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, November 22, 2021
Vietnam Photo
This was a building in downtown Saigon. We didn't often drive through the city. When I first arrived in Vietnam before I got the camera, when I was running a generator it was at the MAC-V headquarters, IIRC.
Sunday, November 21, 2021
Vietnam Photo
Alcohol and Weed
Politico has a post on Prohibition, stating the case for prohibition being a reasonable reform with supporters ranging from Washington to Lincoln. The writer is a historian with a new book out. My mother was death on alcohol; looking back I'm not sure why. I'm thinking there was some element of experience there, possibly from neighbors, or within the family; I don't know, I never asked.
I can buy some of the argument, certainly the part about alcohol being one of the Progressive reform causes. Comparing the brewers and distillers to the today's peddlers of oxycontin and fentanyl is good, as is pointing to the impact of firewater on Native Americans.
Meanwhile, there are reports of national Republicans supporting the legalization, or at least the decriminalization, of marijuana. That's amazing to me, but it seems that it's the wave of the future.
I can't come out with just one standard rule for alcohol and drugs which I think would work for all times and all societies.
Saturday, November 20, 2021
Vietnam Transport
Many of the photos I shot were during trips between Long Binh and the company's HQ near Tan Son Nhut. All were 35 mm slides; I forget the type of film but many didn't hold their color so I've tried to adjust using Google Photo tools.
Friday, November 19, 2021
An End to Fence-Building?
Modern Farmer reports on a "no fence" system for goats. Unlike "no fence" systems for cats and dogs, no buried wire marking the boundary is needed, just GPS and other sensors.
It seems as if the same technology would work for any mammal, which would mean an end to one spring routine--fixing fence, which involved replacing fence posts which had rotted, driving in fence posts which were still good but had been heaved up by the frost, replacing rusted out barbed wire, etc.
Laws about fencing date back centuries. Depending on the agriculture in the area sometimes it was the responsibility of the animal owner to fence his herd in, in other areas the responsibility of the crop grower to fence out free roaming animals. "No fence" tech would seem to be the responsibility of the animal owner.
One blogger I follow is Foothill Agrarian who raises sheep in California. He and some of the organic farmers have a system where they move their grazing animals from one field to another, or paddock to another, which involves movable fences. Invisible fences would ease that work.
Thursday, November 18, 2021
The Vaccinated Are Smarter?
I'd answer "yes", if you're smart enough to get yourself vaccinated, you're smarter than your unvaccinated friend or relative. And I'd point to this CDC study (via Lawyers, Guns and Money--Paul Campos) which shows a big difference in death rates between the two groups: vaccinated and unvaccinated.
The big thing about the study is the difference is based on death rates excluding Covid.
Wednesday, November 17, 2021
Homicides, Car Accidents
Homicides are up, fatal car accidents are up. I suggest it's a combination of factors (that's always a safe suggestion):
- the pandemic, obviously. We've built up a lot of frustration as we've had to adapt to change.
- Trump. Leaders can set the tone. In the former guy's case the tone he set was to act out your emotions, to be angry at situations you can't control, and to bully the people you can. (Wrote this yesterday, but see AOC making a similar point today--the tone set from the top can matter.
AOC links Gosar's video to a "nihilism" among Republicans holding that nothing Congress does really matters or is meaningful pic.twitter.com/zFYlFwI3f9
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) November 17, 2021) - for homicides, there's likely been an impact on policing from the "defund police" etc.
Tuesday, November 16, 2021
A New Day Dawning? Leahy
Sen. Leahy has announced he won't run for reelection next year. On the Newshour Lisa Lerer commented on the number of old farts who are in the Dem leadership of Congress, and their impending retirements.
There's likely a transition coming for Dems, certainly in the House, more probable in the Senate if the next two elections turn out awful for the Dems.
Currently it seems as if the Reps are on a firm course: Trump the likely nominee in 2024, McCarthy as Speaker, but McConnell won't last past 2024 if Trump is elected. The Dems are less clear: will Biden run for election, if not can Harris get the nomination or will it be someone else. If there's primary fight for 2024 will the nominee be defeated by Trump, as Carter was defeated by having a divided party behind him.
My guess would be that Pelosi leaves if Dems lose the House in 2022.
Monday, November 15, 2021
Why We Fight the Last War
I've written before about my Harshaw rule--we never get it right the first time.
I just realized this morning that there's a logical corollary: we always fight the last war. Why? It's what we know, and when we're in a crisis, a new situation with high stakes, we revert to what we know. The Harshaw rule says we don't get it right the first time because we lack the understanding and the habits needed to deal with newness.
(This was spurred by an article in the papers saying that we responded to the pandemic recession by doing what we did for the Great Recession.)
[Updated with link]
Sunday, November 14, 2021
Afghanistan Refugees
An article in the Post yesterday on the arrival of Afghan refugees in in American society, particularly in the DC area. Some children are already enrolled in local schools. There's a NOVA RAFT (Resettling Afghan Families Together) helping--they've a Facebook page and an Amazon wish list.
My sister was active for many years in the interfaith group which worked settling refugees in the Syracuse area.