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Just a heads up that interesting stuff is happening at the forums. I want to direct your attention to two new member contributions :

Dropping Only One Rock at a Time: Two Years after NY's Rockefeller Drug Law Reform Act | by Shreya Mandal

Outsourcing Bonanza: Vietnam Trade Normalization by unlawflcombatnt

Great work indeed. Go read them. Also, a big shout out to our new members. The list after the jump!

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Margaret Bassett's picture

Pull up a chair. Let's set awhile

America was having mid-term elections during Jimmy Carter’s administration, and I had a problem. Turnips. During our first summer in East Tennessee, I finally had beat back drought, Japanese beetles, and creeping Bermuda grass (Mudey, to the natives) in the garden. But I didn’t know when to harvest the turnips. Someone had told me the first killing frost came on November 4, and at the same time the Daily Times was talking about a long growing season. So I called our neighbor, the fellow who lived by the sub-station. He was the line foreman when TVA installed electricity. He said to leave turnips in the ground as long as the tops were fresh. Pulling too soon robbed them of sweetness, but if tops were frozen they’d turn bitter. As a girl, I tangled with hard alkali soil and absolutely no summer rain in the near-desert conditions of Northeast Wyoming. The growing season was little more than three months. There, root crops would remain in good shape in the cellar. Here, a crawl space would fill the bill when the nights turned cold.
When we looked to buy, there were few low-cost houses available. Only one with a vacant lot for a garden in Maryville. I wanted to show my big city husband that we could eat well if we had a garden. I packed Mason jars from Illinois and bought more to reach 360 quarts. Beans, tomatoes, peaches, and whatever else was fresh and cheap would help the budget. Within one year, the price of a sheet of plywood had skyrocketed. There was plenty to do on our fixer-upper. Each time we went to the lumberyard, Jimmy Carter’s words ran through my mind: “Inflation is the cruelest tax of all.”
Retiring when we did raised a terrible risk. The weather had been extremely cold in the Chicago area for three successive years before we pulled up stakes. To make matters worse, natural gas was in short supply. A hint of a looming “rust belt” was circling my husband’s work. Mine would be changing also. What was to become a PC was still only an intelligent terminal. Teaching computer science would change shortly. IBM’s 360s had turned into 370s. A device, as long as a six-foot work bench, belched toner and was heralded as the newest thing in laser printers.
In Tennessee, we bought a used Datsun Honeybee to beat the high price of gasoline and vowed that we would not go into debt, nor use what capital we had. Then came the Gipper. Reagan’s inflation really tested our resolve. I remember local television showing the President at the World’s Fair in Knoxville in 1982. It was an Energy Exposition. During those years there were brownouts during the hottest part of the summer. A Mr. Friedman was in charge of TVA’s plan for more nuclear plants, the same man who later was in Los Angeles during the energy crisis in the early part of this century. By the spring of 1983, Knoxville was highlighted for having the first big bank failures. In 1984, when Howard Baker didn’t run for the Senate again, Al Gore beat out the GOP. Lamar Alexander, who grew up in Maryville, was the governor.
Meanwhile, in our pea patch, we continued to survive. What few savings we had in bonds produced double digit interest. We finally could afford a better Japanese small car. We added a laundry room to replace the clothes line. It was a comfortable, although certainly not a lavish, way of living. Our neighbors had become friends. I felt I was accepted. Many of those early couples, and by now their children, are still my friends. It’s hard to understand the provincialism of Appalachian culture, and to this day I sometimes wonder how I ever adjusted to what is referred to as the Bible Belt. Let it be said that folks are folks.


mole333's picture

Welcome!

Welcome aboard Margaret.

I have good memories of the Carter economy. I was a little kid and had some money to save. So I opened a Certificate of Deposit account at double digit interest. Seemed wonderful to me!

My initial impression of Reagan: a sudden, massive increase in homeless people on the streets of Los Angeles.


rwallnerny2007's picture

Carter administration

I remember working for Carter's campaign back in 1976 when I was in jr. high and living in georgia. I got a personalized invitation to the inauguration signed by Carter himself. Pretty heady stuff for a thirteen year old!


Margaret Bassett's picture

Carter Inauguration

I got an invitation too.
But it arrived almost at the
same time as the event. I
was so happy to have him
elected, after what we had
gone through with Tricky
Dick. I would like to read
his latest book.


Margaret Bassett's picture

Help!

The e-mail came from you, Lisa. I find my first entry. Makes no sense to me. Since Sat. I've had messages, mostly about my FDR piece, and then there are no submissions except my original. I'm writing here to say I don't know why I'm getting messages and then nothing to respond to except myself.
Anyone who sees this, Please! Write me directly or indirectly. I'm frustrated, because I can do other yahoos and blogs. But I can't get a seat at the Kitchen table.


liza's picture

You may be getting comment alerts

I am right now at the Apple computer store trying to get my computer fixed, but once i get home I'll look more closely at your account settings. you may be getting commet alerts. that means that every time someone posts a comment on one of your posts, an emial goes out to you. to reply all you should do is click on the link and that will get you to the post and comment to reply to.


mole333's picture

Spam

I think she is getting alerts for spam that hasn't been approved, which means she can't actually respond. At least one of the times she asked me about it the only things on the thread were spam emails awaiting (dis)approval.


Margaret Bassett's picture

Thanks to both of you

Settings are not quite right, else I wouldn't be getting alerts when no one has posted to my entries. Those have pretty well stopped, however. This hello there worked fine.
I have overcome some of the frustration by just logging in and looking at interesting pieces. I found a reply to one of my posts (FDR Dem) by just going to see if anything was added. I answered. Didn't look before I started this to see if the count is three, or more.
It's better now since the click and nothing to reply to has pretty well ceased.


Margaret Bassett's picture

Hi, Lisa A question

Got to the end of the thresd from your alert this time. I'm not getting responses to some other emails, however. It seems you have been doing some good work on the home page.
Part of my concern is whether I have an Earthlink problem, which could be bothering your page. However, I don't know what to tell Earthlink, because I can get, and respond to, your page without using the email link.


Margaret Bassett's picture

Did someone call me?

Early on the 27th I received a message from Lisa's "hello there" and here I am. Let's see what happens next.


Margaret Bassett's picture

What's up?

New log-in format. Neat! But here I am, answering myself.


liza's picture

the form looks different but it's the same

i changed the template structure to make it load faster for people to who have slower internet connections. it seems to be working.


Margaret Bassett's picture

It's working

Ah! Broadbank width may part of my problem. I have DSL.


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