PlaceEconomics Blog

This blog is the lessons learned from cities, clients, and students about what makes good cities, about historic preservation, about downtown revitalization and about economic development based on my work and travels throughout the US and elsewhere.

Saturday, May 2, 2009

The Truck Farm - Update

Back in August I posted an entry on a great business in Las Cruses, New Mexico named The Truck Farm. They are producers/purveyors of GREAT New Mexican, Mexican, Southwestern condiments. It is a great small business.

I told them at the time that they needed their own website to directly sell their wonderful products. Well I learned that they now have one. You can find them at www.sweethots.com.

If you like Southwestern cuisine of any kind, it can only get better with these products!

(and for any of you who are suspicious...this is an unsolicited, and uncompensated endorsement. I just love the Truck Farm, both as a great small business and for their products.)

Unabashed self-promotion

This morning I read a wonderful, funny and (believe it or not) scholarly paper entitled The Dakota Effect. It first appeared in PSOnline, an electronic journal of the American Political Science Association.

The article (maybe the wittiest academic article I've ever read) was written by two political science professors at George Washington University. It is about the statistically significant number of members of Congress who, although they now represent other states, were born in the Dakotas. For those of you who don't know, South Dakota is where I grew up and where I lived until my mid-30s.

But one of the reasons I love the article is that they nailed a number of the idiosyncrasies of those of us from the plains of Dakota (being positive, they might be called cultural peculiarities). Not surprisingly I suppose, since Lee Sigelman, one of the authors, is a native South Dakotan himself.

The authors write, "...Dakotans...are a proud but humble people. (A cynic would say they are humble because they have so much to be humble about.)"

Well, the first phrase in that description doesn't apply to me. I don't know anyone who would put me on their "10 most humble people I know" list. But the parenthetical certainly applies...I have plenty to be humble about.

And maybe that is the reason (along with the cultural peculiarities I learned in the first half of my life) that I am very, very uncomfortable with self-aggrandizement. Several good, and financially successful, friends of mine have pointed out that I would be a much better businessman if I were willing to be a bit more self-promoting. I'm sure they are right, but I'm too old to change now.

But I'm going to make an exception. Last week The Town Talk, the daily newspaper in Alexandria, Louisiana, wrote an editorial in advance of the statewide meeting of the Louisiana Trust for Historic Preservation at which I spoke on Wednesday. I have inserted the link below. Take a look if you wish. I'm not sure what they wrote is true, but I'd like to think that this is why I really do have the best job in America.

http://www.thetowntalk.com/article/20090426/OPINION/904250353

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