Conversing with a relative, older than I, this morning. She remembered the newsreels of the Capitol being lighted up again after the end of WWII (maybe VE day?). She'd lived in the DC area until about 1943-4. I asked if she remembered air raid drills--she did, many of them, in fear of German air raids.
My memory for some things is not the best, so I'm sure we had some a-bomb drills in school, but I don't remember a lot of them, or indeed any specific one. Those drills were in fear of a Soviet nuclear attack.
Today students get active shooter drills, many of them. Unfortunately the chances of their ever encountering an active shooter, although minuscule, are significantly greater than the chance of a German air raid on DC, but perhaps not as great as a Soviet attack on DC was (except I lived 300 miles from DC).
Drills--the ones I really remember are the penmanship ones, perhaps another drill destined for the wastebasket of history.
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 27, 2019
Friday, May 24, 2019
MFP II Addenda
Via Farm Policy News further details on MFP II--based on the USDA big shots' discussion. The key point I take from it:
"Referring to the market facilitation program, Undersecretary Northey indicated that, “So these payments are not designed to be a market loss payment. They are a market facilitation payment. It’s not going to perfectly reflect what some producers feel the loss of these markets have been.”
FWIW I don't know what the words "market facilitation" mean, at least not as applied to the $14.5 billion part of the program.
Thursday, May 23, 2019
MFP II Announced
NY Times writes about trade policy and Trump's trade war, including the announcement of $16 billion in MFP II.
Chris Clayton's article at DTN has the details on the program, which has three tranches and uses county payment rates among other differences from MFP I. He also notes Trump's lie about the history of farm income:
Chris Clayton's article at DTN has the details on the program, which has three tranches and uses county payment rates among other differences from MFP I. He also notes Trump's lie about the history of farm income:
"President Trump reiterated, falsely, that farmers have seen a 20-year steady decline of income, despite farm income peaking in 2013. As a key part of the president's rural base, Trump reiterated, "They [farmers] are patriots. They stood up and they were with me. They didn't say 'Oh we shouldn't do this because we're going to have a bad year. They have had 20 bad years if you really look."The county payment rate will be new and a challenge to implement. [Update: When I wrote this, I was wrong. I was thinking county/crop payment rates, which I never dealt with back in the day, but the fact is FSA has had experience with them, both through price supports and the new 21st century programs which I don't understand. However, the idea is one country price for all crop acreage, regardless of the crop planted. That, I think, raises new problems. If all farmers in the county raise crops in the same proportion, it could work. But that's a big "if". Say a country produces corn and soybeans 50/50, so the county rate is based on that proportion. But take a farmer who plants only corn, which I'm assuming is less affected by the trade war, she will get a higher rate than she "deserves". Conversely the farmer who plants only soybeans will be screwed. (Obviously I'm using extreme examples.)]
Who Gets Chosen as VP?
Scott Adams blogged this:
To go over recent history:
"VP candidate traditionally boring, watered-down version of POTUSI'm afraid he needs a course on American history. Traditionally the vice presidential candidate is different than the presidential candidate--it's called "balancing the ticket". There's even a wikipedia page for it.
- Biden was more boring than President Obama
- Now Biden has to select his own VP, that’s even more boring"
To go over recent history:
- Trump chose a VP who had extensive DC experience and personally was very different and was from a different region.
- Obama chose a VP who had extensive DC experience and personally was very different (old, white, ebullient, not buttoned up)and was from a different region..
- GWBush chose a VP who had extensive DC experience and personally was very different (older, buttoned up) and was from a different region..
- Clinton chose a VP who was indeed of the same age and region but who had extensive DC experience.
- GHWB chose a VP who presented a fresh face from a different region.
- Reagan chose a VP who had extensive DC experience and personally was very different and was from a different region.
- Carter chose a VP who had extensive DC experience and was from a different region.
- Nixon chose a VP who was a fresh face and was from a different region.
I think Mr. Adams just went for a cheap attack on Biden.
Wednesday, May 22, 2019
Women in Government--the Rate of Social Change
We're coming up on the 100th anniversary of the passage of women's suffrage in the U.S.
My cousin noted that yesterday the voters of Ipswich, MA elected women to fill 3 of the 5 seats on the town's select board, a first for the town. The Post, I think, had an front page article on the Nevada legislature which is the first in the nation to have a female majority.
I think it's worth reflecting on the 100 years as an indicator of the limits of legislative change. It's a caution to liberals
Tuesday, May 21, 2019
A New Market Facilitation Program?
Lots of talk about a new and bigger program to compensate for depressed prices due to Trump's trade war with China.
Will it just be the MFP for 2018 updated for 2019? Maybe, maybe not. There's talk of including prevented planting because of the widespread flooding and the very slow progress of corn planting. We'll see.
[Updated--see Clayton's piece.]
Will it just be the MFP for 2018 updated for 2019? Maybe, maybe not. There's talk of including prevented planting because of the widespread flooding and the very slow progress of corn planting. We'll see.
[Updated--see Clayton's piece.]
Monday, May 20, 2019
Countervailing Judicial Power
Ezra Klein has a piece on Vos about "countervailing power", a concept from John Kenneth Galbraith. Briefly, he saw "big labor" as countering "big business", and "big government" as an essential balancing player. So Klein summarizes his argument:
" If the [political] question is framed as socialism or capitalism, it’s difficult to state the obvious: We may need a bit more socialism now, even if that may create a need for more capitalism later.I've always liked the Galbraith's concept. I'm struck by a tweet from Orin Kerr, suggesting that if conservatives become dominant in the judiciary, it will evoke a countervailing response from legal academia.
But if it’s framed as the balance of countervailing powers, that truth becomes more obvious. There is no end state in a liberal democracy. There is only the constant act of balancing and rebalancing. The forces that need to be strengthened today may need to be weakened tomorrow. But first they need to be strengthened today."
Saturday, May 18, 2019
National Service Concerns
Some discussion these days from Dem candidates about "national service".
I guess I'm generally favorable to the idea, but with reservations, based on my experience with the draft.
The draft was good for:
I guess I'm generally favorable to the idea, but with reservations, based on my experience with the draft.
The draft was good for:
- getting me out of a rut (different people have different ruts, but I suspect the recent decline in American geographical mobility is partly the result of the ending of the draft).
- exposing me to people from across the country and diverse backgrounds
- challenging me to endure and master new experiences: like basic training, like serving as an instructor.
Those benefits came because the draft was not voluntary. I'd worry that a non-military national service would not have the diversity nor the challenges. Once you allow the person to choose, you start to lose some of the necessary difficulty. Even in the Army, once I was past basic my cohort and co-workers were much more similar to me.
The other vulnerability of a new national service program would be, I think, the difficulty of finding a purpose to the program's work. While we draftees disliked the military, we knew it was important and/or significant. But we were essentially unskilled labor, cannon fodder, and weren't qualified for much more than that. And we got paid accordingly, so we were cheap. So what work requires cheap unskilled labor and is self-evidently important?
If the proponents can come up with an answer to that question, we can then talk about instituting "national service". Until then, we need more focused things like Job Corps and Americorps.
Friday, May 17, 2019
Powerline and Althouse Wouldn't Qualify as Immigrants
Nor would almost all liberals blogging and tweeting. See this NY Times calculator.
I scored 18 points, where 30 is required. (The key, of course, in my case is age, income, and my college major.)
(Updated: I'm referring to the people behind the two blogs I follow which are on the right, although Ann Althouse might quarrel with that categorization.)
I scored 18 points, where 30 is required. (The key, of course, in my case is age, income, and my college major.)
(Updated: I'm referring to the people behind the two blogs I follow which are on the right, although Ann Althouse might quarrel with that categorization.)
Thursday, May 16, 2019
Another Round of MFP Payments?
There's been discussion this week, and a promise by the President, that farmers will receive more money to compensate for losses due to the trade war with China.
That's well and good, but I'm not sure of the nitty-gritty. Let me backtrack:
For the first MFP I initially thought USDA was tapping Section 32 funds. Did a bit of research on that possibility. (Roughly, Section 32 provides authority for USDA to use a portion of certain tariff revenues for certain aid to agriculture. It dates back to the New Deal days.) But that turned out to be a mistake of mine. Instead USDA tapped CCC's borrowing authority, which also dates back to the New Deal. CCC has authority to borrow up to $30 billion from the Treasury and spent it to aid agriculture in certain ways..
I've tried, half-heartedly, to find out how much borrowing authority CCC has left. When it's tapped out, CCC has to stop its operations until Congress passes legislation to replenish the authority. (I'm skating on the edge of my comprehension of these matters, but I do have a clear memory of a time when CCC ran out of authority just before we were to make deficiency payments, notably because my screwup cost the taxpayers a few million dollars. (A story for another day.)
Bottom line, I didn't find the answer.
That's well and good, but I'm not sure of the nitty-gritty. Let me backtrack:
For the first MFP I initially thought USDA was tapping Section 32 funds. Did a bit of research on that possibility. (Roughly, Section 32 provides authority for USDA to use a portion of certain tariff revenues for certain aid to agriculture. It dates back to the New Deal days.) But that turned out to be a mistake of mine. Instead USDA tapped CCC's borrowing authority, which also dates back to the New Deal. CCC has authority to borrow up to $30 billion from the Treasury and spent it to aid agriculture in certain ways..
I've tried, half-heartedly, to find out how much borrowing authority CCC has left. When it's tapped out, CCC has to stop its operations until Congress passes legislation to replenish the authority. (I'm skating on the edge of my comprehension of these matters, but I do have a clear memory of a time when CCC ran out of authority just before we were to make deficiency payments, notably because my screwup cost the taxpayers a few million dollars. (A story for another day.)
Bottom line, I didn't find the answer.
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