"I see a group of people for whom partisan polarization wholly and completely defeated patriotism. I see a group of people so completely convinced that Hillary Clinton was the enemy that they were willing to make common cause with an actual adversary power at a time it was attacking their country to defeat her. To me, it matters whether the conduct violated the law only in the pedestrian sense of determining the available remedies for it—and in guiding whether and how we might have to change our laws to prevent such conduct in the future.
Ben Wittes on Mueller
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.
Sunday, April 28, 2019
Friday, April 26, 2019
Taxes--the Rise of Intermediaries
There have long been tax-preparation services. H&R Block was an early one. One of the brothers who founded the firm, Henry Bloch, died recently. His obituary in the Post says this:
business boomed in the mid-1950s as the Internal Revenue Service began discontinuing its free tax-preparation services, and the Bloch brothers began advertising their discount tax service in a local paper.
Who knew the IRS once did returns for free? Now of course H&R Block is one of the firms lobbying Congress to be sure that IRS doesn't resume the service,.
Thursday, April 25, 2019
Slaves in the North
Discussing with a relative the existence of slavery in the North.
I mentioned the idea/fact that New England settlers sometimes swapped Indian slaves (captured in war, particularly IIRC King Philips War) for black slaves by sending the former to British Caribbean colonies.
On a practical if very cynical basis, it makes sense. Society recognized that when you won a war people were part of the booty. Women to rape, men to work as slaves if they weren't killed. (No conventions about treatment of prisoners of war back then.) But the problem with captures in the wars between the colonists and the Native Americans was it was relatively easy for the captives to escape and return to their people. White colonists often did this, so would Native Americans. The practical answer was to ship your war captives away to someplace where they were foreigners, where society was foreign.
(I suspect some part of the dynamic accounting for the capture and sale of black slaves to the slave traders was similar. Keep your captives with you as slaves and they escape; sell them to the European trader who could provide weapons, etc. and it was a win. Not for the slave.)
I mentioned the idea/fact that New England settlers sometimes swapped Indian slaves (captured in war, particularly IIRC King Philips War) for black slaves by sending the former to British Caribbean colonies.
On a practical if very cynical basis, it makes sense. Society recognized that when you won a war people were part of the booty. Women to rape, men to work as slaves if they weren't killed. (No conventions about treatment of prisoners of war back then.) But the problem with captures in the wars between the colonists and the Native Americans was it was relatively easy for the captives to escape and return to their people. White colonists often did this, so would Native Americans. The practical answer was to ship your war captives away to someplace where they were foreigners, where society was foreign.
(I suspect some part of the dynamic accounting for the capture and sale of black slaves to the slave traders was similar. Keep your captives with you as slaves and they escape; sell them to the European trader who could provide weapons, etc. and it was a win. Not for the slave.)
Wednesday, April 24, 2019
The Fruits of the Garden
Got my first planting in the garden in around March 15. Spent a lot of time last fall trying to get spinach started and thriving. Now we're being inundated with spinach (fall) and scallions (spring) and the spring lettuce is now big enough to eat the thinings.
Thinking about my garden got me wondering about the White House garden. Turns out it's still in operation, and you can tour it, though you've missed the spring one. You can see photos at Instagram, whatever that is, although very few of the photos there show the vegetable garden. Here's one, though. I suspect neither Melania nor Barron spend much time there--the regularity of the planting suggests a good Park Service bureaucrat is caring for it.
Tuesday, April 23, 2019
Thanks for a Beautiful Day
Today was about perfect: sunny, low 80's, low humidity, the trees are green.
The garden is doing well, although we've got a surplus of spinach from the plants which over-wintered and over which I sweated last fall.
I'm in no mood to discuss Trump, or impeachment, or bureaucracy.
Enjoy.
The garden is doing well, although we've got a surplus of spinach from the plants which over-wintered and over which I sweated last fall.
I'm in no mood to discuss Trump, or impeachment, or bureaucracy.
Enjoy.
Monday, April 22, 2019
The Proliferation of Popular Culture References
My wife and I subscribe to Netflix and Amazon Prime and watch regularly. Maybe I'm just feeling out of it these days, but it seems to me there are more and more popular culture references in what we're watching, more and more of which I don't get.
Sometimes it's musical, which since I've not kept up with popular music since the Beatles it's understandable I'll miss them. Often it's what critics like to call "homages" or "call-outs" to other programming. Those I miss as well.
I think it's "Billions", the third season of which we just finished, which made me particularly aware of this. It's possible it's just the writers of that show who are especially into references to other pieces of popular culture, but it seems more pervasive. Although there are fewer directors' commentaries these days now that Netflix is shifting from DVD's to streaming, they're another way I become conscious of things I'm missing.
It seems a logical trend in our culture: the more time people spend watching and listening, the more likely creators will cross-reference things. I suspect the trend also means fewer references to the older sources of reference material: the classics and the Bible.
Sometimes it's musical, which since I've not kept up with popular music since the Beatles it's understandable I'll miss them. Often it's what critics like to call "homages" or "call-outs" to other programming. Those I miss as well.
I think it's "Billions", the third season of which we just finished, which made me particularly aware of this. It's possible it's just the writers of that show who are especially into references to other pieces of popular culture, but it seems more pervasive. Although there are fewer directors' commentaries these days now that Netflix is shifting from DVD's to streaming, they're another way I become conscious of things I'm missing.
It seems a logical trend in our culture: the more time people spend watching and listening, the more likely creators will cross-reference things. I suspect the trend also means fewer references to the older sources of reference material: the classics and the Bible.
Sunday, April 21, 2019
The Continuing Effects of the Irish Potato Famine
Stumbled across a piece on the Irish potato famine. Its effects varied in different parts of the island, hitting particularly hard in the south and west, areas which were much more dependent on the potato and had fewer other resources.
While many died and many left, others moved within Ireland, moving north and east to Belfast and Dublin. For the former, the writer observed that where Belfast used to be almost entirely Protestant, because of the internal migrants being Catholic it became a more divided place. (I'm not sure whether Catholics also moved to other places in Ulster.) Those divisions led to the "Troubles" of the last pat of the 20th century, which led to the importance of the peace agreement in British and Irish politics, which led to the Brexit conundrum Incidentally, it reminds me of the anecdote about the horse who get hung up jumping a fence.
While many died and many left, others moved within Ireland, moving north and east to Belfast and Dublin. For the former, the writer observed that where Belfast used to be almost entirely Protestant, because of the internal migrants being Catholic it became a more divided place. (I'm not sure whether Catholics also moved to other places in Ulster.) Those divisions led to the "Troubles" of the last pat of the 20th century, which led to the importance of the peace agreement in British and Irish politics, which led to the Brexit conundrum Incidentally, it reminds me of the anecdote about the horse who get hung up jumping a fence.
Saturday, April 20, 2019
The Dilemma of Trump's Appointees
The Mueller report has shown the tightrope which Trump's appointees must walk, particularly in the case of Don McGahn. It's a question of how far you go in appeasing your boss, versus compromising your own ethics.
As an ex-bureaucrat who had some people among my superiors whom I didn't much respect, I've some empathy for the McGahns of the current administration. That perhaps leads me to undeserved sympathy for AG Barr. He's gotten criticism for his summary of the Mueller report, spinning the conclusions to be the most favorable to his boss. That's deserved. But we need to remember that he did succeed in getting the Mueller report released, although with redactions. That's not something I would have predicted back when he was nominated. It's possible he regards the release as serving the public interest, a release important enough to justify his tactics in getting the release past his boss. (Will Trump start blasting Barr for the release? Maybe.)
As an ex-bureaucrat who had some people among my superiors whom I didn't much respect, I've some empathy for the McGahns of the current administration. That perhaps leads me to undeserved sympathy for AG Barr. He's gotten criticism for his summary of the Mueller report, spinning the conclusions to be the most favorable to his boss. That's deserved. But we need to remember that he did succeed in getting the Mueller report released, although with redactions. That's not something I would have predicted back when he was nominated. It's possible he regards the release as serving the public interest, a release important enough to justify his tactics in getting the release past his boss. (Will Trump start blasting Barr for the release? Maybe.)
Vertical Integration for Dairy?
A comment in this twitter thread suggested that some form of vertical integration would be coming for the dairy industry, as it has for poultry and hogs.
That makes sense to me. Dairy is under more and more pressure--the other day I found not 3 but 5 thermos of "milk" at the Starbucks counter--to the usual nonfat, milk, and half and half they'd added soy and another "milk" which I forget now.
With the divorcing of cows from pasture and the proliferation of robotic milkers the capital cost is only going up.
And finally there seems to be closer ties between outlets, like Walmart, and their suppliers.
Maybe another 15 or so years there will be only smaller, "truly organic" dairies feeding a niche market and perhaps encouraging tourists who experience nostalgia, and the big operations with 5 digits worth of cows.
Friday, April 19, 2019
The Answer Is Google, Always Google
Supposedly intelligent people still aren't current with the modern world. Two instances:
- Mr. Kushner tried to find out the name of the Russian ambassador to the US (that's in the Mueller report) in late 2016. So he called someone who might know.
- Scott Adams tweeted out a reward of $100 to the first person who could tell him how to change the footnotes in a Word document from "i, ii, iii..." to "1, 2, 3".
In both cases simply typing the question into Google would have produced the answer in a matter of seconds.
I hope our young are learning this lesson better than their seniors (both of whom could be my children, God forbid).
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