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.
Saturday, February 09, 2019
Northam and Boyd
John Boyd, head of the National Black Farmers Association, met with Gov. Northam and offered support, according to this.
Why Blue America Is Blue--II
A Leap Too Far for the Army
As a former draftee I retain a deep skepticism of the wisdom of the US Army. So I would have said "I told you so" to the Army's plan for its "Iron Man suit", that is if I'd known about it, which I didn't.
As it turns out it was impracticable to integrate all the features desired into one outfit, so the Army appears to be separating the bits out to use individually.
As it turns out it was impracticable to integrate all the features desired into one outfit, so the Army appears to be separating the bits out to use individually.
Friday, February 08, 2019
The Marginal Utility of an Extra $50 Million
Jerry Brewer had an interesting column in the Washington Post about star basketball players seeking new teams. This was the bit which stood out to me:
In the doc [made by ESPN on Chris Paul's decision], he met with his friend, Jay-Z, the rap and entertainment mogul. Paul was telling him about various offers, ranging from $150 million to $200 million. Jay-Z listened and then spoke his mind. “Ain’t gonna change your life,” Jay-Z said about the offers. “You get 150, you get 200 — it’s the same thing. You’re gonna ride the same plane. You’re gonna wear the same sneakers. That [expletive] ain’t gonna change your life. One-fifty, 200 — same thing. . . . Your happiness, now that’s worth everything.”
Thursday, February 07, 2019
Why Blue America Is Blue I
From the Rural Blog:
That's part of the "Big Sort" which underlies our political divisions.
About 15 percent of Americans live in rural areas; the percentage has been declining for more than a century. The 35 percent of counties that have experienced long-term, significant population loss now have about 6.2 million residents, a third less than in 1950. Depopulation mostly started with young adults moving to cities or suburbs; the slide in population continued because fewer women of childbearing age were left in rural areas to boost the population"
That's part of the "Big Sort" which underlies our political divisions.
Monday, February 04, 2019
"Seeing the Whole Picture"
T.J. Stiles had some tweets participating in a discussion on Winston Churchill (Newt Gingrich had triggered it by comparing Trump's work habits to Churchill's, to which some, including Stiles, took issue).
He had this tweet in which he said it was important "to see the whole, real picture". I replied to the tweet, but have had some added thoughts.
"Seeing the whole picture" sounds good, but when you think about the meaning of the word, it's more complicated. A picture, whether painted or photographic, is basically a two-dimensional representation of reality; it's not a 360 degree holographic image. And it's static, representing a moment in time, not a movie showing the lapse of time.
I'm being nitpicky, of course. It's best to look at every corner of a picture, to look up close and stand way back, while remembering the limits of a picture in representing reality.
He had this tweet in which he said it was important "to see the whole, real picture". I replied to the tweet, but have had some added thoughts.
"Seeing the whole picture" sounds good, but when you think about the meaning of the word, it's more complicated. A picture, whether painted or photographic, is basically a two-dimensional representation of reality; it's not a 360 degree holographic image. And it's static, representing a moment in time, not a movie showing the lapse of time.
I'm being nitpicky, of course. It's best to look at every corner of a picture, to look up close and stand way back, while remembering the limits of a picture in representing reality.
Sunday, February 03, 2019
Simple Gifts--the Handshake
According to this, Quakers popularized the handshake in America. I can see them as disliking the bow or the tipping of the hat as perhaps signalling social differences. "Simple Gifts" is a Shaker song but the emotional basis is similar.
Saturday, February 02, 2019
What Historians Don't Know--the Case of Jill Lepore
So I got several books for Christmas. First I read "Becoming" which was very good. Then I read Carl Zimmer's "She Has Her Mother's Laugh", which also was very good. Now I'm ready for Jill Lepore's " These Truths, a History of the United States".
Lepore is a good writer. I think I've read most of her books and enjoyed them. She's more of a narrative historian than an analytical one, but she knows how to tell a story.
So she starts her history by imagining in the fall of 1787 readers of a New York newspaper seeing the language of the new constitution. By page ii of the Introduction she moves to the people of the United States considering whether to ratify it, "even as they went about baling hay, milling corn, tanning leather, singing hymns, and letting out the seams on last year's winter coats for mothers and fathers grown fatter, and letting down the hems, for children grown taller."
So what does she get wrong?
Obviously farmers weren't baling hay in 1787. (I know I've seen a similar error somewhere recently, forget where, might even have been Lepore in another form reusing the same material. )
I'd also challenge the idea of "milling" corn. I find to my surprise that wikipedia covers it, but I'd be more comfortable with the wording: "grinding corn".
As the proportion of Americans who farm, or grew up on farms, dwindles, the understanding of that way of life starts to vanish.
Lepore is a good writer. I think I've read most of her books and enjoyed them. She's more of a narrative historian than an analytical one, but she knows how to tell a story.
So she starts her history by imagining in the fall of 1787 readers of a New York newspaper seeing the language of the new constitution. By page ii of the Introduction she moves to the people of the United States considering whether to ratify it, "even as they went about baling hay, milling corn, tanning leather, singing hymns, and letting out the seams on last year's winter coats for mothers and fathers grown fatter, and letting down the hems, for children grown taller."
So what does she get wrong?
Obviously farmers weren't baling hay in 1787. (I know I've seen a similar error somewhere recently, forget where, might even have been Lepore in another form reusing the same material. )
I'd also challenge the idea of "milling" corn. I find to my surprise that wikipedia covers it, but I'd be more comfortable with the wording: "grinding corn".
As the proportion of Americans who farm, or grew up on farms, dwindles, the understanding of that way of life starts to vanish.
Friday, February 01, 2019
ERS on US Agriculture: the Case of Hay
Farm Policy has a post summarizing a recent ERS report on the characteristics of farms in the US.
There's the points which are not new to me: when considering total value of production the dominance of the family farm, except in the case of very high value crops and beef, especially what are known as "large-scale family farms", which are the modal and median farms in the ERS categorization Except, except in the case of hay and poultry.
Because poultry is, I think, dominated by contract farming I won't comment on it. But hay is interesting--I suspect in part it representatives the last gasp of small scale dairy farms, where the production pattern is harvesting hay in the summer and feeding the hay in the winter. But dairy itself is dominated by the large-scale family farms, likely meaning their cows don't graze the pastures, but have their feed delivered to them in their barns/feed lots. In that context a small farm can find a niche space--growing and harvesting hay is not that difficult to combine with getting income from elsewhere, like social security or off-farm employment. And the the big dairies provide a market.
There's the points which are not new to me: when considering total value of production the dominance of the family farm, except in the case of very high value crops and beef, especially what are known as "large-scale family farms", which are the modal and median farms in the ERS categorization Except, except in the case of hay and poultry.
Because poultry is, I think, dominated by contract farming I won't comment on it. But hay is interesting--I suspect in part it representatives the last gasp of small scale dairy farms, where the production pattern is harvesting hay in the summer and feeding the hay in the winter. But dairy itself is dominated by the large-scale family farms, likely meaning their cows don't graze the pastures, but have their feed delivered to them in their barns/feed lots. In that context a small farm can find a niche space--growing and harvesting hay is not that difficult to combine with getting income from elsewhere, like social security or off-farm employment. And the the big dairies provide a market.
Wednesday, January 30, 2019
Agreeing with Althouse on the Past
I've been following Ann Althouse's blog for years. In the last few years I think she's become more conservative, often defending President Trump. I also think she tends to find hidden motives buried in people's statements and in news article, explaining things by those motives rather than the simpler explanation offered by Murphy's Law and taking things at face value.
But the other day she and her son collaborated on a post with which I can agree. Basically they're remembering a past when liberals and the left were vehement in defense of free speech. Mario Savio and the Berkeley Free Speech Movement come to mind, though definitely before her son's time.
All things being equal, I think I generally lean towards free speech (joined the ACLU back in the days of the Nazis marching in Skokie) and am reluctant to see boycotts, even though they are a part of our American heritage (boycotts of British goods led up to the Revolution).
But the other day she and her son collaborated on a post with which I can agree. Basically they're remembering a past when liberals and the left were vehement in defense of free speech. Mario Savio and the Berkeley Free Speech Movement come to mind, though definitely before her son's time.
All things being equal, I think I generally lean towards free speech (joined the ACLU back in the days of the Nazis marching in Skokie) and am reluctant to see boycotts, even though they are a part of our American heritage (boycotts of British goods led up to the Revolution).
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