I understand Microsoft is ending the free upgrade from Win 10 to Win 11 tomorrow. So I went through the process to upgrade the desktop my wife and I share. Eventually I got it done, but next time I think I'll just buy a new desktop for her.
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.
Wednesday, October 05, 2022
Tuesday, October 04, 2022
Housing Codes--Needed or Not?
Monday, October 03, 2022
The Big Sort
[Note: I drafted this several days ago but didn't publish. Then I wrote yesterdays post. Although I never added the links, I ]
I've played with the idea that our big sort resulted from the proliferation of housing developments after WWII.
Today from pieces in my two newpapers I'm more persuaded by another factor:
- The Post had a graphic showing how population had shifted--people had moved from the smaller states to the bigger states, presumably the big metropolitan areas within the states (i.e., Massachusetts, New York, DC, Texas, Florida, California.
- The Times had a graphic showing the party splits in presidential elections from 1988 to 2020. You see some states moving to the Democrats (Virginia, Colorado, New Jersey) and some states moving to the Republicans, and other states become more of what they were before (especially Dakotas)
Where are the divisions?
They identify four areas of gradually deepening division: economic inequality, political partisanship, and questions of identity relating to race, as well as gender and sexuality.From wikipedia:
Additionally, since the 1970s, income disparities have disproportionately increased in metropolitan areas due to the concentration of high-skilled jobs in urban zones.[10][11] For example, even though New York is the state with the highest inequality levels in the country, the upstate part of the state has a much lower rate of income inequality than the downstate, as the economy of New York City (Gini index 0.5469)[12] is highly reliant on high-salary earners.[11] States with better financial development tend to be more unequal than those with worse financial opportunities, but the trends go in the opposite directions for high-income and low-income states, with the former actually seeing more equality up to a certain level of development, beyond which the inequality rises non-linearly
Sunday, October 02, 2022
The Big Sort and Rural Migration
Can't find sources for my guesses. This is the closest, showing the ratio of women to men in rural areas went from 99.8 in 1990 to 99.0 in 2000. My guesses are:
- in the old days, women were more conservative in rural areas, men could migrate to urban areas for jobs, both manufacturing and others.
- smart rural women could find jobs as teachers.
- smart rural men went to college and ended up in jobs in urban and suburban areas.
- the sex ratio was heavier female (despite the "norwegian bachelor farmers")
- in the modern world more women go to college and end up in jobs in urban and suburban areas.
- women are now more into social issues and tending to be liberal.
Friday, September 30, 2022
No Hemp in Texas
Thursday, September 29, 2022
Boundary Setting
Who knew that we have government bureaucrats worrying about our actual borders, as opposed to migration across them? FCW had a piece on Trump's infamous Schedule F, which described the two agencies which had reported their plans to OPM. One was OMB, as you'd expect. The other:
Over at the U.S. International Boundary and Water Commission, only five of the agency’s 234 employees were slated to move into Schedule F. The agency submitted its plan on Jan. 19, 2021, and OPM was unable to review the proposal before Biden rescinded the executive order.
Officials at the agency, which applies boundary and water treaties between the U.S. and Mexico, said the expedited hiring and firing offered by Schedule F was appealing to senior leaders, particularly given the location of its offices in remote locations along the southern border.
Wednesday, September 28, 2022
Have Rules on Agencies Sharing Data Changed?
FCW reports on a White House deal about improving the nation's health and food situation. Reading between the lines it sounds as if some of the plans involve USDA and other agencies sharing data so they can improve participation in USDA food programs.
That may be mistaken, but 30 years ago there was a law restricting our ability to share data. I wonder whether that's changed or is now being ignored, or maybe privacy advocates no longer wish to oppose such deals?
Tuesday, September 27, 2022
States Rights and Bureaucracy
Reading Dr. Deborah Brix's "Silent Invasion", her memoir of her work in the pandemic. It's basically chronological, and I'm just about 2 weeks in.
She is trying to maneuver among the various camps in the Trump administration:
- economics interests such as Sec. Mnuchin and Larry Kudlow, worried about economic impacts.
- politicos like Joe Grogan worried about political impacts.
- CDC scientists worried about science and being right.
- HHS bureaucrats who worry about implementation.
- Poli-scis, like Bob Redfield who's head of CDC and Tony Fauci, who's reluctant to get beyond the data.
Monday, September 26, 2022
The Future of the Chinese Military
Putting together this Powerline post, which includes a graph projecting China's population to 2100, which shows it crashing. Meanwhile Mr. Kilcullen in his book notes the "little emperor" syndrome, with parents and grandpartents focusing attention on their one child/grandchild. He argues that it will make China's leaders very reluctant to incur casualties in a war.
Sunday, September 25, 2022
Sputnik and Equity
An article on "equity", which is tl:dr, but it's a hook for a memory--we're coming up on the 55th anniversary of the launch of Sputnik, which set off a panic. The wikipedia article is rather narrowing focused. My memory is that education was impacted as well--sputnik was seen as reflecting weaknesses in US schools, particularly in math and science. There was also a perceived lack of focus on talent; education schools were seen as under the influence of John Dewey and progressive education.
Part of the response to Sputnik was the 1958 National Defense Education Act, which included student aid and an emphasis of science.
We didn't talk about equity back then, but it seems the pendulum has swung the other way now.