I didn't know Warhol was a hoarder, nor did I know psychologists are reconsidering their categorization of hoarders as suffering from OCD. See this article.
(I'm a hoarding fellow-traveler, as we used to say in the '50's.)
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, May 27, 2013
Sunday, May 26, 2013
Discovered: The Undetectable Extension Charm and Rolling Thunder
Wife and I recently watched Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part I, on DVD in which Hermione's handbag with its inexhaustible contents plays a key role. Turns out it's because she applied the "Undetectable Extension Charm" to it, making it capable of infinite expansion.
According to this Washington Times article, there were 750,000 motorcycle riders in last year's Rolling Thunder. And this says 500,000 are expected for this years. Apparently someone will apply the charm to the Pentagon parking lots, which are the staging area for the riders.
Why do I say this? Well, lets say 4 motorcycles can fit in the space for one car. Most of the cycles I see on TV have only one rider, so lets say 500,000 divided by 4 = 125,000 car equivalents, but take off 25,000 to allow for double riders. Assume that all the people at the Pentagon drive to work with no car pooling (not true--car pooling and subway and bus all serve the building), so there must be 100,000 people working there?
Not so, it's more like 30,000. Bottom line is, the organizers of all demonstrations in DC claim numbers which are too high, including even the vets, but the media never scrutinize the vets. That would be politically incorrect.
(Wiki answers says the Pentagon has 8,000 parking spots.)
According to this Washington Times article, there were 750,000 motorcycle riders in last year's Rolling Thunder. And this says 500,000 are expected for this years. Apparently someone will apply the charm to the Pentagon parking lots, which are the staging area for the riders.
Why do I say this? Well, lets say 4 motorcycles can fit in the space for one car. Most of the cycles I see on TV have only one rider, so lets say 500,000 divided by 4 = 125,000 car equivalents, but take off 25,000 to allow for double riders. Assume that all the people at the Pentagon drive to work with no car pooling (not true--car pooling and subway and bus all serve the building), so there must be 100,000 people working there?
Not so, it's more like 30,000. Bottom line is, the organizers of all demonstrations in DC claim numbers which are too high, including even the vets, but the media never scrutinize the vets. That would be politically incorrect.
(Wiki answers says the Pentagon has 8,000 parking spots.)
Friday, May 24, 2013
Capping Crop Insurance Subsidies
Here's the page from the Congressional Record containing the amendment to cap the federal subsidy on crop insurance premiums. Essentially if the producer is over $750K AGI according to FSA at the beginning of the crop year, the subsidy is whacked 15 points. The Secretary can waive the requirement.
Though I'm populist and liberal enough to like the concept, there's some issues there.
Though I'm populist and liberal enough to like the concept, there's some issues there.
- Getting congruence between the FSA records and the reinsurance year, given that different crops have different dates and different terms.
- Getting congruence between FSA "producers" and FCIC "insureds" (though that may be a problem which RMA and FSA have already worked out.
- the tipping point. If a producer goes over AGI by one dollar, he may lose much more in subsidy
FCIC, Fraud, and Pigford
Sen. Hagan of NC got an amendment to the farm bill passed, allowing some use of the crop insurance fund to look for fraud. Her actions were inspired by the biggest crop insurance fraud yet discovered, located in eastern NC. (Not sure whether it was the biggest in money terms ($100 million), or in the numbers of people involved. . I was led to these articles:
Maybe I'm wrong, but I think this is a reminder that fraud is an equal opportunity temptation. Also a reminder that whenever there's a new program, or a steep increase in an old program, the incentive to defraud is raised, and bureaucrats would be well advised to increase their counter-measures.
Maybe I'm wrong, but I think this is a reminder that fraud is an equal opportunity temptation. Also a reminder that whenever there's a new program, or a steep increase in an old program, the incentive to defraud is raised, and bureaucrats would be well advised to increase their counter-measures.
Thursday, May 23, 2013
Pigford Lawyers Hire Lobbyists
That's the report from Politico.
John Boyd is not happy, asking very reasonably IMHO why they need lobbyists now?
Seems to me both the Pigford I and II settlements are over, all except the shouting. There might be a need for lobbyists in case a House committee wants to look into the role of the lawyers in crafting and administering the settlement. But who can say?
John Boyd is not happy, asking very reasonably IMHO why they need lobbyists now?
Seems to me both the Pigford I and II settlements are over, all except the shouting. There might be a need for lobbyists in case a House committee wants to look into the role of the lawyers in crafting and administering the settlement. But who can say?
VA, DOD, and Me
Though I'm a veteran, I've stayed away from the VA, not much there for me.
But I've watched with interest through the years, particularly in the pages of the Washington Monthly, as the VA has worked on incorporating computers into their health record system, then later as the DOD and VA have tried and failed, so far, to come up with one health record system which will follow the military person from active duty to the VA hospital to the grave.
In skimming the papers this morning I note DOD Secretary Hagel was getting flak for wanting to study the issue further, someone in Congress said we needed not VA and DOD systems which could interoperate but one system. Though my bias has always been towards one system, as I've aged I wonder whether that's right. In my USDA days with Infoshare we were trying to build one system which could serve at least ASCS, FmHA, SCS, and possibly FCIC and Extension. Needless to say we failed. The best I understand these days MIDAS is an FSA initiative, with little or no carryover to NRCS, and none to RD.
Maybe back in the day we would have been better off just focusing on file transfers of data, use more brute force and keep interconnections looser rather than tighter. Certainly with DOD and VA they've spent years and millions and failed. I don't know.
But I've watched with interest through the years, particularly in the pages of the Washington Monthly, as the VA has worked on incorporating computers into their health record system, then later as the DOD and VA have tried and failed, so far, to come up with one health record system which will follow the military person from active duty to the VA hospital to the grave.
In skimming the papers this morning I note DOD Secretary Hagel was getting flak for wanting to study the issue further, someone in Congress said we needed not VA and DOD systems which could interoperate but one system. Though my bias has always been towards one system, as I've aged I wonder whether that's right. In my USDA days with Infoshare we were trying to build one system which could serve at least ASCS, FmHA, SCS, and possibly FCIC and Extension. Needless to say we failed. The best I understand these days MIDAS is an FSA initiative, with little or no carryover to NRCS, and none to RD.
Maybe back in the day we would have been better off just focusing on file transfers of data, use more brute force and keep interconnections looser rather than tighter. Certainly with DOD and VA they've spent years and millions and failed. I don't know.
Wednesday, May 22, 2013
Our Ante-bellum Government
Stumbled on an interesting publication from Ohio, written by the auditor, called "Ohio Lands Book".
Seems the federal government was active in the subsidizing of:
Seems the federal government was active in the subsidizing of:
- public schools
- canals
- railroads
- ministers (apparently uniquely, Congress designated something over 40,000 acres for supporting religion)
- salt springs
- swamplands
- specific grants to colleges (i.e., preceding the Morrill Land Grant Act.)
Tuesday, May 21, 2013
Oh For the Days of "No Cost" Tobacco
Once upon a time long ago there was great outrage when people discovered the government (ASCS) was doing tobacco price support (and marketing quota) programs at the same time the Surgeon General was saying smoking was bad.
After sufficient pontificating on the Hill, legislation was passed which tried to make the tobacco program "no cost"--that is, the costs of the program were borne by the tobacco industry, at least in theory--some dispute over the accounting for administrative functions.
That was a while ago, and the meme about USDA supporting tobacco had dwindled almost to nothing. Dwindled at least until today, when some Senators have discovered that RMA/FCIC subsidizes crop insurance for tobacco and are hoping to amend the farm bill to prohibit that.
All cynicism aside, I can't disagree with them. When pot is legalized, I would firmly oppose offering crop insurance for it.
After sufficient pontificating on the Hill, legislation was passed which tried to make the tobacco program "no cost"--that is, the costs of the program were borne by the tobacco industry, at least in theory--some dispute over the accounting for administrative functions.
That was a while ago, and the meme about USDA supporting tobacco had dwindled almost to nothing. Dwindled at least until today, when some Senators have discovered that RMA/FCIC subsidizes crop insurance for tobacco and are hoping to amend the farm bill to prohibit that.
All cynicism aside, I can't disagree with them. When pot is legalized, I would firmly oppose offering crop insurance for it.
Monday, May 20, 2013
Early Playing: Baseball Factoids
Ran across two factoids today:
Mr. Cabrera is on the list of people who hit the most homers by the time they were 30. What's sort of surprising is two of the people started their major league careers at 17 (Mel Ott and Jimmie Foxx) And two of the three top hitters aren't on the list of 12 top hitters at all: Babe Ruth (started off pitching) and Barry Bonds (started off clean). Hat Tip owed, perhaps to Powerline.
And the Texans, who are always biggest, best and first, also were playing baseball before the Civil War, and during.
Mr. Cabrera is on the list of people who hit the most homers by the time they were 30. What's sort of surprising is two of the people started their major league careers at 17 (Mel Ott and Jimmie Foxx) And two of the three top hitters aren't on the list of 12 top hitters at all: Babe Ruth (started off pitching) and Barry Bonds (started off clean). Hat Tip owed, perhaps to Powerline.
And the Texans, who are always biggest, best and first, also were playing baseball before the Civil War, and during.
Sunday, May 19, 2013
Maid's Quarters: $1.5 Millon
And that's the low-end. If you want your maid to have good quarters, you can spend $3.5 million.
But your wine can be housed for a mere $158,000.
All of this from this graphic in the NYTimes, accompanying an article about the tallest residential building in NYC, now under construction, many of the apartments of which are sold, some to wealthy foreigners.
John Kenneth Galbraith used to have great fun poking at apparent excesses like this; not sure we have anyone like that today.
But your wine can be housed for a mere $158,000.
All of this from this graphic in the NYTimes, accompanying an article about the tallest residential building in NYC, now under construction, many of the apartments of which are sold, some to wealthy foreigners.
John Kenneth Galbraith used to have great fun poking at apparent excesses like this; not sure we have anyone like that today.
Saturday, May 18, 2013
Use Proportional Spaced Type, Please
The White House released the emails about Benghazi, and Kevin Drum has excerpts.
I'm back on my hobbyhorse: for once and for all, proportional spaced type is more legible than the old monospaced pica and elite type, familiar to some of us from the SmithCorona/Remington days. So why Gen. Petraeus and the NCTC are using monospaced only shows how backward some in the intelligence/foreign affairs community are. Get with the program, join the 21st century.
I'm back on my hobbyhorse: for once and for all, proportional spaced type is more legible than the old monospaced pica and elite type, familiar to some of us from the SmithCorona/Remington days. So why Gen. Petraeus and the NCTC are using monospaced only shows how backward some in the intelligence/foreign affairs community are. Get with the program, join the 21st century.
Friday, May 17, 2013
Scandals of Yesteryear: Billie Sol Estes, RIP
This has been a week of scandals, or at least supposed scandal. But they don't do scandals like they used to. These modern people just have no idea of how to make a scandal and how to cover it. Let me tell you how it was in my day.
Billie Sol Estes was a real piece of work. He died the other day, and the Times ran an obit which only touched the surface. Bloomberg had this piece on him. Robert Caro had a whole chapter on him in his LBJ bio. And he was a cat man.
Who was he? A wheeler dealer equal to Mark Twain's imagination (remember the King and the Duke in Huckleberry Finn?). He's called "the king of Texas wheeler-dealers", which isn't wrong.
He could call the vasty deep, and they might answer. (Just so happens the town where he died, Granbury/deCordoba, Texas was just devastated by a tornado. He didn't go quietly into that good night.)
When I arrived at ASCS in 1968, I started to hear of Billie Sol, even though his downfall was 6 years earlier. Old records were stored in the attic of the South Building, Most of the records were in old metal file cabinets and accessible to anyone willing to walk up a flight of stairs from the 6th floor and brave the dust and gloom. But some of the records were under lock and key in the vault; these were sensitive records, probably personnel stuff and perhaps some civil defense material. The crown jewel, or at least the records which got talked about, were the Billie Sol Estes records.
There's mention in the wikipedia entry of his buying cotton allotments, though not in the Times obit. As was explained to me, part of his scheme was to buy cotton allotments in one area of Texas where the yield was low, and transfer them to a county where the yield was high. So a 100 acre allotment in county A would equate to 300 pounds per acre, where if it was transferred to county B the same 100 acres could grow 600 pounds, and consequently be worth a lot more. My impression was that this was a loophole in the ASCS regs governing allotment transfers, which got plugged later by a rule change (so in my example the county B allotment would be just 50 acres).
When the Billie Sol scandal broke, USDA and ASCS were very much in the limelight, because he had ties to some of the officials (Texas state office, I think, but not sure) and some had to resign. As I understood, third or fourth hand, in 1962 ASCS had no records system, or at least not an adequate one. So as investigators tried to piece together what happened they gathered together all the records they could find, which were the ones which ended in the vault.
Now Congress, even though under the control of the Dems, had fun investigating because the blowhards and good government types (not always mutually exclusive types) love the publicity and the feeling of cleaning the Augean stables. (ed: going overboard here on literary references.) I'm not sure whether their staff actually saw all the records in the vault, or whether the agency was maybe hiding some.
I did hear they were very efficient: the Administrative Services division had two men with somewhat similar last names, one was a GS-9 dealing with property, the other a GS-12 who dealt with records. The Congressional committee hauled the poor property man into their hearing and pestered him with questions about records until they finally figured out they had the wrong man.
Anyhow, one result of the scandal was a very formalized system of recordkeeping for communications with the field, official record copies and finder copies, and a centralized depositary for the records. Over the years of my career, that system was gradually eroded away, as people lost awareness of the original problem it was created to solve. And, perhaps even more important, new new equipment (office copiers and word processing which replaced carbon sets) and new people with new ideas on how to communicate proposals and make decisions took the place of the old hands.
Billie Sol Estes was a real piece of work. He died the other day, and the Times ran an obit which only touched the surface. Bloomberg had this piece on him. Robert Caro had a whole chapter on him in his LBJ bio. And he was a cat man.
Who was he? A wheeler dealer equal to Mark Twain's imagination (remember the King and the Duke in Huckleberry Finn?). He's called "the king of Texas wheeler-dealers", which isn't wrong.
He could call the vasty deep, and they might answer. (Just so happens the town where he died, Granbury/deCordoba, Texas was just devastated by a tornado. He didn't go quietly into that good night.)
When I arrived at ASCS in 1968, I started to hear of Billie Sol, even though his downfall was 6 years earlier. Old records were stored in the attic of the South Building, Most of the records were in old metal file cabinets and accessible to anyone willing to walk up a flight of stairs from the 6th floor and brave the dust and gloom. But some of the records were under lock and key in the vault; these were sensitive records, probably personnel stuff and perhaps some civil defense material. The crown jewel, or at least the records which got talked about, were the Billie Sol Estes records.
There's mention in the wikipedia entry of his buying cotton allotments, though not in the Times obit. As was explained to me, part of his scheme was to buy cotton allotments in one area of Texas where the yield was low, and transfer them to a county where the yield was high. So a 100 acre allotment in county A would equate to 300 pounds per acre, where if it was transferred to county B the same 100 acres could grow 600 pounds, and consequently be worth a lot more. My impression was that this was a loophole in the ASCS regs governing allotment transfers, which got plugged later by a rule change (so in my example the county B allotment would be just 50 acres).
When the Billie Sol scandal broke, USDA and ASCS were very much in the limelight, because he had ties to some of the officials (Texas state office, I think, but not sure) and some had to resign. As I understood, third or fourth hand, in 1962 ASCS had no records system, or at least not an adequate one. So as investigators tried to piece together what happened they gathered together all the records they could find, which were the ones which ended in the vault.
Now Congress, even though under the control of the Dems, had fun investigating because the blowhards and good government types (not always mutually exclusive types) love the publicity and the feeling of cleaning the Augean stables. (ed: going overboard here on literary references.) I'm not sure whether their staff actually saw all the records in the vault, or whether the agency was maybe hiding some.
I did hear they were very efficient: the Administrative Services division had two men with somewhat similar last names, one was a GS-9 dealing with property, the other a GS-12 who dealt with records. The Congressional committee hauled the poor property man into their hearing and pestered him with questions about records until they finally figured out they had the wrong man.
Anyhow, one result of the scandal was a very formalized system of recordkeeping for communications with the field, official record copies and finder copies, and a centralized depositary for the records. Over the years of my career, that system was gradually eroded away, as people lost awareness of the original problem it was created to solve. And, perhaps even more important, new new equipment (office copiers and word processing which replaced carbon sets) and new people with new ideas on how to communicate proposals and make decisions took the place of the old hands.
Thursday, May 16, 2013
The Idyllic and the Real--Horses and Farming
The Times runs an article today: Farm Equipment That Runs on Oats.
It's about a farm in Vermont, associated with a co-housing collective, doing the locavore/sustainable farming life. The farmer uses horses for most chores, saving the tractor for "heavy soil". He and the writer celebrate the emotions of feeling at one with the team, understanding their personalities and ways, etc etc. You may observe from the title and the "etc.s" that the story struck a nerve.
These give the idea:
It's about a farm in Vermont, associated with a co-housing collective, doing the locavore/sustainable farming life. The farmer uses horses for most chores, saving the tractor for "heavy soil". He and the writer celebrate the emotions of feeling at one with the team, understanding their personalities and ways, etc etc. You may observe from the title and the "etc.s" that the story struck a nerve.
These give the idea:
“People are attracted to the way of working with animals, of being back in touch with nature, of regaining a kind of rhythmic elegance to our lives.”....
Still, this elaborate routine provides the sort of connection to living things that Mr. Leslie believes people today are longing for — and it is why he is convinced that farming with horses will have a real renaissance.
It's all fine and dandy for those who want this sort of life, but we had horses for about the first 10 years of my life. From that jaundiced perspective I'd offer a few observations:“I think people are hungering for a kind of unplugged reality,” he said. “That leads to a deeper self-understanding.”
- The Amish have a sustainable life, but not this family. The farmer and partner have only one child, a girl about 6. If you're going to have a sustainable way of living you need to have some more children, so at least one will stay on the land.
- If you're living a locavore life, you don't need much cash, meaning you aren't depositing much into Social Security and Medicare. So having adult children to support your old age is important.
- One of the downsides of this farming can be observed in the Amish: it tends not to support the ideals of women's liberation. Because field work is usually more strenuous, the males tend to get stuck with that (in the article it sounds as if the man does communing with the horses though my mother did enjoy driving a team) meaning the females get stuck with the house work. The internal combustion engine and electric motor did much to free women.
- It's dangerous. Farming is dangerous whatever motive power is used, but I suspect the accident rate was higher in 1930 when horses were predominant than today. To their credit, the article's author notes a very bad accident with the horses early in the farmer's career which broke both legs of his partner. It doesn't say how they managed in the months before she was able to do resume her work.
Wednesday, May 15, 2013
Counter to NY Times on Pigford
The Federation of Southern Cooperatives has a response to the NYTimes article I linked to previously.
It's a more detailed response than others I've seen. It ends with a repudiation of one of the figures mentioned in the Times article:
It's a more detailed response than others I've seen. It ends with a repudiation of one of the figures mentioned in the Times article:
"The Network of Black Farm Groups and Advocates was created at the beginning of the Pigford lawsuit. Tom Burrell, mentioned in the April 26 New York Times article, was never a part of the Network. His Black Farmers and Agriculturalists Association (BFFA) in Tennessee is not the same as the group in North Carolina. Burrell speaks for himself.Thomas Burrell and his organization never served as representatives of class counsel in the Pigford settlement or the Black Farmers Discrimination Litigation (BFDL), known as Pigford II.Burrell and his organization were not active in the Pigford claims process, and classcounsel in BFDL has not worked with him or his organization on claims nor accepted any claimshe or his organization might have prepared. In fact, class counsel had reported his activities tothe U.S. District Court in an effort to prevent him from spreading false information about theclaims process, and in opinions rendered on January 3, 2005 and September 6, 2005, DistrictCourt Judge Paul L. Friedman charged that Burrell had “given false hope to thousands of AfricanAmerican farmers.”What Burrell has done, but which the article does not make clear, is hijack the claimsprocess for his own self interest. Burrell’s actions have been detrimental to the legitimate claimsprocess, yet the New York Times would have readers believe that those who oversaw the claimsprocess condoned his efforts to undermine the integrity of the process. This is blatantlyfalse. By indicating a connection between Burrell and the claims process, the New York Times is showing a grave disregard for the truth and seriously misleading the public.
"Actively Engaged" Versus "Primary Activity"
Who has it worse--IRS or FSA employees?
Kevin Drum blogs about the problems IRS employees have in determining what "primary activity" means in regards to organizations who try to claim § 501(c)(4) status. I sympathize, but I believe the controversy and unclarity over what is "actively engaged in farming" for payment limitation purposes trumps the IRS problem. Come back to me in 28 years and we'll see whether IRS is still grappling with unclear rules.
(BTW, I've not blogged on the new farm bill versions, but it does seem that the Senate version revives last year's clarifications of what counts as actively engaged. Now if I could only remember what they are, I could save some research.)
Kevin Drum blogs about the problems IRS employees have in determining what "primary activity" means in regards to organizations who try to claim § 501(c)(4) status. I sympathize, but I believe the controversy and unclarity over what is "actively engaged in farming" for payment limitation purposes trumps the IRS problem. Come back to me in 28 years and we'll see whether IRS is still grappling with unclear rules.
(BTW, I've not blogged on the new farm bill versions, but it does seem that the Senate version revives last year's clarifications of what counts as actively engaged. Now if I could only remember what they are, I could save some research.)
Tuesday, May 14, 2013
Bryce Harper and Pete Reiser
Yes, I'm too young (not a set of words I often write) to remember Pete Reiser in person, but old enough to remember his legend
a very talented player who kept running into fences and incurring injuries which ruined a promising career. See this report on Bryce Harper's latest injury. Did I mention the Nats were playing Reiser's old team?
a very talented player who kept running into fences and incurring injuries which ruined a promising career. See this report on Bryce Harper's latest injury. Did I mention the Nats were playing Reiser's old team?
Monday, May 13, 2013
Uniforms, Bands, and Prison
The Post ran an article last week on the proliferation of military camouflage uniforms--our military now has 11 different patterns. The writer says
Finally, there was a piece on why a Jewish prisoner ate with the Aryan Brotherhood.
Seems to me there's a common thread here: people seek community, and in part they do so by opposition to others. So the Marines insert their logo in very fine print on their uniforms, just to make sure no other service will use them. So each service and command needs its own military band to establish its identity. After all, the world would come to an end if the Air Force band played "Anchors Aweigh". And in prison, everyone has to affiliate with one or the other gang, just for safety.
"Lust for new turf"? Yes. But even more important is preserving one's old turf.
"The duplication problem grows out of three qualities that are deeply rooted in Washington. Good intentions. Little patience. And a lust for new turf.Meanwhile, Walter Pincus, who has written for the Post for years, has a vendetta against military bands. He delights in counting the number of bands the US supports, summing the dollars spent, and comparing it against other public expenditures.
When a bureaucrat or lawmaker sees someone else doing a job poorly, those qualities stir an itch to take over the job."
Finally, there was a piece on why a Jewish prisoner ate with the Aryan Brotherhood.
Seems to me there's a common thread here: people seek community, and in part they do so by opposition to others. So the Marines insert their logo in very fine print on their uniforms, just to make sure no other service will use them. So each service and command needs its own military band to establish its identity. After all, the world would come to an end if the Air Force band played "Anchors Aweigh". And in prison, everyone has to affiliate with one or the other gang, just for safety.
"Lust for new turf"? Yes. But even more important is preserving one's old turf.
Saturday, May 11, 2013
Have I Recently Said Change Is Bad?
This week facing an "upgrade" from Windows 7 to 8 because of a need to replace my main PC (don't ask why, but a hint--if you start messing around with the innards of a computer, refresh your memory of the owner's manual before you start) This for someone who used to be an early adopter, but now is far behind the tech curve, not even a smartphone to my name. Also facing the impending loss of Google Reader.
Thursday, May 09, 2013
John Dvorak's Rule
Used to be, according to Dvorak who was a columnist for a PC mag (either PC or Byte), the PC you wanted cost $3,000. That rule is long gone.
Wednesday, May 08, 2013
Astronauts Are Human Too
The guts of Joel Achenbach's latest post:
"And there was an astonishing pair of images, presented by a fellow from Boeing, Greg Gentry, who has duties involving the International Space Station (I didn’t quite catch his precise role). He showed the U.S. laboratory module at launch: A perfectly clean chamber, with all the equipment carefully stowed in cabinets — not a loose item to be seen. Then he showed that same module as it is actually used at the International Space Station: Extremely cluttered, with wires everywhere, gear all over the place. Frankly, it looks like a mess (though I’m sure the astronauts know exactly where everything is and why they’ve got it set up that way).
“We really didn’t anticipate the needs for stowage very well,” Gentry said.
The ancient lament: Not enough closet space!"
Monday, May 06, 2013
Wisdom from a Man
Via Tyler Cowen at Marginal Revolution, here's words of wisdom from Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
Liberrals in a Bind on Organic Checkoff?
Liberals, being mostly urban types, tend in my observation to have little sympathy for the various agricultural promotion programs. And libertarians definitely think they're an encroachment on the freedom of the individual producer.
So this line from todays Farm Policy' may set up an interesting conflict:
So this line from todays Farm Policy' may set up an interesting conflict:
"Mr. Lies also noted that, “Schrader said he also is working on an amendment with Rep. Reid Ribble, R-Wis., to establish a national checkoff program for organic producers.”Why? Because I think liberals are also more favorable to the organic movement. Do they support a checkoff to promote organics or do they resist to promote freedom?
Support Beef, Vote Obama?
Who knew the President was a steak man? I thought he was one of those effete liberal crunchies? Guess that impression was wrong.
Saturday, May 04, 2013
I Think It's a Bubble
According to Illinois extension, farmland prices have gone from $3000 to $7000 per acre since 2000.
Friday, May 03, 2013
Ode to the "Greedy Bastards"
Anyone want to write poetry--there's room to convert this Jonathan Bernstein post on "Greedy Bastards and Democracy" into poetry? I think much, maybe all, of agribusiness and the food community would qualify as greedy bastards of some size or another.
Thursday, May 02, 2013
White House Wheat
This year the White House garden has some wheat growing, planted this spring. It puzzles me, because I've always thought of spring wheat as growing further north, but I guess they know what they're doing. They've planted it in rows, rather than broadcast. Again, I don't know why, because motherearthnews definitely talks of broadcasting.
If I'd ever grown wheat, I might mock them as ignorant city slickers, but I never did, so I can't and won't.
If I'd ever grown wheat, I might mock them as ignorant city slickers, but I never did, so I can't and won't.
Wednesday, May 01, 2013
USDA Is Number 2!
But unlike Hertz, in the old days, they don't want to try harder.
Government Executive says USDA has the second biggest gap in the job satisfaction scores between its leadership (SES types) and the rank and file.
The assumption is that the leadership is out of touch, but it's possible the leadership knows what a great job the department is doing while the rank and file is too busy doing it to know.
It's possible.....isn't it?
Naw
Government Executive says USDA has the second biggest gap in the job satisfaction scores between its leadership (SES types) and the rank and file.
The assumption is that the leadership is out of touch, but it's possible the leadership knows what a great job the department is doing while the rank and file is too busy doing it to know.
It's possible.....isn't it?
Naw
Monday, April 29, 2013
An NPR Anniversary Evaluation
Government Executive has a piece on Gore's National Program Review/Reinventing Government project, assessing how it looks 10 years later.
Friday, April 26, 2013
NYTimes on Pigford, Garcia, etc.
The Times has a front page article, their big story for the day, on the course of the various discrimination class action suits against USDA/FSA. The writer apparently talked to a number of career employees, and found a number of cases of fraud. The politicians and the lawyers come across unfavorably.
Thursday, April 25, 2013
What's a Small Family Farmer These Days?
According to ND's new senator:
"“We have small farmers, small family farmers who must spend $1 million before they can even take a crop out of the ground. That is an average farmer in my State. That is how much it costs to engage in farming."
"“We have small farmers, small family farmers who must spend $1 million before they can even take a crop out of the ground. That is an average farmer in my State. That is how much it costs to engage in farming."
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
Faith in Congress and Computers
We had such faith in our institutions and the computer 45 years ago. Technology Review reprints a piece from 1968 in which a political science prof predicted the future:
[updated to add title and link]
One can readily foresee a congressman sitting at a console in his office poring over computer print-outs into the late evening hours or over the weekend and cutting through the paper arguments and justifications of executive programs with penetrating lines of questions. The possibility of abuse also exists, but the weight of past congressional experience suggests that most congressmen will use such new investigative power wisely. In situations that invite adversary argument, alternative positions and points of view will be more thoroughly developed and cogently presented.
[updated to add title and link]
Monday, April 22, 2013
Best Sentence I Read Today
"Never take driving lessons on a stick shift from someone you're breaking up with".
So writes Justice Sotomayor--as part of the divorce she got the car, with the stick, so her soon-to-be-ex was teaching her.
I recommend the book, though I've not finished it.
So writes Justice Sotomayor--as part of the divorce she got the car, with the stick, so her soon-to-be-ex was teaching her.
I recommend the book, though I've not finished it.
Sunday, April 21, 2013
Douthat: Sci-Fi Optimism and Worldly Pessimism
Ross Douthat at the Times passes on Boston and terrorists in favor of musing about extra terrestial worlds.
He finds optimism in the 1950's science fiction--we confidently expected to visit other worlds and other galaxies--which has faded today and hopes that some of that optimism can be refound.
I was a reader of the old-time science fiction: Clarke, Heinlein, Pohl, Asimov, et. al. I loved it. And I agree we were optimistic then, at least if we didn't blow ourselves up (see "A Canticle for Leibowitz). Remembering those times though I think we were more pessimistic about the fate of the "Third World", as we used to call the recently freed colonies, at least we were by the middle 60's when the first flush of enthusiasm about decolonization had passed. The feeling led into the gloom and doom of the running out of resources crowd, the fear that we'd never feed the booming population, etc.
So the passage of 50 years has produced surprises: we've not been to the moon for many years, humans have never visited Mars. On the other hand the progress made by developing nations is still startling to me.
He finds optimism in the 1950's science fiction--we confidently expected to visit other worlds and other galaxies--which has faded today and hopes that some of that optimism can be refound.
I was a reader of the old-time science fiction: Clarke, Heinlein, Pohl, Asimov, et. al. I loved it. And I agree we were optimistic then, at least if we didn't blow ourselves up (see "A Canticle for Leibowitz). Remembering those times though I think we were more pessimistic about the fate of the "Third World", as we used to call the recently freed colonies, at least we were by the middle 60's when the first flush of enthusiasm about decolonization had passed. The feeling led into the gloom and doom of the running out of resources crowd, the fear that we'd never feed the booming population, etc.
So the passage of 50 years has produced surprises: we've not been to the moon for many years, humans have never visited Mars. On the other hand the progress made by developing nations is still startling to me.
Saturday, April 20, 2013
Old Timers Are Forgetful: George Will
George Wills is one of several whom identify as close contemporaries (i.e., born within a year or two of me). We tell kids not to put on the Internet anything which they'll regret later, but the same could be said to geezers like me and Wills.
The other day he had a nice column taking off from the PBS broadcast of "The Central Park Five", which tracks the history of how five minority youths were wrongly convicted of raping a white woman in Central Park. He writes: "Journalism, like almost every other profession relevant to this case, did not earn any honors. Until now."
Fine. Good for George. But today, Mr. Steve Dutky of Takoma Park throws Wills' words of 1989 back in his face: "In his May 1, 1989, op-ed column, “They went ‘wilding,’ ” George F. Will called “The Central Park Five” boys “evil.” He went on to write: “Punishment in this case will be interminably delayed and ludicrously light. The boys know that; that is one reason they were singing rap songs in their jail cells.” The nastiness of this column has stuck with me these 24 years."
He suggests Wills should apologize. I agree.
The other day he had a nice column taking off from the PBS broadcast of "The Central Park Five", which tracks the history of how five minority youths were wrongly convicted of raping a white woman in Central Park. He writes: "Journalism, like almost every other profession relevant to this case, did not earn any honors. Until now."
Fine. Good for George. But today, Mr. Steve Dutky of Takoma Park throws Wills' words of 1989 back in his face: "In his May 1, 1989, op-ed column, “They went ‘wilding,’ ” George F. Will called “The Central Park Five” boys “evil.” He went on to write: “Punishment in this case will be interminably delayed and ludicrously light. The boys know that; that is one reason they were singing rap songs in their jail cells.” The nastiness of this column has stuck with me these 24 years."
He suggests Wills should apologize. I agree.
Friday, April 19, 2013
Thursday, April 18, 2013
Driverless Bus Drones?
Had a thought today--suppose you put drone software and Google driverless car software in a bus? So the idea is, the bus follows a standard route, which cuts the complexity of the job the software has to do. The Google software works to get the bus around the route, but is set to put the bus in "safe" mode if there's any problem (i.e., a problem on the bus, a road situation it can't handle). Meanwhile the "drone" software enables a remote operator to monitor the bus and to step in to resolve problems.
Digital Public Library Goes Live
The Digital Public Library of America (dp.la) is going live this week, today in fact. Remember Google Books--this is more ambitious. From the announcement, it will be: "
- First, an easy-to-use portal where anyone can access America’s collections and search through them using novel and powerful techniques, including by place and time.
- Second, a sophisticated technical platform that will make those millions of items available in ways so that others can build creative and transformative applications upon them, such as smartphone apps that magically reveal the history around you.
- Third, along with like-minded institutions and individuals the DPLA will seek innovative means to make more cultural and scientific content openly available, and it will advocate for a strong public option for reading and research in the twenty-first century."
Wednesday, April 17, 2013
A Great Epitaph for Lady Sale
Via The Best Defense, a 10 best list of books on Afghanistan . The entry for Lady Sale's book says:
Lady Sale was possibly the only Brit to come out of the first Afghan war with her reputation enhanced. She arrived with an unmarried daughter, seeds from her Agra garden and a grand piano. She survived the retreat from Kabul, with a musket ball in her shoulder and in due course led a jailbreak of her fellow hostages. Her tombstone reads: "Here lies all that could die of Lady Sale."
Big Apple Men Are Gentlemen
According to the NYTimes, a study of subway manners showed that more men stand than women, indicating that New York city men are gentlemen.
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
What We Don't Know About the Globe
Joel Achenbach explains the vanishing island in the Pacific, and throws in the fact the Navy still has seven ships exploring the oceans, simply because we don't know where all the islands and sea mounts are.
Monday, April 15, 2013
Some People Are Too Talented
From the bio posted here of Gregory Mankiw
I'm sure Harvard and Boston will give a big turnout for the event (Arts Fair).
Mankiw is best known at Harvard for his work in economics and for his immensely popular Introduction to Economics class — or Ec 10. His parallel profession as one of the world’s leading interpreters and conductors of Beethoven’s oeuvre is less well known in Cambridge. A child prodigy, Mankiw studied piano at the Universität für Musik in Trenton, N.J., not far from where he grew up. While earning a B.A. at Princeton University and Ph.D. at MIT, the ambitious conductor concurrently earned his M.M. in orchestral conducting from Carnegie-Mellon. At the Pierre Monteux School for Conductors, he garnered special recognition for his micro attention to detail and macro approach to sound.Strangely, his wikipedia entry doesn't reflect all this.
Before joining the faculty at Harvard, Mankiw studied with the esteemed Fritz Frockenstem in the Orchestral Conducting Division of the London School of Economics. Museconominsts and arts critics used the word “revolutionary” to describe the 1980s world tour during which Maestro Mankiw performed with every major orchestra including the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Berlin Philharmonic, Vienna Philharmonic, Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra, London Symphony and the Dresden Staatskappelle. Stateside, he has led orchestras in Chicago, Cleveland, Los Angeles, New York and at the Metropolitan Opera.
I'm sure Harvard and Boston will give a big turnout for the event (Arts Fair).
Saturday, April 13, 2013
Disappointing Obama Bureaucrats
I saw somewhere that the HHS Secretary expressed surprise at the difficulty of implementing Obamacare. And there was an op-ed somewhere suggesting VA Secretary Shinseki should be ousted because of the backlog in VA claims. (See this related article.)
Based on what I know, or rather read, which may be wrong, I'm not impressed with either secretary--one of the primary jobs of a managing bureaucrat is to foresee the future and plan ahead.e.
The VA is always a downstream agency; it gets DOD's output. So it shouldn't have been hard to look at DOD operations since 2002 and foresee a rising workload over the years.
Based on what I know, or rather read, which may be wrong, I'm not impressed with either secretary--one of the primary jobs of a managing bureaucrat is to foresee the future and plan ahead.e.
The VA is always a downstream agency; it gets DOD's output. So it shouldn't have been hard to look at DOD operations since 2002 and foresee a rising workload over the years.
Friday, April 12, 2013
How Do Trains Stay on the Track?
Jason Kottke posts a Richard Feynman video in which he explains that question, after he tells us why trains can go with solid axles and no differential.
What I now want to know is when was the method invented? And why didn't Conestoga wagons need a differential (I assume because the wheels could slip?)
[Updated: turns out the conical shape also contributes to the sway of a railway car. See this wikipedia article on "hunting oscillation" ,which is a generic name for the phenomena. And this article goes into more detail than the Feynman video. It also briefly mentions an alternative to the coned wheel--canting the track. Not quite clear on how that works--a canted racetrack presumably uses gravity to counterbalance centrifugal forces. Is that the effect of a canted rail track, or does it also reduce the difference in distance traveled by outside and inside wheels? Still nothing on when coned wheels were invented.]
What I now want to know is when was the method invented? And why didn't Conestoga wagons need a differential (I assume because the wheels could slip?)
[Updated: turns out the conical shape also contributes to the sway of a railway car. See this wikipedia article on "hunting oscillation" ,which is a generic name for the phenomena. And this article goes into more detail than the Feynman video. It also briefly mentions an alternative to the coned wheel--canting the track. Not quite clear on how that works--a canted racetrack presumably uses gravity to counterbalance centrifugal forces. Is that the effect of a canted rail track, or does it also reduce the difference in distance traveled by outside and inside wheels? Still nothing on when coned wheels were invented.]
Chopper Pilot as Bureaucrat
Tom Ricks' The Best Defense has a post entitled "A Military Genre: a List of the Hard-Won Wisdom of Combat Helicopter Pilots.
You might say there's no way a pilot and a bureaucrat have anything in common, and you'd be almost right. But don't you think these bits apply?
Some of the other items are specific applications of Murphy's Law.
You might say there's no way a pilot and a bureaucrat have anything in common, and you'd be almost right. But don't you think these bits apply?
"6. Decisions made by someone above you in the chain-of-command will seldom be in your best interest.
10. If everything is as clear as a bell, and everything is going exactly as planned, you're about to be surprised.
14. If the rear echelon troops are really happy, the front line troops probably do not have what they need.
34. Nobody cares what you did yesterday or what you are going to do tomorrow. What is important is what you are doing -- NOW -- to solve our problem. "
Some of the other items are specific applications of Murphy's Law.
Thursday, April 11, 2013
Why Farming Is Dangerous
That was my first reaction when I saw the photos by The Cotton Wife. They're cute kids and I'm sure the parents are careful, but one price farmers pay for the lifestyle and occupation they love is an increased risk to the people they love.
Tuesday, April 09, 2013
Where's All the Bureaucrats
Government Executive has a piece including tables showing the 10 most common occupations in government, the Federal government, state and local government.
I was surprised by the lack of classical bureaucrats and by the presence of secretaries:

See the piece for the more detailed breakdown.
I was surprised by the lack of classical bureaucrats and by the presence of secretaries:
See the piece for the more detailed breakdown.
Monday, April 08, 2013
Management Expertise in the Private Sector
Sunday, April 07, 2013
Drones and FEMA
Seems to me FEMA should immediately create its own air force of drones, first to survey the aftermath of hurricanes, flooding, etc to assess the extent and nature of damage and to track the arrival or non-arrival of aid vehicles; second to provide emergency cell phone service in cases where cell phone towers have been damaged and/or where additional service is needed.
Saturday, April 06, 2013
Planting the White House Garden?
Obamafoodorama reports on the planting of the White House garden. We've had a cool, rather dry couple of months which has delayed everything, particularly the cherry blossoms.
In our garden we got the peas and lettuce, etc.in fairly early, though not as early as Al, who always beats us. His peas and lettuce have been showing for a couple weeks now, while I just saw ours this morning.
Mrs. Obama is planting wheat, planning to focus on whole grain foods when it's harvested in the summer. The garden is up to 1,500 square feet, and as they have in the past, they're using seedlings, not seeds so much, which probably explains why they're slower than we are, even though their garden is probably a half zone warmer.
No mention in the posts about whether the kids are doing any weeding--I think it's safe to say they aren't. I'm not a parent, but I suspect it's tough to get teenagers to do anything like that.
In our garden we got the peas and lettuce, etc.in fairly early, though not as early as Al, who always beats us. His peas and lettuce have been showing for a couple weeks now, while I just saw ours this morning.
Mrs. Obama is planting wheat, planning to focus on whole grain foods when it's harvested in the summer. The garden is up to 1,500 square feet, and as they have in the past, they're using seedlings, not seeds so much, which probably explains why they're slower than we are, even though their garden is probably a half zone warmer.
No mention in the posts about whether the kids are doing any weeding--I think it's safe to say they aren't. I'm not a parent, but I suspect it's tough to get teenagers to do anything like that.
Friday, April 05, 2013
Digital Library for All
Robert DArnton in the New York Review of Books writes about the launch of the Digital Public Library of America whose modest aim is to "make the holdings of America’s research libraries, archives, and
museums available to all Americans—and eventually to everyone in the
world—online and free of charge."
He traces the roots of the project back in American history, to our utopianism and pragmatism, the Enlightenment faith in reason and improvement and the practicality of trying to make things better step by step, ideas very appealing to me.
He traces the roots of the project back in American history, to our utopianism and pragmatism, the Enlightenment faith in reason and improvement and the practicality of trying to make things better step by step, ideas very appealing to me.
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