I'm going to be cremated. Because I have no children no one will miss my gravestone. But the church my Rippey ancestors helped found no longer has enough members to support a minister; it has been combined with another church. My parents church was already combined with two others when I was growing up. As the mainline denominations lose members the outlook is grim.
I think there is no answer. We can't preserve everything from the past, so many churches and cemeteries will gradually disappear, just as the evidence of the ways of life of previous residents of this continent have already disappeared.
Tuesday, June 19, 2018
Updating Voting Lists--What SCOTUS May Have Missed
The Supreme Court has ruled on the methods Ohio uses to update their voting registers, deleting names if they don't vote and don't respond to a postcard. Good liberals are up in arms, wishy washy types like Kevin Drum are blah.
ASCS/FSA had a voting register, essentially a subset of the overall name and address file. I never knew how well we maintained it, whether the county offices followed through on their instructions. Basically, they were supposed to, once a year, do a mailing with the request for the postal service to report back any items where the address was wrong. I don't know how well the postal service did this; I'm a bit suspicious of the quality. As far as I know, USPS still has the service though you have to pay a surcharge for the special handling. As far as I know, Ohio doesn't use the approach nor did it become an issue in the litigation. Just skimming the news accounts of the Court's decision it seems the debate was over whether it was rational to assume that a voter who failed to return a postcard had changed her address or was just not responsive to postal reminders.
It seems to me there are two aspects to the voting register: one is whether the register has an accurate mailing address; the other is whether the individual citizen is eligible to vote. And it seems that Ohio and SCOTUS, perhaps many states, are conflating the two, likely because in the old days people didn't move.
Let's start at the beginning:
ASCS/FSA had a voting register, essentially a subset of the overall name and address file. I never knew how well we maintained it, whether the county offices followed through on their instructions. Basically, they were supposed to, once a year, do a mailing with the request for the postal service to report back any items where the address was wrong. I don't know how well the postal service did this; I'm a bit suspicious of the quality. As far as I know, USPS still has the service though you have to pay a surcharge for the special handling. As far as I know, Ohio doesn't use the approach nor did it become an issue in the litigation. Just skimming the news accounts of the Court's decision it seems the debate was over whether it was rational to assume that a voter who failed to return a postcard had changed her address or was just not responsive to postal reminders.
It seems to me there are two aspects to the voting register: one is whether the register has an accurate mailing address; the other is whether the individual citizen is eligible to vote. And it seems that Ohio and SCOTUS, perhaps many states, are conflating the two, likely because in the old days people didn't move.
Let's start at the beginning:
- a person turns 18 and registers to vote, providing whatever proof of identity and age is currently required by the state, whatever proof of "legal residence" (i.e., tying the citizen to a voting precinct) is required, and the current mailing address. Now in most cases the two addresses will be one and the same, but they needn't be. (Actually, these days the mailing address should be replaced or amplified by email address/smartphone number--it's contact information.)
- Now, the manager of the registry can update the mailing address independently of the legal residence. They can ask the USPS for changes of address, or do as ASCS used to.
- When the person comes into vote, if there's no indication their legal residence has changed (because their mailing address is out-of-date or does not match the residence) they can vote.
- If there is an indication the legal address may have changed, the manager can go through a process to validate the change. IMO logically you'd do an online-verification, ensuring the citizen has only the one legal residence recorded and thus can vote only in one precinct.
- The only reason to drop the citizen from the voting rolls (other than death) would be if the citizenship is revoked or eligibility to vote is lost due to a criminal conviction or declaration of incompetence.
As it stands for Ohio voters dropped from the rolls, they have to go through the process of re-enrolling, like photo-id.
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