Editing 75-01-A4

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The Food and Drug Administration paid a Buffalo, New York company to conduct a study of why children fall off tricycles. The research engineers drew a profound conclusion: they fall off tricycles because they lose their balance or collide with an object. They also learn that children get longer legs as they get older, thus complicating the business of riding tricycles. Now the purpose behind this survey was to help the FDA determine if it should issue safety design standards for tricycles. I'm not at all sure the government has any business considering such things, unless someone has proved that a lot of kids are injured riding tricycles, thus constituting a national problem. And no word of such a problem preceded the study.
 
The Food and Drug Administration paid a Buffalo, New York company to conduct a study of why children fall off tricycles. The research engineers drew a profound conclusion: they fall off tricycles because they lose their balance or collide with an object. They also learn that children get longer legs as they get older, thus complicating the business of riding tricycles. Now the purpose behind this survey was to help the FDA determine if it should issue safety design standards for tricycles. I'm not at all sure the government has any business considering such things, unless someone has proved that a lot of kids are injured riding tricycles, thus constituting a national problem. And no word of such a problem preceded the study.
  
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The Smithsonian Institution, which is federally funded, of course, isn't averse to putting in for some exotic boondoggles, too. Not long ago it sent Congress a shopping list of research projects it wanted to sponsor, including reproductive rhythms of catfish in India, or how fishing boat crews caused conflicts in Yugoslavian peasant towns, and a study of Polish bisexual frogs. Now, some of these studies may serve a larger more serious purpose but one can only wonder why private sources and colleges and universities aren't taking these projects on for themselves. The frog study, for example, was intended to test some new methods for distinguishing between one species of animal and another. Now that may be a legitimate scientific research objective but is that what we have a federal government for?
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The Smithsonian Institution, which is federally funded, of course, isn't averse to putting in for some exotic boondoggles, too. Not long ago it sent Congress a shopping list of research projects it wanted to sponsor, including reproductive rhythms of catfish in India, or how fishing boat crews caused conflicts in Yugoslavian peasant towns, and a study of polish bisexual frogs. Now, some of these studies may serve a larger more serious purpose but one can only wonder why private sources and colleges and universities aren't taking these projects on for themselves. The frog study, for example, was intended to test some new methods for distinguishing between one species of animal and another. Now that may be a legitimate scientific research objective but is that what we have a federal government for?
  
 
In recent years, a new cottage industry has sprung up to take advantage of federal boondoggles in the name of science and culture. A small army of bright wordsmiths and scholars will, for a fee, help prospective grantees dream up serious sounding titles for their projects in order to impress Congress or a federal agency. Grant proposals are chock full of persuasive salesmanship stressing the vital nature of the grantees project that Congress takes such stuff seriously at all, as a measure of how far we've strayed. In recent years, from the original purposes of federal government there are a few Congressmen who battle the boondoggles who say, in effect, "Hey, wait a minute. What business does government have paying for this? What's the benefit to the taxpayers?" What we need is a research program that will tell us how we can get a few hundred more Congressmen just like those others.
 
In recent years, a new cottage industry has sprung up to take advantage of federal boondoggles in the name of science and culture. A small army of bright wordsmiths and scholars will, for a fee, help prospective grantees dream up serious sounding titles for their projects in order to impress Congress or a federal agency. Grant proposals are chock full of persuasive salesmanship stressing the vital nature of the grantees project that Congress takes such stuff seriously at all, as a measure of how far we've strayed. In recent years, from the original purposes of federal government there are a few Congressmen who battle the boondoggles who say, in effect, "Hey, wait a minute. What business does government have paying for this? What's the benefit to the taxpayers?" What we need is a research program that will tell us how we can get a few hundred more Congressmen just like those others.
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<TD>Book/Page</TD><TD>N/A</TD></TR>
 
<TD>Book/Page</TD><TD>N/A</TD></TR>
 
<TD>Audio</TD><TD>Yes</TD></TR>
 
<TD>Audio</TD><TD>Yes</TD></TR>
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<TD>Youtube?</TD><TD>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=op2xB5ywFFc Posted by Me] with [[75-10-B1|Boondoggle's Foe]]</TD></TR>
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<TD>Youtube?</TD><TD>No</TD></TR>
 
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===Added Notes===
 
===Added Notes===
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* [https://worlddatabaseofhappiness.eur.nl/publications/the-demography-of-happiness-1348/ The Demography of Happiness]
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* [https://worlddatabaseofhappiness-archive.eur.nl/hap_bib/freetexts/matlin_n_1966.pdf The Demography of Happiness (PDF)]
 
* [https://www.fordlibrarymuseum.gov/library/document/0047/phw19750610-04.pdf If you are wondering, it was spelled "Lighght"]
 
* [https://www.fordlibrarymuseum.gov/library/document/0047/phw19750610-04.pdf If you are wondering, it was spelled "Lighght"]
 
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