Reading David Reynolds' "Abe: Abraham Lincoln in His Times".
Some Springfield, IL blacks did well, including Lincoln's barber and shoemaker. But in the 20th century the shoemaker was lynched. William Donnegan, page 410.
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.
Reading David Reynolds' "Abe: Abraham Lincoln in His Times".
Some Springfield, IL blacks did well, including Lincoln's barber and shoemaker. But in the 20th century the shoemaker was lynched. William Donnegan, page 410.
Judge has ruled USDA can include hydroponics in the "organic" category.
Followers of Rodale, like my late mother, will not be happy.
This is dedication, or perhaps just the usual spring-rush routine. Never lived on a row crop farm so I don't really know.
CRS has an explanation which should cause every reader to shed a tear for the poor FSA personnel who have to deal with the different definitions.
Here's a table showing the numbers:
The philosopher Isaiah Berlin made his name with the essay The Hedgehog and the Fox, where the hedgehog has one big idea, the fox knows several smaller ideas.
Someone has investigated sheep and goats--turns out goats are better problem solvers than sheep, possibly because goats forage for their food, exploring everything which might be edible, while sheep specialize in grass., even though they're related species and both were domesticated early.
Apparently the Biden administration is opting for slow and possibly sure over fast and challengeable. That is, rather than using the Congressional Review Act to undo last minute Trump regulations they're using the Administrative Procedure Act process--notice of proposed rulemaking, etc. The CRA could be done, but it has a kicker that when used, the agency can not later issue new regulations the same or reasonably similar to those which were killed.
In a sense, a CRA kill is a permanent veto unless a future Congress enacts a new authority.
This site has maps of how each county voted in presidential elections from 1820 to 2020. Naturally I looked at Broome County. I was aware it was solid Republican through the years. It was back and forth for a while, but in 1856 it went Republican and continued for over a century. In 1964 it voted for LBJ, but returned to the Republicans through 1984. Beginning in 1988 it went Democratic, with the exception of 2016.
Trump and Goldwater are the two outliers in its history. Interesting that Broome disdained the second and liked the first.
Gene Weingarten, the humor columnist for the Post, wrote One Day describing events on one random day (Dec. 28, 1986 as it happened), specifically what some people did and what happened to people on that day, with the ramifications down the line.
The top two reviews on Amazon are 4 stars, which reflects the fact that in a group of stories, some will not appeal to some people, perhaps particularly the downers.
I'd give it 5 stars, just for the story telling and Weingarten's style. Because the stories are selected, they don't fit standard narratives--the wife-beating ends happily, for example.