Dan Zak covers 24 hours in the life of a restaurant in Northeast. His good article is focused on the new diner there, owned by an analyst for the Justice Department. There's a nice bit about a family in town for the Beck rally, who stop there for a meal and about whom the owner worries (and tracks back to their rental to be sure they're safe).
On a somewhat related note, Matt Yglesias has a post on gentrification and why it's disruptive.
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.
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
Meanwhile, in Lake Woebegone
From NYTimes article on Dr. Redelmeier:
"“Every driver on average thinks he’s in the wrong lane,” Dr. Redelmeier said. “You think more cars are passing you when you’re actually passing them just as quickly. Still, you make a lane change where the benefits are illusory and not real.” Meanwhile, changing lanes increases the chances of collision about threefold."
Funniest Paragraph in August
Petula Dvorak notes that Glenn Beck's rally was white, Al Sharpton's black and asks:
What's that all about? It's not because folks only go to the Mall if the speaker looks like them. If that were the case, Lady Gaga would draw zero humans.
Monday, August 30, 2010
New Deal Ag Programs Didn't Come From Nowhere
FRom the News from 1930 blog (Wall Street Journal stories of August 29, 1931):
Farm Board has received "somewhere between 500 and 1,000" proposals for solution of the cotton problem in response to its plan to plow under every third row of cotton; "the Board has indicated that after it digests the various plans it may evolve and make public some other proposal."
America and Land Ownership
Ezra Klein comments on land ownership, the hook being a Forbes piece saying promoting home ownership is un-American. I agree with him and Wilkinson: the colonies were founded by the landless, who saw in America the opportunity to own land. And see Matt Yglesias.
Remembrance of Times Past: the Laundry Box
Kids are going off to college, as many of us once did. Kids will have dirty clothes, as we did. How do clothes get washed?
The answer to that simple question was, for many people in the late 1940's and 1950's, the laundry box. It was an ingenious way to extend the domestic slavery of women, forcing them to do their kids' laundry even after they'd shipped them off to school. The kids would package their dirty clothes in an aluminum box and ship it by parcel post to the mother; the mother would wash and iron the clothes, put them in the box and ship it back to college.
I reached college just at the time when the new dorm had coin-operated washers and driers, so the first small step to liberation of mothers occurred around 1958 or so.
I suspect the laundry box was a reflection of the post-war boom in college attendance. Before the war people who attended college probably had enough money to engage laundresses around the college. After the war, it was cheaper to ship laundry back and forth.
The answer to that simple question was, for many people in the late 1940's and 1950's, the laundry box. It was an ingenious way to extend the domestic slavery of women, forcing them to do their kids' laundry even after they'd shipped them off to school. The kids would package their dirty clothes in an aluminum box and ship it by parcel post to the mother; the mother would wash and iron the clothes, put them in the box and ship it back to college.
I reached college just at the time when the new dorm had coin-operated washers and driers, so the first small step to liberation of mothers occurred around 1958 or so.
I suspect the laundry box was a reflection of the post-war boom in college attendance. Before the war people who attended college probably had enough money to engage laundresses around the college. After the war, it was cheaper to ship laundry back and forth.
Sunday, August 29, 2010
The SF-1099 Flap
The Post runs an article on the SF-1099 requirement, something John Phipps blogged about some months ago.
Here's the description:
I'm sure I don't understand. If I'm a business, I've a check book and a credit card. And I have accounting software (Quicken or whatever). So I know to whom I make payments and for how much, don't I? And I could run a yearly report showing payments by payee, couldn't I? And to make a payment in Quicken I need the payee's name and address. So as far as I can see the only thing I'm missing is the payee's social security number or tax ID number. Getting that, I admit, would be a pain.
So based on my lack of understanding, what would make sense is:
Here's the description:
The provision, which takes effect next year, will require businesses to file 1099 tax forms reporting any purchases they make of goods or services above $600 from any individual or business, including corporations. Currently, businesses only need to file 1099s when they buy services - and only when the vendor is an unincorporated person or business.There are currently proposals to drop or modify the provision.
I'm sure I don't understand. If I'm a business, I've a check book and a credit card. And I have accounting software (Quicken or whatever). So I know to whom I make payments and for how much, don't I? And I could run a yearly report showing payments by payee, couldn't I? And to make a payment in Quicken I need the payee's name and address. So as far as I can see the only thing I'm missing is the payee's social security number or tax ID number. Getting that, I admit, would be a pain.
So based on my lack of understanding, what would make sense is:
- allow a small business to certify they do not use any accounting software and waive the requirement
- businesses which use accounting software would have to submit a yearly report of payments along with their tax return
- tell IRS they have to, when developing software to audit such reports, include a module to try to match the incoming name and address to their master file of tax ID's and SSN's.
- give IRS the right to go to developers of accounting software and pay them to tweak their software if necessary to meet the requirement, assuming my ignorance hides some other complication. (I don't really like this idea; it would set a precedent, but if you're going to lose billions in taxes over ten years, spending a few millions is cost-effective.
Love of God and Country Reign at Beck Rally
The title should be in quotes, because that's the title MSNBC is using this morning for its coverage.
Without delving into detail, how can anyone quarrel with: a massive (300,000+) rally full of praise for God, country, MLKing, very little politics, a beautiful day, recognition for do-gooders?
I can't, except to say I find it a bit soft and mushy, like an overcooked eggplant. But that's a personal taste.
Broder's column today recalled the anxiety with which white America, particularly white liberals, awaited the 1963 March ("will it be good for Negroes"?). I think the hopeful aspect of yesterday's event is this: 47 years since much of America thought of the civil rights movement as leftist agitators, causing trouble, moving too fast, 30 or so years since people like John McCain and Ronald Reagan opposed an MLK holiday, a leader on the right is striving mightily to wrap himself in King's aura. (It's a point also made in a Post column today.)
To this failed historian, it seems just another step in the process of redefining historical reality, winnowing out unpleasant facts and creating weapons to use in the future, but it's also this process which ultimately creates a shared historical mythology most Americans can be moved by. (And those words are soft and mushy too.)
Without delving into detail, how can anyone quarrel with: a massive (300,000+) rally full of praise for God, country, MLKing, very little politics, a beautiful day, recognition for do-gooders?
I can't, except to say I find it a bit soft and mushy, like an overcooked eggplant. But that's a personal taste.
Broder's column today recalled the anxiety with which white America, particularly white liberals, awaited the 1963 March ("will it be good for Negroes"?). I think the hopeful aspect of yesterday's event is this: 47 years since much of America thought of the civil rights movement as leftist agitators, causing trouble, moving too fast, 30 or so years since people like John McCain and Ronald Reagan opposed an MLK holiday, a leader on the right is striving mightily to wrap himself in King's aura. (It's a point also made in a Post column today.)
To this failed historian, it seems just another step in the process of redefining historical reality, winnowing out unpleasant facts and creating weapons to use in the future, but it's also this process which ultimately creates a shared historical mythology most Americans can be moved by. (And those words are soft and mushy too.)
Saturday, August 28, 2010
An Oxymoron?
"John Sides finds better educated Republicans grew most in believing Obama is a Muslim;"
From a Pollster summary
I call it an oxymoron, and I call it *(##.
From a Pollster summary
I call it an oxymoron, and I call it *(##.
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