Ryan, Debi, and Toren Cragun's Blog

Debi (and Toren) at Plant Park

May 5th, 2009 10 comments
Number of Views: 4

We spent about an hour shooting photos in Plant Park at the University of Tampa on Saturday.  Here are some of the better photos:

On a different but related note, the main concern I have now is that Toren is not stillborn (per CDC definitions, stillborn refers to fetal deaths after 20 weeks). Luckily, his odds are pretty low – about 1 in 200. So, if we can pass that hurdle, the next is the risk of SIDS and infant mortality (also about 1 in 200, given our demographic characteristics). This is what a sociologist thinks about when he’s having a child…

Categories: Toren Tags:

big government vs. little government

May 1st, 2009 1 comment
Number of Views: 10

For all you fans of reducing government out there, maybe you should reconsider.  This NYTimes article gives a good illustration of situations when small government doesn’t make sense.  For years the government has allowed private companies to provide student loans at virtually no risk to the companies as the government insures the loans and provides the funding.  The companies just make money off that arrangement.  When the government makes the loans directly (even if it uses a private company to manage the loans), it saves billions.  In short, sub-contracting out to private companies services that government can provide directly only increases the cost.  It doesn’t decrease the cost, and here’s why: You introduce profit into the equation.

Do the math.  When the government runs the program, it looks like this:

cost of program = cost to provide the services

When government subcontracts programs, it looks like this:

cost of program = cost to provide the services + profit for corporation

In what situation can “profit for corporation” lead to lower costs of programs?  (It certainly hasn’t in healthcare; one of the primary reasons healthcare costs in the US keep going up is because insurance companies keep increasing their profits.  Take them out of the equation and healthcare costs will go down, not up.)

When I read that article this morning I remembered thinking about my father’s military experience. When he was in the military soldiers did the cooking and cleaning.  That was part of being a soldier.  Today, all of that is subcontracted out at ridiculous rates.  Soldiers don’t cook the food.  Why?  Can they not cook?  Of course they can.  The reason they don’t is because defense contractors see that as one more way to take money from taxpayers.  How could it possibly be less expensive to have soldiers cook their own food?

Don’t get me wrong; this isn’t a rant against soldiers having more leisure time.  It’s a rant about wasteful spending.  I’d love to pay less in taxes, just like everyone else.  But that means cutting out these ridiculous subcontractor scenarios where they simply add “profit for corporations” to the equation and then claim that it is cheaper for the American taxpayer because it “reduces government.”  That, of course, is crap!  It may mean bigger government to get rid of the subcontractors, but, ironically, bigger government sometimes means lower taxes.

Categories: politics, sociology Tags: ,

science is amazing!!!

May 1st, 2009 No comments
Number of Views: 4

Here’s a great NYTimes article this morning summarizing some recent genetic research on the origins of humans in Africa. We’ve known for quite some time that humans originated in Africa, but the current studies trace human ancestry to the southwest corner of Africa, something that had not been done before. That’s pretty cool. But even more cool – about 150 humans crossed into Arabia and their descendents settled the rest of the world. The fact that we can determine all of that through genetics is simply remarkable. Science rocks!

Categories: general news, sociology Tags:

Toren Cragun, in utero

April 25th, 2009 6 comments
Number of Views: 4

I know I haven’t posted much about the baby recently, but that doesn’t mean we haven’t been documenting the pregnancy. As promised yesterday, Toren, in utero:


Toren Cragun in utero from Ryan Cragun on Vimeo.

FYI, it’s actually much better in HD, which you can see on Vimeo’s website.

Categories: Toren Tags:

Spring Dance Concert

April 24th, 2009 1 comment
Number of Views: 4

Among all the other things Debi has been doing, she found the time to choreograph a dance for the University of Tampa Spring Dance Concert with a friend (and now neighbor).  Here it is:


UT Spring Dance Concert – 2-20-2009 from Ryan Cragun on Vimeo.

Categories: general news Tags: