The Volokh Conspiracy had a post urging adoption of a point system to fairly distribute the Covid-19 vaccine. I like the idea. The military used a point system for demobilizing troops after World War II which seemed fair. It's a way to handle cases where multiple factors are at work (i.e., an essential worker with underlying condition).
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, December 13, 2020
Saturday, December 12, 2020
Gripe With the Met--Membership Accounts
I've a gripe with the Metropolitan Museum of Art, specifically its website, and more specifically the way it handles membership. I know I've run into similar problems elsewhere; I think one was the Wolf Trap website, possibly the New Yorker as well. And my guess is that it's a result of hidden silos: when they got into the internet, separate departments did separate developments. For the Met, the website is focused on visitors, describing exhibitions, how to visit, etc. and how to become a member. What's missing is any focus on existing members--to find your member account info you have to go to the shopping option.
It makes sense that the accountants would worry about renewals, etc. while the museum people just worry about getting people in the door.
But, if I were emperor, my edict would be that any website for an organization would have a "Log in/Your Account" icon in the upper right corner,
Friday, December 11, 2020
The Racism Behind the Decline of Black-Owned Record Stores?
Thursday, December 10, 2020
Improving Rural Life--Butchers and Regulations
Wednesday, December 09, 2020
Getting Ahead of Theirselves--JBF
I've been checking Congress.gov for the actual text of the "Justice for Black Farmers" Act sponsored by Sen. Booker. Today I found it; it's Senate S4929, but while it's been introduced and a number assigned, the text is not yet available.
The bill is getting some publicity, both pro and con. I may continue to post on it.
Haircut Time
Had my second haircut since the start of the pandemic today. Some trepidation, given the new surge of cases which has hit Virginia, though not as hard here as elsewhere in the country.
Monday, December 07, 2020
Breaking the Rule--Japan
I have the "Harshaw rule", which says you never do something right the first time.
There have been exceptions to the rule, one of which has just occurred--Japan has just brought back a sample from an asteroid--congratulations to them.
[Update: It turns out my compliment was undeserved. According to the NYTimes article, there was a previous try at doing this, which had several problems.
"Hayabusa2 is not Japan’s first planetary mission. Indeed, its name points to the existence of Hayabusa, an earlier mission that brought back samples from another asteroid, Itokawa. But that mission, which launched in 2003 and returned in 2010, faced major technical problems."]
Sunday, December 06, 2020
On Trump Judges
Josh Blackman is a conservative law professor writing on the generally conservative Volkoh Conspiracy, but today he notes the failure of "Trump" judges to buy the Trump lawsuits.
We should give credit when credit is due.
Saturday, December 05, 2020
On Regulatory Approvals
The UK has approved the Pfizer vaccine for use; the FDA hasn't yet. Some, like the Marginal Revolution blog, are critical.
The FAA grounded Boeing's 737-Max for 20 months, before approving it this month.
These are judgment calls, or actually likely a nested series of judgment calls in each case.
There are some of us alive who remember thalidomide, and the British Comet.
I'm not one to second guess bureaucrats who have to make judgment calls with life and death consequences.
Friday, December 04, 2020
Me and Kevin Drum I
Kevin Drum on Dec. 1 blogged his positions on an assortment of domestic issues. I commented that I agreed with almost all of them (I plan a separate post discussing them in detail) but he embodied the typical Democrat moderate/progressive in totally ignoring rural issues.
Here's my thoughts on some issues:
- it's hard for me to see the revival of rural areas--farms keep getting bigger and more consolidated. Even as some farms hire immigrant labor companies are developing technology to replace labor, especially robots. So the depopulation of the farm areas will continue.
- I think the first priority is broadband for all. Al Gore pushed Internet connectivity back in the day, the Obama administration supported it, but didn't complete the job. (I've no idea of how well or poorly the Trump administration did.)
- Broadband is the key to several things, changes which the pandemic has pushed along.