o Terrierman's Daily Dose Terrierman's Daily Dose

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Loading the Dice for Defect, Deformity and Disease



Amy P. sent me a note about something she hoped I would address. She writes that she often hears people say:

"With an unknown mixed breed dog, who knows what kinds of problems are lurking there, and how many? At least with a purebred dog you know what problems you will be getting."


Ah, the old "better the devil you know than the devil you don't" case for Kennel Club dog ownership.

Too bad it's complete nonsense as far as canine health is concerned.

Just imagine someone telling you "Our family has hypertension, so we don't have to worry about cancer."

Eh?

Cancer and hypertension have nothing to do with each other!

If your family has a history of hypertension, you probably have the same chance of getting cancer as everyone else. And that chance is NOT zero!

Ditto for dogs.

If you own a breed with a seriously elevated chance of cancer, or a high incidence of epilepsy, that does NOT mean your dog will be free of heart disease, skin disease, liver disease, cataracts, or hip dysplasia.

Sorry, it does not work like that.

If you own a breed of dog with a particularly increased incidence of disease or defect, that negative health outcome is almost certainly ADDITIVE to the base of pathology which all dogs commonly face. One disease is not a "get out of jail card" for others diseases and congenital defects.

This is not to say that some genes are not linked.

A few are.

For example, we know that dogs with merle and spotted coats are more likely to be deaf than dogs with solid or big blocks of color on them.

That said, most diseases do not appear to be associated with linked genes. Those that are, are the exception rather than the rule.

In addition, when we do see linked genes, that link almost always points to an elevated incidence of something negative rather than something positive.

The reason for this is pretty simple: obvious disease, defect and deformity is much easier to tease out of the data pile than a reduction in an already rare pathology. One event is akin to a statistical loud noise; the other is simply a slightly longer continuation of the silence all around.

Of course no dog is born with a 100 percent guarantee of good health.

The health of dogs, like the health of all animals, is a roll of the dice.

Which is not to say that all dogs get the same set of dice.

To carry forward with the dice analogy, heavily outcrossed working dogs may be playing with a regular six-sided dice in which the chance of coming up with a pair of "snake eyes" (two ones) for a particular genetic defect is 1 in 36, or less than 2.8 percent.

A heavily inbred Kennel Club dog, however, may be playing with a six-sided dice that has the number ONE printed on three sides and the number TWO printed on the other three sides.

For that dog, the chance of coming up "snakes eyes" due to a "doubling down of genes" is one in four, or 25 percent.

In fact, many breeds have much higher rates of pathology than 25 percent.

Look at cancer for example. As I note in Making and Breaking Dogs in the Show Ring, more than 54% of Flat-coated Retrievers die of cancer, as well as more than 45 percent of Scotties, and 45% of Bernese Mountain dogs. Airedales have a cancer rate of 39 percent, Irish Wolfhounds 33 percent, English Setters 33 percent, Gordon Setters 29 percent, Irish Setters 27 percent, and Dobermans 26 percent.

All of these breeds have other problems too, of course.

There is a roll of the dice for every major body system: skeletal, circulatory, endocrine, and neurological, for example. A dog with a high incidence of cancer is not immune to other problems such as hip dysplasia, cruciate ligament injuries, heart problems, or epilepsy.

Today, scores and scores of Kennel Club breeds have serious health problems in which the probability of single-system defect is well over 25 percent.

Sometime this is is due to positive selection for pathology, as it is with dogs that have over-large heads which cause whelping issues, or dogs that have too flat a face (causing breathing and palate issues), or dogs that have achondroplasia (dwarfism) which is linked to both skeletal and heart issues.

Other times, however, it is simply a function of a small initial gene pool that happened to contain a regressive gene for one type of defect or another.

So long as the gene pool was large and otherwise diverse, the chance of that gene coming up in two rolls of the dice (one dice from the sire and one from the dam) was pretty low.

With a small population at the start, however, and progressive tightening of the pool through dominant sire selection and intentional inbreeding of the dogs to "improve" visible features such as coat color, coat length, and head size, defective genes are now much more likely to find each other.

The result is that defect and disease have reared up at startling rates in a huge number of Kennel Club breeds.

If you are looking to get a dog as a pet, do not swallow the blarney of a Kennel Club dog dealer who suggests that though his breed has a higher-than-average incidence of cancer or heart disease or cataracts, "you at least know what you are getting" in terms of problems.

In fact, all that Kennel Club dog dealer can REALLY promise you with his problem-riddled breed is that you are almost certainly buying into a higher-than-average chance of getting a dog with a serious, painful and expensive health care condition.

When buying dogs, caveat emptor is the watch word.

Do your research.

If a dog dealer tells you his "line" of dogs is free of all defect, assume you are being lied to, because you probably are.

When you read words like "cancer," "cataracts," epilepsy, heart defect, hip dysplasia, deafness, and skin disease, do not bounce too quickly to the next paragraph.

What is being promised here is that a lot of money will be hoovered out of your wallet, and a lot of time will be spent in veterinary offices.

Yes, a bad roll of the dice may occur with any dog, but remember that not all dogs are playing with the same set of dice. With many Kennel Club dogs, the dice are loaded for defect, deformity and disease.

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Sunday, November 16, 2008

Top UK Veterinary Charity Pulling Out of Crufts



The Daily Mail reports

Britain's leading veterinary charity is cutting ties with Crufts in the latest blow to the world-famous dog show.

The PDSA [the People's Dispensary for Sick Animals] said today it was withdrawing from all Kennel Club events over 'unacceptable' breeding practices and health issues affecting some pedigree dog breeds.

The organisation, which provides free veterinary care for the pets of people in need and has been supporting Kennel Club events for more than 30 years, said its staff were continually confronted by the consequences of pedigree breeding practices, including serious inherited health conditions.

The PDSA action comes less than two weeks after the RSPCA pulled out of Crufts.
Pedigree pet foods also ended its £1.5million sponsorship deal with the dog show, set to be staged next March.

Those moves followed allegations in a BBC documentary that the event promotes canine breeding practices that lead to deformities and illness

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Saturday, November 15, 2008

How About a Pygmy Hippo for the Whitehouse?



It seems everyone has an opinion about what kind of dog the Obama's should get.

The issue has leaped to the top of the national agenda for a couple of reasons: We are a bit in love with the idea of a young charismatic family in the White House; no one can understand the macro-economic complexities of the economic meltdown and so there is not much to talk about there, and Barack Obama himself has shoehorned this topic into the national conversation by giving a shout-out to his kids in his acceptance speech, noting they had earned the puppy he had promised.

All well and good up to there, but there have been a few small bumps since then. It seems Barack Obama is a little to new talking about medical and dog issues with the national press, and in his confusion, he said the family is looking for a "hypoallergenic" dog.

In fact, his daughter Malia is not allergic to dogs; she has a slight case of asthma, so a low-shedding breed is best, so as not to unnecessarily inflame the condition.

No problem; there are lots of low-shedding dog breeds, including all the various forms of rough-coated or wire-haired terriers, poodles, and a hundred different crosses of the same.

If the Obama's want a really low-shedding pet, however, perhaps they should consider doing what Calvin Coolidge did: put a Pygmy Hippopotamus in the White House.

Yes, it's true; along with six dogs, a bobcat, a goose, a donkey, a cat, two lion cubs, an antelope, a raccoon, and a wallaby, Calvin Coolidge kept a Pygmy Hippopotamus by the name of Billy for a short time at the White House.

Billy came from Liberia (they are native to the thickly forested river sides of Liberia, Ivory Coast, Guinea, and Sierra Leone), where he was born on 1927 and captured at a young age.

Billy ended up in the hands of tire mogul Harvey Firestone who had a huge rubber plantation in Liberia (note: Firestone's Liberian massive rubber plantation is still in operation in Liberia).

Firestone gave Billy to President Coolidge as a gift, but by the time the hippo got to the U.S. he was no longer a little baby; he was six feet long and weighed about 600 pounds!

After a very short stint corralled at the Whitehouse, Billy ended up at the National Zoo which is run by the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. He lived there his entire life and was a popular attraction.

For the record, Billy turned out to be quite a stud, and over the course of his long life (he died in 1955) he sired 23 babies. Most of the Pygmy Hippos in U.S. zoos today, in fact, are his descendants. Billy also traveled a bit, and even attended the 1939 New York World's Fair as part of the Firestone exhibit!

Coolidge was not the only person to have a non-shedding animal in the White House.

Herbert Hoover's son, Allan, had two alligators that were occasionally allowed to wander (supervised, of course) around the White House grounds.

These were not the first alligators in the White House. That distinction is owned by John Quincy Adams who got an alligator donated to him by the Marquis de Lafayette.




A baby Pygmy Hippo named Monifa recently born at the Taronga Zoo in Sydney, Australia
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Pedigree Pulls Out of Crufts After 44 Years


Samoyeds at Crufts


The Telegraph (UK) reports:


The future of Crufts is in doubt after the show's sponsor, Pedigree, pulled its sponsorship after 44 years.

The move could spell disaster for the show, which has been embroiled in controversy since a BBC documentary claimed that Crufts supports unhealthy breeding practices which lead to disease and deformities

Last month, the RSPCA severed its ties with the event, claiming that Crufts' emphasis on pure breeds was "morally unjustifiable". The BBC may not cover next year's show.

The Pedigree deal was worth £500,000 per year. A brief statement from the brand's parent company, Mars, said: "After careful consideration, Pedigree has decided to withdraw its sponsorship of Crufts. The Pedigree brand has evolved and we are prioritising initiatives that support the broadest possible community of dog owners such as our successful programme to help homeless dogs - The Pedigree Adoption Drive - and our online service for breeders. We look forward to working with The Kennel Club on other projects in the future."

Pedigree's one-time slogan was "top breeders recommend it", but the BBC documentary, Pedigree Dogs Exposed, highlighted the life-threatening genetic conditions in many of Britain's five million pedigree dogs including popular breeds as the bassett hound, German shepherd, bulldog and pug.


All I can say for Forest Mars and family (who happen to live up the road in Arlington, Virginia, and who own Mars which owns Pedigree) is God bless, and "Thank You."

Taking a pass on Crufts is not only good business sense, but it puts Pedigree in the forefront of the New History of Dogs which is being written right now.

Let the record show that Pedigree dog food put dogs first when the facts where brought to them.

Let the history show that instead of stuffing there hands in there pockets, this venerable dog food company said "Enough is enough; let's change the way things are done."

Instead of saluting only the narrow, cramped and inbred world of show dogs, Pedigree has decided to market to the larger world of dogs which includes pets, muts, working dogs, and yes homeless dogs too. Is there a better dog food ad in the world than this one? I think not!

The BBC is another company that will make it into the history books.

They have already done a lot by commissioning Pedigree Dogs Exposed (click here for the links to the documentary loaded up to Youtube), but they can still do more, by pulling out of Crufts alltogether (the best idea) or requiring an alternative narrative to announce the show if it must go on due to contractual considerations.

The idea here is simple: Instead of the tired, and almost entirely fictional, prattle that is repeated ad nauseum about the dogs, let's hear the truth for every breed. Let's hear about the the incredible inbreeding coefficients, the cancer rates, the breathing and whelping problems, the skin conditions, the liver diseases, and the epilepsy.

Let's also note that none of the working breeds actually work.

The lady parading a Finish Spitz around on a string lead not only cherishes a breed with frightening levels of epilepsy, but she also does not hunt birds with that dog, nor does she even own a shotgun!

The fox terrier may have been a working terrier 150 years ago, but it has not been since the day the Kennel Club got hold of it in 1873. The modern dog has a chest as deep as the keel of a war ship. The only time a show ring fox terrier will go to ground will be its last day on earth when a headstone is slipped over the top.

The true story of what has happened to dogs, thanks to shows like Crufts, is so much more interesting than what we have been told!

If "the show must go on" due to the two-year contract the BBC has already signed, let it at least go on as a teaching tool.

If the BBC thinks it must sponsor this travesty for at least once more year, let them at least "teach the controvery" and not in some sideshow tent where it will not be heard, but on air as part of the main television broadcast event!


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Friday, November 14, 2008

Got a Smaller Dog?


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More Ukulele! More Clint Eastwood!




Ennio Morricone, the composer of "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly," turned 80 this week, and we have a new Hawaiian president, which combined seems like a good enough excuse for this clip from the Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain.

Enjoy!
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What They're Saying

Writing on Slate.com, Michael Schaffer author of the forthcoming book One Nation Under Dog: Adventures in the New World of Prozac-Popping Puppies, Dog-Park Politics, and Organic Pet Food writes:
"Americans' lingering fascination with breed purity is a fading aspect of pet culture, something that may someday look as goofy as those tuxedo-clad TV announcers who pontificate about the proper size of basenji paws during the Westminster Kennel Club's annual show."

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Best Diet Food Ever



Pork Brains in Milk Gravy, and yes you can eat as much as you want! Armour used to make this wonderful product, but now it's only sold by Rose. The good news is that you can still order it by the case!

Notice that one serving contains 1,170 percent of your daily recommended cholesterol intake.

For a full meal, might I also suggest the Scottish Haggis and for dessert the Spotted Dick?

Of course I know you are all dying to chow down on the Pork Brains in Mike Gravy! All you really need is a recipe!

The good news is that our finest Members of Congress have suited up and showed up to help. Congressman Howard Coble (R-NC) has a nice recipe right here.

Says Congressman Coble:

"When I was a youngster, my mom used to prepare Brains N' Eggs for breakfast. It was a fairly regular breakfast, not at all unusual. So that's when I started eating them. I've enjoyed them ever since, but I can't find any on Capitol Hill. I'll admit the name of the dish is not the most appetizing, but try 'em, you might like 'em!"


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How to Find a Break in an Invisible Dog Fence



I have an invisible fence at the house (along with solid fencing) which prevents the dogs from running down the driveway. It has worked like new money for more than 10 years. No complaints here.

That said, a worry with invisible fencing (especially in a very big yard) is that someone may dig on a flower bed or install something near the fence line and cut through the wire. If that happens, how do you find where the cut in the wire occurred?

The Invisible Fence folks will charge you about $80 for coming out and tracking down the break, but you can do it yourself by following this "Instructable" which involves using a simple AM radio and a $1.50 part from Radio Shack called an "RF choke" (Radioshack part number 273-102).

With the RD choke hooked into the transmitter, the IF wire should send out a signal you can pick up on the AM radio at about 600 kHz (60 on your AM dial). See the link for a step-by-step guide.

Want to save money on Invisible Fence replacement batteries? There's an "Instructable" on that too.

My hot tip on button batteries of any type (including for locator collars for your working terriers) is to order them through E-Bay where you will pay a fraction of the cost at your local store.

I order my locator button batteries directly from China, and pay about 15 cents apiece (including shipping) as compared to about $2 apiece at Home Depot or Radio Shack.
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James Bond Was a Birder



The new James Bond movie, Quantum Of Solace, is opening today, which is my excuse to mention that Ian Flemming named his star character after famed birder and author James Bond, who wrote Birds of the West Indies, which is still one of the very best books on Caribbean avian fauna. Ian Flemming had a copy of Bond's bird book at his home in Jamaica -- a home called "Golden Eye." So now you know ...
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Thursday, November 13, 2008

New Falconry Regs



The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) has announced a major revision to the regulations governing falconry.

The federal permit has been slated to be eliminated in favor of state, tribal or territorial falconry permits. All states, except Hawaii, already administer falconry permitting programs.

Dual state/federal permitting will no longer be necessary.

In addition, the U.S. FWS will now have an electronic reporting system for the acquisition, transfer or loss of falconry birds, to replace the current paper reporting system.

The final rule can be found at http://migratorybirds.fws.gov/ and a good Question and Answer piece (PDF) can be found here.
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Guns and Crocodiles: A Solomonic Solution




Back in the 1990s, the Solomon Islands broke out into a pretty nasty ethnic conflict which only ended in 2003 with the military Regional Assistance Mission to the Solomon Islands (RAMSI) and the Participating Police Force (PPF) which includes up to 30 New Zealand police.
Under the peace accord, almost all Solomon Islanders had to surrender their fire arms.

Now, some five years later, the local crocodile population has boomed, and last week a 10-year-old girl was killed by a crocodile.

The solution, at least for now, is not to rearm the Solomon Island natives (ethnic tensions remain), but to send the PPF in to cull the crocs, which is being done.
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Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Bird and Fortune on the Financial Mess



No one puts a point on the pencil quite like Bird and Fortune.
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Excellent Wildlife Art

Susan Fox is a very gifted artist with a special talent for drawing animals and she has a terrific blog too with a special focus on Mongolia, critters, natural history and travel.

The painting at right is of a Jack Russell terrier Susan spied at a stable in California. Perfect!

Check out her other painting and drawings. Susan is a member of the Society of Animal Artists, Oil Painters of America, Artists for Conservation and the California Art Club. Her main website is at www.foxstudio.biz.

Folks with a special Mongolia jones (you know who you are) will find her work of particular interest.
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Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Hunting With Terriers in South Africa

Jonathan sends pictures of hunting with terriers in South Africa.

Excellent!!


Hunting Rock Hyrax in South Africa with a Jack Russell by the name of Sticks. The Rock Hyras is locally called a "Dassie."


A young man and his "dassie."


Checking a Jackal sette, South Africa.


A taxidermied Dassie or African Rock Hyrax.


A working dog dreams of another day in the field.
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No Problem: It was a Triple Wide

From Tuscon Arizona:

About 800 small dogs, including Chihuahuas, terriers and Pomeranians, were seized from a triple-wide mobile home whose occupants were overwhelmed trying to care for the animals, authorities said Wednesday

Pima County sheriff's deputies and animal welfare officials who removed the dogs also found 82 caged parrots in the home in a rural area northwest of Tucson.

:: source

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The Bullet Spins to the Right ... and the Left




This is Part I. See Part II and Part III.

I'm taking a small crash course in scientific spin this morning.

The science is the recent report from the CDC about lead bullets and wild game.

What's the report say? Who know? No one has bothered to actually link to it.

According to the National Shooting Sports Association, the trade association for the firearms, ammunition, hunting and shooting sports industry, the study shows "no evidence that lead or 'traditional' ammunition pose any health risk to those who consume game harvested meat."

According to an Associated Press story headlined Government study warns of lead levels in wild game, however, the study may say something a little less comforting:


A government study says people who eat wild game shot with lead bullets tend to have higher lead levels in their blood.

The preliminary study was released Wednesday by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the North Dakota Health Department.

A state epidemiologist says the study found that the more recent the consumption, the higher the lead levels.

Health officials and the CDC collected blood samples this spring from more than 700 people in North Dakota. Most were adults who ate venison from deer killed with high-velocity ammunition.

State officials are recommending that pregnant women and children younger than 6 avoid meat from deer killed with lead bullets.


The notion that this study was promulgated by "anti's," by the way, is complete nonsense. As the video, at top, makes clear, this is a debate being initiated by hunters and it is is a public health issue and is being reported and treated as such. If lead bullets are a problem for hunters consuming game, the solution is not an end to hunting, but a simple change in ammunition formulation to copper or bonded bullets. We put a man on the moon; we can make cheap bullets out of something other than a highly toxic metal, eh? Have a little more faith in America!

From what I can tease from conflicting reports, lead bullets in game elevate the lead count in the blood of those who eat that meat, but that elevation may not be enough to cause a huge health concern in and of itself.

That said, lead in the human body is a bad thing in adults, and a very bad thing in children where it leads to stunted mental abilities. Is it worse that drinking whiskey, smoking cigarettes, or inhaling paint fumes? Probably not, but without a link to the CDC report, how will we ever know?
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Update: Fact sheets and summary info on the report are linked off of here. More from the Minnesota DNR is available here. The North Dakota Dept. of Health says:

  • Pregnant women and children younger than 6 should not eat any venison harvested with lead bullets.

  • Older children and other adults should take steps to minimize their potential exposure to lead, and use their judgment about consuming game that was taken using lead-based ammunition.

  • The most certain way of avoiding lead bullet fragments in wild game is to hunt with non-lead bullets.

  • Hunters and processors should follow the processing recommendations developed by the North Dakota Department of Agriculture.

  • If food pantries choose to accept donated venison or other wild game, they should follow these recommendations:

    ** Shot with lead bullets – Accept only whole cuts rather than ground meat. (Studies indicate that whole cuts appear to contain fewer lead bullet fragments than ground venison.)
    ** Shot with bows – Accept whole cuts or ground meat.


The x-ray picture, above, shows a rapid-expansion soft-point bullet, showing where the bullet entered and exited, and the fact that small lead shards were strewn throughout the carcass, from shoulder to flank. See the Minnesota DNR video (slide show) for more information. Click on picture to enlarge.
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Monday, November 10, 2008

Job One is Job Done



The BarkObamablog has officially closed down, but it was fun while it lasted and (more importantly) it helped, just a little, to raise cash, Cain and consciousness. The bloggers were:

Check 'em out!

A special thanks to Gina Spadafori for getting the whole thing going.
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Fisheries at the End of the Line


Greyhound II, Key West, 1958


Greyhound IV, Key West, 1983


Greyhound V, Key West, 1987


In a recent article in Smithsonian magazine entitled Seeing is Believing, Loren McClenachan, a graduate student at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in San Diego, looks at the scrap books of charter fishing boats to see how their catch has changed.

What she documents in pictures is what has been verbally reported across the world; all the great fisheries are being overfished, and what was once considered bait is now the catch of the day.

Whether sport fishing with poles, or commercial fishing with nets, overshore or close to shore, the story seems to be the same all over; fewer species and smallers fish are being boated all over. The big fish, at the top of the food chain, are increasingly rare and are often absent alltogether.

The three pictures shown at top are all taken from the "Greyhound" -- a charter fishing boat out of Key West, Florida. The giant grouper in the top photo are now fully protected after being pushed to the edge of extinction. The Jack in the middle picture are now a rarer catch than they once were, with most day trippers now having to content themselves with immature red snappers as pictured in the third photo.
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Sunday, November 09, 2008

Pedigree's Pro-Adoption Obama Ad With Terrier



Perfect. In every way.
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Thursday, November 06, 2008

Obama's Green Team Likely to be Competent


Robert F. Kennedy Jr. with Augur Hawk (Buteo rufofuscus) in Kenya, 1974.

How do you clean house in Washington?

The good news is that it's easier than you think.

The top folks in any Administration are Schedule C appointees, and their tenure is up with the Administration that appointed them

Just below the Schedule C appointees are the folks who really run Washington, year in and year out: the Senior Executive Service or SES.

The Senior Executive Service was created in 1978 to provide continuity of care and institutional memory from one Administration to the next. These are the folks who know how to get things done and who know why certain thing cannot (or should not) be done.

A continuing problem in any Administration is that lower-level Schedule C appointees may try to transfer over to an SES pay grade. This is not always bad (competence comes in all political stripes), but it is generally discouraged.

So what will Barack Obama's cabinet look like?

It is being assembled now, but one thing is clear: The test is competence and expertise, not political cronyism. The word has already gone out that ambassadors will not be recruited from the high-dollar donor list as was done with Bush and others, and the word has also gone out that new blood and news ideas and energy are valued. While we can expect to see quite a few Clinton-era folks in the Obama Administration, I also expect to see a lot of young hyper-educated can-do public policy technocrats running things on a day to day basis.

Look at the Obama campaign for a sign of what is to come: Smart young people you have never heard of working quietly and seamlessly, and with considerable internal discipline, to get things done. "There is no drama with Obama," note the mechanics who have been part of the inner workings of the machine: Messages are designed to support goals, and a task list is developed to achieve the goal. It's not a cook book, but it is a play book followed again and again. There are few surprises, and while the team is energetic and adaptive, it is not easily sidetracked by loud noises or hand wringing from the sidelines.

Individual cabinet appointments are to come, but the initial calls are excellent. No word yet on who will run the U.S. Department of Interior, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Bureau of Land Management, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the U.S. Forest Service, or the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service, but you can bet it will be a notable improvement on every score.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a Hillary Clinton supporter, may be tapped to run the Environmental Protection Agency.

RFK Jr. has served as an attorney with the Natural Resources Defense Council (an excellent group in my opinion), and used to work for Riverkeepers in New York where his work to protect the Hudson River got him tapped by Time magazine as one of the "Heroes for the Planet."

Of special interest to the folks who read this blog is the fact that Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is a licensed falconer (click for video). He used to be the head of the New York State Falconnry Association, and he wrote the manual and test for falconry used in New York State.

For other names being tossed around, see this piece from The Guardian entitled: Obama's potential green team.
To see how incredibly competetent and on the ball Team Obama is, check out http://Change.gov, which is a website launched by the Obama team's Presidential Transition Project which documents the transition into power and solicits ideas from the public. This was done on Day One.
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RFK Jr. at the University of Charleston, WV in 2002
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Barney Nails a Reporter ... and on Camera Too!


Poor Barney. I would snarl and bite too if I was going to Texas.
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A Soft Monkey Loves a Tough Terrier




From The Cellar (cite):

Keepers at Jiaozuo City Zoo [in China] have given an orphan monkey its own guard dog, because the other primates in the cage were bullying it. After being forced to intervene to save its life several times, they settled upon the trained canine, named Sai Hu, and are happy to report that it has been very successful.

"Whenever the baby monkey gets bullied, he dashes up and drives the others away. And the baby monkey is also very smart. Each time he smells danger he runs to jump on the dog's back and holds on tight. The alpha male monkey has been really unhappy since we sent in Sai Hu. He tried to organise several ambushes on the little monkey, but they all failed because of the dog," said a zoo spokesman.
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