Wednesday, May 31, 2006

"Decent Porche" No Longer an Oxymoron

Saw this in one of the machine design rags we get at work and knew I had to share. This is the Porsche Rinspeed Bedouin. The six cylinder boxster engine has been converted to run on natural gas. Acceleration is 0-60 in 5.6 seconds. Top end is 155 mph due to electrical and mechanical inhibitors installed. The roof is lowered by electrical motors hidden in the thicker side walls of the hatch to form the bed of a truck. With tailgate extended for extra capacity, the bed is six feet long.

So it's just big enough to haul two choppers on a light weight trailer with a big dog kennel secured in the bed. And when not being used as a truck, it's a pretty kick ass little wagon. I think the El Camino has finally been usurped.

Success!

Sera is alive and well. Last nights efforts have been duly rewarded. The front tire can now lock up on a dime and stay locked up for at least $7.50. So I have all the go and braking power I need. Use it wisely, grasshopper.

She sure is fun. Low to the ground, feet stretched in front of you, over-steering at the mere thought of which direction you want to go. Everything feels so comfy. Then the rear wheel hits a bump and you get tossed like a mechanical bull ride. "Save me Jebus!"

Fuzzy Head

I seem to have picked up a cold this weekend. Woke up this morning with a sore throat and a nose that would not stop running. Stuffed a snot rag in my back pocket and headed to work.

And I stayed three hours late. Two hours were over time that weren't really over time. The company counts holiday pay separately, so I have to work at least eight hours of 'over time' as straight time before the time-and-a-half goodness kicks in. Buggar all.

The last hour was 'me' time. I took my defective master cylinder into work and honed it out so the plunger would move freely. Which now it does. My head was exceptionally fuzzy, my body sore and tired from working while fighting off my cold, but I worked through it with the help of a snot soaked rag and now have a functional master cylinder for the chopper.

At least it seems functional. I'll find out for sure when I hook it all up. How addicted to my motorcycles am I? An 11 hour day to get the chopper working when it's supposed to rain? I live in a fool's paradise.

Monday, May 29, 2006

Where there's Spark there's Fire

It was a good effort today. I gave the old girl all I could for one day. In the end, I got her started. She roared beautifully. She'll go. She still won't stop. The plunger is binding in the master cylinder. I'm going to take it into work and hone it out on the precision honer we've got there.

The old drum brakes on the Ironheads are real pieces of crap. All that power to thrust you forward and a half-assed drum brake to stop you. The rear drum brake on TAZ is the same way. You have to rely almost entirely on the front disc brake. Sera didn't even used to have a front brake. Then I wore out a pair of good boots performing emergency Flintstones braking maneuvers. So she got a disc brake up front. It has never worked as well as it should have. Hopefully I can change that tomorrow.

I tend to forget what different beasts my two Ironheads are. I'd swear that Sera weighs about half what TAZ does. She also leans about twice as far to the left when on her kick stand. TAZ is LOUD. Sera generates volume and tone. Sera also has a habit of marking territory and blowing oil caps. As soon as she fired up today she took a leak on the driveway.

Motorcycle Philosophy

I am currently taking a Clymer manual break from fixing the rear brake on the chopper. I am missing two key tools right now; a case of beer and a heckler. Somehow I am managing. And man can I lube a bike. When I pulled the rear axle it was thickly coated with the good glide grease. But in the process I came upon a very interesting philosophical question.

If ass-crack is revealed, and nobody is there to see it, am I really working?

My wife assures me that since I can feel the crack of my ass slipping past the belt line, that counts as observation. I am indeed working.

Best Blotter Art EVER!

Sunday, May 28, 2006

Pointing and Giggling: LED Throwies

An old room mate of mine finally found something useful on the internet. Yes, more useful than me blathering on about choppers, punk rock, anarchy, and strange work place conversations.

LED Throwies

I suddenly want to attack the old Steel Bridge here in P-town.

Saturday, May 27, 2006

Have it Both Ways

Apple has invented an all-seeing screen. What do I think?

The Paranoid: I wonder if this project had government funding?

The Synic: Just when you thought internet porn couldn't get any worse!

The Futurist: It's good to see something REALLY new instead of the standard upgrades.

Over all ranking: meh.

The Value of Higher Education

Having to take the bus to work I learned something new. I guess people with Down Syndrome can attend community college. I never knew that. But this kid with Down Syndrome knew that because he was a college student. So if you get a degree from a community college, you know that at the very least you're only retarded. My AA sure makes me feel proud right now.

BTW, this kid had a killer lunch box. It was one of the old school black lunch pails like people always imagine all the construction workers carry. I had one just like it in third grade. I still have the thermos from it. A thermos and an AA, and we're both riding the bus. Like peas in a pod, brother.

Friday, May 26, 2006

I've Been Punked!

TAZ just punked me. I was running some errands when a loud PUNK came from the engine. It sputtered loudly, then stopped. What every biker should know to do in this situation:

1. Swear very loudly (I forgot to do that)
2. Engage clutch
3. Coast to the side of the road
4. Swear some more (Didn't do it. For some reason I was mellow.)
5. Park the bike
6. Start assessing the situation

A grizzled white haired man with mutton chops and a mustache driving a construction truck immediately pulled over and asked if I needed to borrow any of his tools. Knowing that a problem that sounded like PUNK would almost certainly require parts, I thanked him but said I was fairly close to home and I had all the tools I needed there. I ended up pushing TAZ a quarter mile home. My first impressions are that I blew a gasket. When kicking over there is still about the same level of engine compression, so piston rings are not likely to be the cause (not ruling it out, though). To investigate further I need to tear into the engine. Damn I wish I had a garage.

What this all means:

1. My errands didn't get run
2. I have to take the bus to work
3. To do this I have to stop by the ATM
4. To get exact change (or a close proximity thereof) I need to stop by the Kwik-E-Mart
5. The guys won't be able to talk me into going to the nudey bar after work
6. Hopefully my lovely will pick me up from work
7. Sera, the chopper, is less of a mystery so will be fixed up and put back on the road pronto
8. TAZ will be dug into and fixed ASAP

Both of these bikes are older than I am. I need to remember that and keep both of them working at all times. That way I always have a backup when one of them goes PUNK! What fascinated me was how calm I remained through the ordeal.

"Huh. That's not a good noise. Is it a random occurence? Nope. Clutch is in and I'm coasting. Anyone in the side land? There they go. Okay, get over. Blown head gasket? Blown piston rings? Whatever it was, I bet I'm pushing this bike home. Hey, the rain is picking up. Oh well."

Einstürzende Neubauten


If a person looked through my music collection they would probably assume that my favorite artists are Tool/APC, Johnny Cash, Einstürzende Neubauten, The Reverend Horton Heat, Social Distortion/Mike Ness, Dead Milkmen, Pogues, Butthole Surfers, Bill Hicks, The Pixies, Madness, and The Beatles (based on number of tracks from each). Profile THAT!

By quantity, Einstürzende Neubauten is the clear front runner. I'm talking half again as much as the runner-up with several old albums I really need to add to my collection one of these days. Which makes me think I should sign up for their fan supported project. Yet I never find myself humming one of their tunes or singing their song lyrics while riding down the road. Working in the factory I tend to live their music. For those of you unfamiliar with their work, here are some suggestions. If you enjoy your sounds on the melodic side, check out Ende Neu. For the truly brave and experimental types willing to let their ears bleed, try Zeichnungen des Patienten O.T. For a third perspective, Halber Mensch is one of my favorites with a great variety of sounds.

Shorts

Iraqis shot 'for wearing shorts'

Do you have any idea how often I have contemplated doing the same? Though I would be more likely to issue a warning telling people not to wear sweat pants.

Punk's Not Dead

While walking past a 55 gallon drum at work, the chain on my wallet caught. The weakened spot of leather surrounding the eyelet that attached the chain to my 10 year old wallet ripped away, separating the two pieces. I felt heart broken. It is so hard to find a good wallet.

I bought the wallet from St. Paul Harley-Davidson in July of 1996. It had everything I wanted including a zippered pocket, card slots, covered photo ID slot, and Multiple large slots for storing things like money, collected business cards, and insurance papers. I have yet to see a more perfect one. But after only two weeks, one of the snaps broke off. I wrote a nasty letter to Harley-Davidson telling them exactly what I thought of the quality of their product. They responded, telling me to send them the item so they could assess the damage and determine a course of action. I mailed it off and two weeks later received a brand new replacement. That wallet has been with me every day since then, traveling all over these United States via planes, trains, automobiles, trucks, and Harleys.

So at the end of my shift I took my broken wallet down to the other end of the factory where we make the big chain. I punched a hole in my wallet behind the one that had ripped out. I grabbed a one-eye (a chain link with only one rivet instead of the required two) from a mohawked operator's waste bucket and a topping tie strap from the parts bucket. Utilizing an unused inspection table, I riveted the chunk of .404 chain to my wallet. I then fed the S hook on the end of the chain through the rivetless holes at the end of the tie straps. I then showed off my handiwork to yet another mohawked worker. (Sure are a lot of us punks at work.)

My repaired wallet may not last another 10 years or I may keep it together for another 20. We'll see how this fix goes.

My leather jacket of 14 years is held together with duct tape, safety pins, metal accessories, and a generous amount of hand stitching. My wallet is now returned to service through a chunk of broken saw chain. If punk is a state of mind, then it is alive and well and still raising hell.

Thursday, May 25, 2006

Mr. Positive

Subtropic warming could mean bigger deserts.
Areas such as the Mediterranean, southern Europe and the northern part of the Middle East could have a tendency toward more drought,
Dry heat stressing in France and California could lead to some of the best vintages in ages. Some of us think that could be a good thing.

Potheads say: TAX ME!

The committee to Regulate and Control Marijuana in Nevada writes Taxing Marijuana Hurts Gangs. I disagree in as much as gangs are entrepreneurial in spirit. The black market is where the money is. High risk ventures have the highest rate of return for those smart enough, strong enough, and lucky enough to pull it off. Remove marijuana (or all drugs, for that matter) from their portfolio and they will shift investments to gun smuggling, child pornography, or counterfeit designer watches. As long as it makes money. Criminalize grapefruit and watch them jump on black market citrus.

However they make a very good point.
Make no mistake -- gangs rely on profits from marijuana like movie theaters make money off $8.00 popcorn.
Damn straight! I can get popcorn for FREE at work. Granted I don't get to watch the latest Hollywood Lackluster Craptacular with it, but that could be a good thing in itself. In theory I could bring in my iBook and a DVD and watch a movie during lunch break while munching on FREE popcorn. So isn't selling it for $8 criminal? Why isn't this industry regulated? Help me Big Government! Help save me from big giant companies who want to charge me too much for something I don't need but buy anyway.

Never mind the raving lunatic in the corner. Where was I? Oh yes...

Here is another angle on pot taxation. Why would government want to tax a portion of what you spend on marijuana when they can bust into your house (no knock laws) and take everything you own if they find drugs present? Why take some when you can have it all?

Switching angles again. Don't get dizzy. Why would we want government regulating marijuana? These same people allow absolute horse shit tobacco and donkey piss beer to be sold to us. A consumer is arguably better off with a free market (albeit underground) in which they have to educate themselves. Does anyone really want the pot equivalent of 3.2 beer?

Final swivel of the camera (for today). How stoned are you that you are ASKING for more taxes?! You want to give the government MORE money? Studies show this shit is relatively harmless especially when compared to alcohol and tobacco, but your request to have your hobby taxed and regulated could be construed as an argument to the contrary.

Damn, I forgot. People don't like that whole threat of arrest and imprisonment thing. So, $120 for an ounce plus the $45 per ounce wholesaler tax (passed on to the consumer of course) for $165 plus 6.5 percent sales tax for a total of $175.73 for an ounce of midgrade pot. Don't forget packaging and handling, infrastructure, you're looking at $200 per ounce in pretty short order. Maybe more when you look at supply and demand issues. Still, best of luck to the CRCM. May they get everything they've asked for.

Has this ever happened to you?

My former supervisor asked me to handcuff her. My current supervisor was present. We were in the middle of the factory. I obliged.

Breakin' the Law! Breakin' the Law!

I broke the law tonight. I did it with full intent and knowledge that I was breaking the law. I did it right in front of four police officers.

At approximately 1:45 AM I pulled up to a red light and stopped. I waited. Just across the intersection were two police cars, lights flashing, the officers surrounding a pulled over vehicle and questioning the occupants. I waited some more. A car pulled up behind me. We waited. Several cars went through the intersection in the opposite lane of traffic. We waited. A car pulled up to the cross street of the intersection and stopped. We all still waited. A girl pulled up next to me in a little red sports car. We waited. The girl next to me gave me a questioning look with a shrug of her shoulders. I shrugged back. Kicking the bike into first gear, I looked for cross traffic and oncoming traffic. The police were still just across the way, but no other vehicles were visible. I gunned it. I twisted that throttle hard and screamed across the intersection. I don't normally do that around cops, especially that close to bar close, but I was not going to spend half a second longer in the middle of that intersection than was absolutely necessary and I was not going to wait forever for that stupid light to change. While I was pretty far away from the intersection pretty fast, a look in my mirror showed no one else following my lead.

Every rule has at least one exception.

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Personal Power

You make up your own reality. Don't believe me? I've seen it. In fact I saw four examples last night.

I spent several hours trying to get a grinder not to stop every few indexes. Everything I tried resulted in what seemed like success only to have the machine start acting up when the operator came over to check it out. I did two hours of overtime and witnessed the next shift's operator running that same machine without those problems.

My partner spent the last hour and a half of his day trying to fix multiple depositing problems on an assembly machine. I checked up on him at the end of the day and witnessed these problems. Again at the shift change with a new operator, those problems magickally disappeared.

I had spent a couple of hours on a pair of assembly machines at the beginning of my shift that also had depositing problems. An operator went home sick and the person switched from his machines to the pair that was already running rather well. When the new shift came on and a new operator took over the machines I had worked on, the machines ran perfectly.

A turn-table machine for making our preset parts had a mysterious problem of leaving marks on cutters but not tie-straps. Due to the number of maintenance calls, I switched the machine to running all tie-straps and told the operator that I would look at the cutter issue when I got done with the other calls. The new shift came on and the cutter problem went away, only to be replaced with a new problem affecting both tie-straps and cutters.

You make up your own reality!

Personal Jesus

Madonna defends mock crucifixion according to the BBC. Gotta love the crucifixion imagery for getting people all worked up. How many thousands of people did the Romans execute this way? How many robbers, rapers, killers, and free thinkers were nailed to some wood and left to die? I've done the crucifixion art thing. Man do people get PISSED! They'll call you all kinds of words they wouldn't utter in their precious churches. If you're going to criticize Madonna, at least do it because she is a talentless hack, not because she knows how to stir up plubicity.

Banner Ad Fun

Found this one while perusing today.

Advice: If you look like that after losing six pounds, you were probably sexier with the extra weight. Thin is a media lie. It only looks good on centerfolds and on runways. In real life, it scares the shit out of people. Looking around the factory, twigs get almost no attention while the girls with some fleshiness about them have guys flocking around them.

This public service announcement was brought to you by the (un)Reality Council.

AWPC

It was raining today. Spring in Portland, bound to happen more often than not.

Boss: Jake! You rode your bike today?
Jake: Yeah.
Boss: Dude. You are hardcore. Is your truck in the shop or something?
Jake: No.
Boss: Dude! You are SO hardcore!

And cheap. It costs me almost one third in gas to ride the motorcycle to work. That alone is worth a wet bum.

Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Robots

Soldiers bond with iRobot machine (Reuters).
Angle did not hesitate when asked if he thinks the bond soldiers have formed with his robots is normal.

"I think it's very rational," he said. "(Scooby Doo) was someone, something, that was doing a great service for them and thus when they brought it back, it was viewed not just as a loss of a machine gun or a piece of body armor or a helmet. It was a loss of a contributing member of the team."
A lot of soldiers, especially Marines, will name their rifles. Pilots will name their aircraft. I name my vehicles. It has a lot to do with the magickal link. When the engine starts to sputter and you want the thing to get you two more miles to the gas station for a closer look you can start chanting, "Come on Sera. Come on baby. Just a little further." Compare this with, "Come on 1965 Harley-Davidson Sportster. Come on machine. Just a little further."

But I would have called the bomb sniffing robot Snoopy. Snoopy was a WWI flying ace who challenged and shot down the Red Baron. Scooby was a coward who would eat his best friend's hoagie when his back was turned.

Review: 10,000 Days

TOOL's latest album, 10,000 Days, is awesome. I mean really, really awesome. Totally awesome, even.

Every time they come out with a new album the fear hits me. Will this be the one where they stop exceeding their previous works? Will this be the one where they don't surprise me? I hope that day never comes. One of these days I'm going to listen to Opiate, Undertow, AEnima, Lateralus, and 10,000 Days in that order in one sitting. Hey, I've got Monday off!

When listening to TOOL, even when hearing one of their albums for the first time, I immediately get the sense that their music is coming from a well that I have visited often. There is another language being spoken behind it all and my subconscious can speak it and understand it. I've been there. I've done that. We have received the same signals. Our nervous systems may process the data differently, but the thumb print is there. Any others out there get that experience?

Monday, May 22, 2006

Hail to the King, Baby

Dreams have always fascinated me. My friend Bree had a fairly typical one recently. The typical ones are the best. They strike at the root of the program and can scream messages back out at us.

Which has inspired me to relate a dream of my own from a few days ago. Here are the pertinent details as copied directly from my journal entry. Hold tight:
Took a side door. Saw the maintenance area. All modern equipment but dirty, oily, messy. Felt awkward not wearing safety glasses. Back to the caves. Tracking someone. There she is! Maria enters a side cave in a trance state. The others show up, including my dad. "I've found the entrance!" No, that's just to the king's home. You want into the Monster City, the throne room. Grab a bucket of bolts and hydrox cookies, because only that will satiate the beast. I send the rest of the party away. Go find another way in. But it's spring break and zombie and vampire college kids are descending into the caves for the big party. I am spotted. I act tough and challenge one guy to bloody knuckles. My fist comes forward at full force and as knuckles collide I feel nothing. Why? I am a mix of two vampire clans myself. But they don't know that. I challenge a female vamp with pale skin and white mohawk. She takes off her shirt. Stare at those perky white breasts with huge nipples. I smile. Our fists collide and she shakes her hand in pain. I try once again with the man. He too feels pain while I feel nothing. So I leap. The chase is on and I am headed for the underground city where the monster king lives.
And I wake up knowing, just as any half assed shrink could tell you, the monster on the throne that I seek is most assuredly myself.

So there you have it. I am the King of the Monsters, Lord of the Demons, a vampire twice over again. The only thing that will satiate me is a bucket full of bolts and hydrox cookies. And those long hard bolts and soft centered round cookies intermingled in a bucket are not symbolic of anything. Nothing at all.

Saturday, May 20, 2006

Portland Bike Fest: The Sea of Monsters

I was robbed. It was a gentle robbery. First they asked me to give them $5 to park my motorcycle. I whipped out the wallet and handed them a single bill. In return I received a little green ticket with instructions to place the piece of paper in my windshield. Uh, yeah. At the door they told me that if I wanted to go inside I had to give them $15. Since this is what I came to do, I again unleashed the leather and slipped the elderly gentleman a single bill. I was rewarded with another ticket which would permit me entrance and another single bill similar to the one I had to relinquish for parking. In total they took $20 from me. In return I got two thin pieces of paper and the privilege of entering the 2nd Annual Portland Bike Fest.

Upon arrival I should have realized that something was amiss. After all, this was supposed to be a show dedicated to bikers and their lifestyle. The bike parking area had a few motorcycles parked there. I slid my road worn 1973 Harley Sportster between a shiny Honda Shadow and a pimped out Goldwing. Was this the crowd that I would find waiting for me inside? No, it was a far worse thing than that. The parking lot was a sea of suburban monstrosities. Mini vans, SUVs, and family sedans were packed near capacity into the lot. A few old timers sat out front, road worn faces sucking back cigarettes and telling tales of their travels. I walked up to the turn style, handed another elderly gentleman my ticket, and entered purgatory.

This was the new American motorcycle scene. What greeted my senses shared more in common with the old starving artist fairs than what I had known to be a bike show. Technical proficiency of the craft of motorcycle building was apparent, but the soul had been stashed away in some forgotten shed along side the classics that used to dominate such events. The first bike I saw had a placard next to it, declaring that this was a custom chopper. To its credit, the bike was based on a rigid frame, open belt primary, and had radically long front forks. Did this make it a chopper? The inverted telescopic forks were massive. They were so large that I doubt most women could fit a single hand around one tube. The frame, while forgoing the added mass of a suspension system, seemed to be designed for use by a pair of over weight, middle aged polar bears. One look at the expanse of the seat confirmed this intended use. The mass of the plate covering the outer portion of the open belt primary drive showed that while polar bears me be an endangered species, they wanted something capable of withstanding a direct hit from a high powered rifle. I glanced around the auditorium, spotting several likely candidates of big, white furriness. Which ones had ridden this bike here? I looked again at the motorcycle. Apparently the bears opted for something with more protection, like a Hummer or maybe an armored personnel carrier. The bike had no stone bruises, heat marks, oil stains, or other signs of actual road use.

After passing by several examples of the expanding back sides of the American biker, I came upon something that seemed to tell a different tale. It too bore the description of chopper on its tag, but the builder had the common decency of tacking on the words 'pro-street' before hand. At last, a sign of someone not afraid of revealing that their design was actually a hybrid of styles. The message of the bike was powerful. It was done up with the long, low, pro-street style but opted for a long, thin springer up front like a chopper. They had painted it a dazzling burnt orange with a Confederate flag on the tank and the numbers '01' in dark blue on the sides. Having grown up watching a pair of hillbillies outrun dim witted law enforcement every weekend, the General Lee reference was stark. The devil is in the details, or so they say. Iron Cross valve stem caps and the lightning bolt 'SS' insignia on the points cover clearly eluded to Germany's World War 2 era. By comparing the ideals of the Confederate South and Hitler's Germany the common theme emerged. This was a bike for people who hated Jews and Coloreds. While I could not approve of the sentiment, I appreciated the honesty in this ocean of ambiguity.

While navigating the displays of thick, glossy paint jobs, wide rear ends, and obvious over use of chrome trinkets (Am I talking about the bikes or the people, here? The lines seem to blur.), I spotted a group of young gals. It was obvious that they belonged to some sort of bizarre gang or strange sex cult as they all looked and dressed alike. Each was a blonde anorexic in black vinyl hot pants. below the waist were fishnet stockings at black high heeled platforms. Up top were form fitting micro t-shirts declaring them as 'Bad Ass'. The situation became clearer when I spotted the heavy set, grey haired man with a much larger shirt featuring the same words. Apparently this was some sort of family business, a man pimping his wares. This is Portland, after all, home to what is the third largest legal American sex industry after Nevada and California. I only hoped, for the old man's sake, that this was the colloquial use of 'bad'. Honesty is never the best policy in advertising.

While still searching, hoping to find a Picaso amongst the velvet Elvises, the first act of the day's musical entertainment took to the stage. Tribute bands, by nature, are a curse of the blind masses on those with the sensibilities of a mouse. Once, during a financially difficult time, I purchased a case of ramen noodles. The mice found them, recognized that they were not food, and started to build a nest in the box. I took a cue from the mice and tossed the entire case, vowing to never again indulge in such cheap mockeries. So when a band announced as a tribute to Guns and Roses were brought on stage, my stomach was already turning. To my surprise, they went above and beyond what any normal cover band does when pissing all over songs that some people may have actually enjoyed at one time. They did an acoustic set. No, don't run. Whatever does not kill you surely makes you stronger. Breath in. Breath out. Turn off the sound inputs and focus on the visual. Something here has to be worth the admission price.

There, a few feet from the forty-something tattoo artist with pink dreads and years of living the lifestyle engraved in the folds around her eyes, there was that one thing I had come for. It was a beautiful garbage heap. Low slung rigid early 60's Sportster, magneto ignition, steel plate seat, single rear disc brake, and not a speck of paint anywhere. It was a masterpiece of function and art. In defiance of convention, black exhaust taped pipes were routed to the left side of the bike. A pair of velocity stacked carbs jutted out to the right, feeding into a single pipe before splitting into the heads. The oil drip off of the generator was cleverly disguised as a garden hose faucet. An extremely utilitarian oil cooler was hidden in the shape of a hip flask. Strangely twisting copper tubes fed fluids from their various storage containers to where they would be used. In order to ride this bike someone would have to remove their lower legs and reattach their feet at the knees. It was street performance art for the brave. Polar bears need not apply.

Before total nausea set in I managed to find a couple of other rough gems. One came in the form of a simple bar hopper that borrowed heavily from the stylings of the late, great East Coast outlaw Indian Larry. While a bit over done, one could appreciate that the old school influence had not completely died off. Another was a memorial to the fallen brothers of Oregon's motorcycle clubs. It was assembled using parts from the motorcycles of dead patch holders. The result was a clean suicide clutched rigid framed pan/shovel. It was obvious that this was something greater than the sum of its parts.

When I could no longer handle being crowded by polar bears and families who tuned in to watch Jesse James or Orange County Choppers every week, I stepped back outside to the clouds of cigarette smoke hovering around the door. Only a few years ago when I went to such events, the bikers would light up inside with blatant disregard for posted signs prohibiting such behavior. I couldn't help but think, 'No! Not yet. I am far too young to be talking about the good old days.' Striding through the parking lot, I passed a D.A.R.E. search and rescue vehicle. A woman who had been passed out in the front seat wearing her fishnet stockings and black leather bikini top quickly opened the door. Her head barely cleared the vehicle before she vomited up a chunky mixture of what was mostly beer and some remnants of a meal that never should have happened. She glanced in my direction, mascara smeared around her eyes, and quickly retreated back into the refuge of her vehicular fortress of solitude.

Back in the motorcycle parking area my bike still stood out as a blight in the sea of bolt on customization. The Shadow was now gone. In its place was a simple, low slung Ironhead Sportster. Somewhere in that accumulation of bastardized bike styles and commercialized creations was a kindred spirit. We were a pair of suckers, willingly handing over $20 for the privilege of partaking in the dance of the dead. While one polar bear made grunts and groans at another, attempting to show off the various gadgets and googaws on his giant Japanese sled, a lone wolf howled. All attempts at any other communication were futile. The wolf howled and leapt, running off into the distance. Somewhere back there was another lone wolf. Rather than tracking him down, it was best to leave him as a mystery, more perfect than what I would probably encounter. That way this lone wolf can continue to think that while the pack is busy in-breeding and feeding off of dead carcasses, there are a few out there that still dare to howl at the moon. And maybe that thought is worth $20.

Friday, May 19, 2006

Racial Identity

When my great grandparents (dad's mother's side) came to the US, they left a country known as Germany. They identified themselves as Germans. They had the surname LaRue. To visit where they came from, I would have to go to France.

When my grandfather was brought to America, he came from a country known as Germany and was identified as German. If I were to visit where he originated from, I would have to travel to Poland. Also, my dad swears that his father's story of his kidnapping from an estabilshed and respected German family and subsequently being brought across the Atlantic to be held for ransom is probably phony. He seems to think that his father was actually a Jew escaping German persecution, probably a Rothchild or a Rothman who shortened it to the Germanic Roth.

My mother's father is Norwegian for several generations. We'll just leave that one as is.

Her mother is a completely different story. My maternal grandmother would claim to be part just about every single European ethnicity except English or Irish. So that side could be anything, but I'd put my money on English with a surname like Pierce. Probably some Irish in there too.

I grew up being told I was a Norwegian/German. I could be a French/Polish/Norwegian/English/Jew. Some might consider me a European mutt. To trace it all back with any certainty, I should probably call myself African. Or maybe it is safest just to consider myself a modern American. I can state with very little doubt that I am human. Everything else is just lines on a map.

Thursday, May 18, 2006

Capitalist Pig Dog Hating Short

Go watch HA HA HA AMERICA. I get sick of trying to preach this shit to people. You enjoy fragrant monkey tail!

Money, Money, Money. Ain't it Funny?

When reading House FY07 budget sees $348 bln deficit, the eyes gloss over and the brain shuts down. How can one even begin to fathom money in sums that large? That is just the deficit! The actual budget is $2.7 trillion with some more almost assuredly to be tacked on at a later date to cover things they forgot about.

I hate the way they write out things like that in the news. It makes the difference between million and billion look like a single step. Same with billion to trillion. Let's write it out in full.

Deficit= $348,000,000,000

Budget= $2,700,000,000,000

Gotta love those zeros. But let's put it into a more human perspective. If every person in the United States, regardless of age, had a full time job earning minimum wage, we'd have to give it all to the government just to cover the budget. That's over $10,000 per person. Don't forget that this has nothing to do with the already existent national debt or Social Security, which is figured separately.

See, not real money at all. So don't worry about it.

Wednesday, May 17, 2006

Campaign Stuff

I haven't really been doing much campaign stuff since I don't want to win. Still, what is the fun of a political campaign if I don't do a little mud slinging. Since the supposed front runner right now is Hillary Clinton...

Someone told me that Hillary has cooties.

Quick Run Down

Using the National Guard to patrol the border is a legitimate use of these citizen soldiers. They are the NATIONAL GUARD. I just find the very notion that we could even attempt to lock down our Southern border laughable. Then again, I find the whole idea of political borders kind of funny. As history has shown, walls eventually fail.

Much ado about nothing. The Da Vinci Code premiered at Cannes and canned. But for some reason fundies everywhere are pissed that a book from the fiction shelves was made into a fictitious film. BAN THE UNREAL! Nevermind that the critics have declared it a piece of shit. Come on Christians, this isn't like your protests of The Last Temptation of Christ. That film was GOOD. Can't you just get all high and mighty and claim that your God made this film suck to punish the infidels?

Tony Blair is suggesting the UK automatically deport foreign prisoners. Why doesn't he just show up in public wearing a rubber suit and ball gag with Bush behind him, riding crop in hand? At least when Reagan and Thatcher were swapping saliva they were both conservatives.

Lastly, The United States has banned the sale of arms to Venezuela. President Chavez doesn't care. Here's an idea. Bush and Blair versus Chavez and Castro in a tag team cage match. I'd put my money on the Southerners. Oh wait, I can't. They're Socialists.

Getting Ahead of Itself By Going Backwards

Scientists at the University of Rochester have observed light going faster than the speed of light by going backwards.
"It's weird stuff," says Boyd. "We sent a pulse through an optical fiber, and before its peak even entered the fiber, it was exiting the other end. Through experiments we were able to see that the pulse inside the fiber was actually moving backward, linking the input and output pulses."
This is one of those strange pieces of information that is going to stick with me and forever change my view of the universe. I keep trying to picture myself about to enter a tunnel only to see myself already exiting the other end and achieving this miracle by going in reverse.

My brain is starting to make noises something like those old percolator coffee pots. Somethin's a-brewin'.

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

The Big Maybe

US releases 9/11 Pentagon video. Does this put to rest the conspiracies that say the plane was most likely shot down by a missile and yet another missile hit the Pentagon? Go ahead, watch this video footage for yourself and draw your own conclusions.

Have you gone and watched the footage for yourself? I highly suggest you do it before continuing on. So, that was the recently released footage of what was reportedly American Airlines flight 77 hitting the Pentagon. It very well could have been exactly that. From what I saw, it could also have been a missile. Again, from what I saw, it could have been an alien space craft crashing into the Pentagon. From that same footage I could also see this being something put together by a special effects studio to be intentionally vague. It also fits the desciption of Zeus hurling a lightning bolt at a bunch of humans who have displeased him. I can almost rule out that this was a silver explosive carrot being thrown by a giant rabbit. Almost.

I love it when news services have to tell you what you are seeing in the video.

Captain Capitalism!

Are you a Piggy Bank Pinko? Watch this animated short to find out the truth about how the economy works. Then go buy stuff.

Monday, May 15, 2006

This Weekend

It was a weekend of choppers, socks, politics, and Peruvian Goddesses. Good times.

Saturday, May 13, 2006

Consumption Junction

McDonalds got hit really freakin' hard by the whole Super Size Me business. They had to start down playing the huge soda and giant fries while trying to offer 'healthy' alternatives. So did the other fast food chains. The gig was up.

But in the last couple of weeks I've seen the new push. Both Taco Bell and Jack in the Box are urging people to add a fourth meal to their day.

My message to all the fast food chains. Spend massive amounts of money lobbying for the legalization of pot. That way you are doing somethng useful AND boosting your late nite sales.

AWPC: The Rebel Rouser

Guy: The oil companies are making record profits and we're paying record prices for gas. It's pretty bad when you have to plan your vacation around how much gas you can afford.
Me: But people are still lining up at the pump.
Guy: But how much longer can we afford to? There ought to be some heavy regulation.
Me: Here's an idea. Why don't we do what Bolivia did? We forcibly take the assets of the oil companies, tell them, "You've made your profits. Get lost," and let Americans share in the wealth of the resources that belong to them as Americans.
Guy: Yeah. That'd show 'em.

I don't really want such a thing to happen. I am not a fan of Socialism, even if it is Democratic Socialism. But it was great to hear Americans agreeing with a Communist ideal. I got a good laugh out of that.

Indifference

I whole heartedly encourage people to buy American products, especially union made American goods. I also have no problem with buying British, German, Swedish, Venezuelan, Bolivian, and other non-exploitive products. So I should be happy to hear that Big Three auto retirees launch buy-US campaign, right?

I could care less. Why would former CEO's exercising their stock options want you to buy goods from the companies they formerly worked for? How would that benefit them? Maybe it's because they didn't get to cash in on the huge salaries current CEO's get. But my mind wanders.

So yes, by all means give preferential treatment to American goods. Then kick out the CEO's and let the employees run things. After all, Ford was established on the ideas of a guy named Henry, built on the sweat and labor of hard working unions, and made rich via the wallets of the consumers. As far as vehicles go, I would suggest a pre-1980 American model, you know, from when CEO's only made 10 times as much as their employees and workers received a decent wage and benefits package. They rock.

Friday, May 12, 2006

Shop Safety

X was quoting Norm Abram and the suggestion, "there is no more important safety rule than to wear these— safety glasses."

Last night while trying to watch a machine's part depositor, instead of placing the part down on the track, it shot it straight out at me. The tiny part headed directly for my left eye, and was deflected by my safety glasses.

I've heard so many tiny things ricochet off my glasses, I can't figure out those folks who choose to wear their glasses on top of their heads. I still wouldn't force safety glasses on people. And sometimes eye patches can be sexy.

NSFW?

Let's make all of this indecency business nice and sparkling clear.

This is art.



At one time this was porn, but it's old enough now that it is art.



This is porn.



Hope that clears things up for everyone.

Bye-Bye Boobies

Video game "booth babes" forced to cover up.
The video game industry's annual trade show in Los Angeles opened its doors to its exhibitors on Wednesday with organizers ordering women staffing the booths to cover up or face a $5,000 fine.
Because as anyone in the labor force knows, you don't have to wear skimpy outfits to be a whore.

The only obscene displays of flesh I've seen were flapping off the sides of Minnesota State Fair goers with a corn dog in one hand and a Republican party baloon in the other.

Thursday, May 11, 2006

The Practical Side

My dad had a dresser in the basement, next to the old claw foot tub and shower. That's where he kept his barn clothes and work clothes from his days at the foundry.

It has taken me a while to catch on to the true practicality of that. This week I moved my dresser into the bathroom downstairs. My smelly work clothes from the factory always come off in there when I come home and take a shower. That means the laundry basket always needs to end up there. Why not centralize it?

What would make even more sense is putting the washer and dryer in there as well. Rental property so that won't happen. Space would also be a concern. But it is something I will keep in mind if I ever decide to build a house. A 'personal cleaning center' makes practical sense. Clothes and towels make up the majority of the laundry. Sheets, table clothes, and rugs are occasional wash items. Why not put the laundry facility where most dirty laundry is generated?

Hmm... suddenly naming the capital WASHington makes more sense.

Know Blue Axes!

Taxes are bad. Unless you think the government should be buying you shit, then taxes are good as long as they aren't taxing you.

So the government is trying to pass yet another supposed tax cut. Fine. Whatever. The national debt is currently so outrageous I can't even think of it in real terms anyway. Any politician who tried to cut programs, cut government jobs, and raise taxes to actually pay off that damn debt would be tarred and feathered. I'm with Bush on this one. Let's just pretend it doesn't exist. After all, in many ways it doesn't actually exist.

I still love this photo of the folks in business attire with the balloons and anti-taxation signs.

Wednesday, May 10, 2006

Random

I had a dream in which hordes of people left a Mormon gathering in laughter after a black woman read a tract describing the Mormon view of Whites and Blacks. I then had to walk across that field, stepping carefully to avoid the huge piles of elephant shit. Where did I end up? In a huge auditorium full of naked Thelemites. Not perfect, but much more pleasant.

The Swede Transvestite is coming for a visit. I'm going to make him ride bitch, reliving our days as room mates when we would disco to The Village People while wearing boots and hats. Yes, boots AND hats.

WOOT!!!

I don't know how I do this. I really don't. Check out this graph.

Just like I had purchased my house right before the housing boom, I sold my house in Minneapolis at the very best possible time. It will be a while before I can afford to buy another one, but that's fine. What did I do with my earnings? Not what I had planned, but it was a hell of a good time.

Full article on the housing market slow down found in The New York Times.

AWPC

Monday I was sent down to the other plant to cover for a missing maintenance guy. Supposedly everyone in my usual plant was asking where I was. This conversation occurred last night when I returned to my usual haunt.

Tim: Everyone was asking where you were last night. I told 'em, "What? I'm not good enough for you?"
Pete: Well Jake is the better looking one.
Tim: Pete! I feel so insulted.
Jake: It wasn't an insult, Tim. He's just making an observation.

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

The Art of Customization


At my last gas stop on Saturday a 40ish gal approached me.

Lady: What's that you're riding?
Jake: 1973 Sportster.
Lady (looking stunned): I used to have one of them, but it didn't look anything like THAT!

That is the power of custimization. Stock is for suckers. If you think buying officially licensed bolt on crap from Harley is customization, you'll get the bland bike you deserve. If you purchase one of those 'production customs' from the likes of Big Dog, BMC, or any of the other V-twin shops, prepare to eventually be ignored as people grow tired of seeing the same 'chopper' over and over.

TAZ isn't even that radical. Ape hangers, 6 inch over forks, a tear drop tank, and an after-market seat. It's nothing compared to my other Sportster, Sera.

I'm a really lucky guy to have two incredible bikes. Anybody willing to save their money can get away with having one.

Monday, May 08, 2006

Environmental Poser

I figured out my mileage from my motorcycle excursion this weekend. While I normally get about 35 mpg around town, on the open road I was getting over 40 mpg. The downside is that I have to purchase high octane fuel, premium. I also use a lead substitute because of the old engine. That costs about $10 a bottle and I have been using the same bottle for over five years and still have over half the bottle. Sometimes I also purchase some octane booster to get the fuel mixture closer to the 100+ octane the thing was meant to run on, but I didn't do that this weekend. When I purchase that it costs about $5 a bottle and will last me about 20 fill ups. Regardless, I was experiencing some decent gas mileage while getting to keep my tough as nails image.

UFO's Natural

UK says UFOs caused by natural forces, not aliens.
"No evidence exists to suggest that the phenomena seen are hostile or under any type of control, other than that of natural physical forces," the report said, according to extracts quoted by the BBC.
Well what a relief. I'm glad to know that when I saw that incredibly huge triangular shape flying directly over my farm and blocking out entire star systems it was just a natural phenomenon. This huge object, impossible to say how large but certainly bigger than several football fields, passed directly overhead at an incredibly slow crawl of a pace with only a whisper of a sound, with several solid lights seemingly attached as though to some sort of impossible aircraft was really just due to unusual atmospheric conditions. It is so comforting to have somebody who wasn't there and didn't see it explain away the mysteries of the experience.

This is an artistic rendition of something very similar to what I saw cruising along at a snails pace nearly silently. It was quite the natural phenomenon.

Nostra-Dumbass

Folks, mark your calendars and let's test the accuracy of the little man in my head.

May 2012 will mark the begining of time travel. By the end of the year, time as we know it will cease to exist.

Shit, can you imagine the effect time travel would have on the stock market? Speaking outside of the dream now, money as we know it would have no purpose. Why save up for a rainy day when you know that next Tuesday there will be showers for 12.7 minutes starting at 2:34pm?

Sunday, May 07, 2006

Sweet, sweet lovin.

From Flintlocke's Guide to Azeroth (World of Warcraft for those who don't know). Go read it now. Seriously. Even if you don't play and might not get some of the references, you will still laugh your ass off by the end.

Meat Grinder

All day ride the '73.

Go out for a meal of fried chicken strips, beer battered fries, fried mozzarella sticks, and deep fried mushrooms.

All night drink gin and tonic.

The possibility of physical and mental collapse is now very real. No sympathy for the Devil, keep that in mind. Buy the ticket, take the ride.

Saturday, May 06, 2006

Numb-de-dumb

All week I had been craving it and today I finally made it happen. I needed to go for a real motorcycle ride. Not this bang around town shit. The plan was to ride up to Mt. St. Helens, cruise around their for a bit, then ride back. The plan was quickly scrapped as I discovered that signs in Portland that tell you which road to take to get to St. Helens actually point you to the town of St. Helens, Oregon. Live and learn never to trust signs posted by the man.

So instead of 100 miles to Mt. St. Helens and back, I decided to continue along this trail to Astoria, then down to Cannon Beach, and back to Portland for a trip of well over 200 miles. While my body had lost nearly all sensation due to the notorious Sportster buzz, the ride was superb. There were lots of great parts, but one thing stood far and above the rest. Perhaps even a once in a lifetime experience.

As I rode from Seaside to Cannon Beach, I passed a Ferari. I've only ever seen a Ferari on the road once before. They are truly marvelous sports cars. An engineering marvel of high power in a light frame that hugs the road so closely you can hardly tell where one ends and the other begins. Standing still these things looks like they are going fast. And today I learned they sound fast, even if they are only going 20 mph. Have you ever watched one of those films that shows a high speed European grand prix? Ferari's in real life make a sound similar to that in a way that a photo of a steak is similar to having a perfectly cut and cooked t-bone on a plate in front of you.

Then I passed another Ferari. This one was newer, but had the same red paint job, the same fast look, and a nearly identical fast sound. Then there were three more in a group, one of which was silver, all different models and years.

As I pulled into Cannon Beach to grab some lunch, there were Feraris everywhere. A tent downtown welcomed the Northwest Regional Ferari Club Gathering. Porches are junk. I have an affinity for older Corvettes. But these are clearly superior machines. I have seen how Corvettes handle the road. I've driven a big block Vette down a desolate stretch of highway. A Vette is a car. It may be a very fast one, but it is a car. A Ferari is a work of engineering art. There is no road fast enough, none twisty enough, to unleash the demon within these things. If a Corvette is champion warrior, a Ferari is a master assassin.

Up until today, I wasn't a big fan of Feraris. I know I'll never own one no matter how much disposable income I have, but it sure would be fun to drive, just once, preferably some place that has no speed limit or very few cops.

Friday, May 05, 2006

Chapel of Sacred Mirrors

The first time I viewed any of Alex Grey's art, I can remember thinking, "I've been there! I've seen that!" I have tried over and over to reproduce those space/time events in some of my own art. I hope that some day my work can be as succesful at it as his.

Today's Sinfest

Dangerous Freedom

The ride into work today cinched it. The weather was beautiful, temps in the 70's and the sun shining down from a clear sky. And there I am having to wear that stupid fucking helmet. So this June I am loading up one of the bikes in the back of the truck when I head out to Idaho to pick up the VW Bug over the Car d'Lane weekend. Idaho doesn't have a helmet law. I'm going to let my scalp soak up some rays and feel the wind in my 'hawk. Dangerous personal freedom is what I crave. No helmet, no matter how small, can allow me to feel that. And I miss it a LOT!

Thursday, May 04, 2006

Working to the Music

The factory doesn't allow radios. For someone like me, this is a blessing. It also means that I hum, whistle, and sing while working. What I have discovered;

When I whistle, there is a 90 percent chance that it will be 99 Red Balloons.
Hast Du etwas Zeit für mich
Dann singe ich ein Lied fuer Dich
When I hum it will usually be Beethoven's 9th. Lovely lovely Ludwig Van.
Freude! Froh Freude!
Freude, schöner Götterfunken
Tochter aus Elysium!
Singing is far more frightening as I break into Hanks Williams' Honky Tonk Girls.
Honky tonk girls, honky tonk girls,
With their big hair and their rhinestones and their pearls.
Honky tonk girls, honky tonk girls,
Well it's Saturday night and I'm gettin' tight with my honky tonk girl.
When I was a grinder operator I used to sing the entire Rocky Horror Picture Show soundtrack. Glad those days are behind me.

Pro-Life Hypocrits

As someone who hates kids I am appaled by what some pro-lifers are saying about a 63 year old woman who has decided to have a baby.
The reports of Dr Rashbrook's pregnancy have sparked an outcry from pro-life groups.

Josephine Quintavalle, from Comment on Reproductive Ethics (Core), accused Dr Rashbrook of selfishness and said it would be extremely difficult for a child to have a mother who is as old as a grandmother.
So having a baby between the ages of 13 and 40 is God's plan. After that you are evil. Got it.

Personally, anyone who wants to have a kid can go right ahead and do so. I don't care if you do it the old fashioned way, go to a sperm bank, try to clone one in the bath tub, or sit in a seedy hotel room with a turkey baster full of hobo juice. Just have the common sense to leave when the damn thing starts screaming in the movie theater.

Those who know me will confirm that I do not actually hate children and will often be quite nice to them. I just prefer that they belong to someone else and spend as little time around me as possible. At least until they are smarter than me. Then they can hang out for several hours. This usually happens around age 5 and lasts until puberty.

Automatic Teller

After work I decided to stop by Taco Bell. Sometimes it helps to have the whole drive through process so mechanical that you don't even have to hear the person on the other end. If I could have gone inside to order I would have. Drive through service only by the time I get off of work. With engine roaring I pulled up to the speaker.

TB: Wah wah wah Bell. Wah wah wah order wah.
Me: I WOULD LIKE A GRANDE MEAL! FOUR BURITTOS! SIX SOFT TACOS!
TB: Wah wah wah wah grande wah wah wah wah. Wah thing wah?
Me: THAT'S ALL!
TB: Wah wah wah wah wah wah.

I pulled ahead and took out my wallet. The boy at the window said something to me. I looked at the electronic sign and pulled out a ten dollar bill. When he gave me back my change he said something else which was completely lost to my ears.

Me: I'D LIKE SOME FIRE AND SOME HOT!

A few moments later he handed me a bag with some other unintelligible phrase to which I simply nodded. I slipped the tacos into my saddle bag and had an absolutely gorgeous ride home.

Is this like the opposite of my news rant where I bitch about people saying, "You know what I mean"?

Wednesday, May 03, 2006

History Repeating Itself

Bomb, Bomb, Bomb, Bomb, Bomb Iran!

I seem to remember a nearly identical tune blaring over the radio in the barn while my dad milked the cows way back when. Only then everyone I knew thought we really should blow the hell out of them. Seems some Iranians nabbed a bunch of Americans for hostages, made Ronald Reagan look like a hero for getting them released, and ended with something commonly remembered (or mentally blocked) as the Iran-Contra Scandal.

Bomb, Bomb, Bomb, Bomb, Bomb Iran!

Fox?

At first I was in shock. Fox, BBC, Al Jazeera most trusted: poll

Fox? I shouldn't have been too shocked since I know a lot of people at work watch Fox News. They say it's the most accurate but if you pry into their heads you soon discover that they watch it because it's more entertaining. They obviously don't know the C-Span drinking game.

But don't worry folks. Here's the catch.
Asked to name the news source they most trusted, without any prompting, 59 percent of Egyptians said Al Jazeera, 52 percent of Brazilians said Rede Globo, 32 percent of Britons said the BBC, 22 percent of Germans said ARD and 11 percent of Americans said Fox News, each leading their respective nations.
Yeah. Quite a bit of a drop off there for Fox. I wonder how many people answered, "I don't trust any of those bastards!"

News Lesson

I am not so interested in this actual news article (Russia will deliver air defense systems to Iran) as I am with one sentence from it.
Despite strong criticism from the United States, Russia has maintained that the systems could be used only to protect Iran's air space.
Did you read that? Read it again. What does this sentence actually say?

When I get on people's cases about wisely choosing how to say things, so often I get, "You know what I meant." Do I? How can you be sure? That line may just be a mistranslation or some semantic sloppiness, but it leapt from the page for me. Compare these two lines.

The systems could be used only to protect.

The systems could only be used to protect.

Exact same words in each of those.

Rant time! This is why I hated the timed reading tests in grade school. I knew it even back then. Speed reading requires you to view a sentence as a whole and not take the time to see the pieces that make it what it is. You gloss over things. You let your brain assemble what it thinks it just saw. Speed reading has no place in legitimate study. Why would a public school want me to speed read? Why would they want me to train my brain to assemble things as I thought they were rather than seeing what was actually there? If you don't see the fnords they can't hurt you.

Luciferian

Let's talk about Satan.

I've known quite a few decent Christians. They exist. Some of them are really nice people. But a good number of them are right bastards. I have been yelled at, threatened, and harassed by Christians. There is no end to the number of lies Christians have told me. Maybe they do this because they will be forgiven for such acts. I don't know.

While I haven't met nearly as many Satanists, either self-professed or actual members of one of the many Satanic churches, I have liked every one I have met. Not a one of them ever threatened me in any way shape or form. They stood by their word and to the best of my knowledge never lied to me. Perhaps it's because they believe they alone are responsible for what they do and say. I don't know.

Abolish the Minimum Wage!

I picked up a lot of supporters at work by telling them my (stolen) idea. Abolish the minimum wage and replace it with a maximum wage. No individual can make more than ten times (x10) what the lowest paid employee makes. If some guy wants to make a million bucks, then everybody under him has to be making at least $100k. If you don't like caps on your income, become self employed and do all the damn work yourself. Technically if you opened a cafe and weren't making any money, you wouldn't have to pay any of your employees. And technically, they wouldn't have to work for your bum ass.

Of course I don't believe that this would solve many corruption issues. No matter how air tight you tried to make it, clever fookers would figure out a way to exploit it. It's just the kind of thing the people want to hear.

Tuesday, May 02, 2006

Mahamut's story

A BBC article about Life in Somalia had this excerpt from an interview with a Somali. He is currently a scrap metal worker who hammers out the rebar from the cement walls of the former US embassy.
If there is a new government, I would like to go to school and learn something.

But if I could not go to school and had to carry on doing this, at least if there were a government, I would not have to give half the rods to the gunman.
Correct. He would only have to give a third of the rods to the government for taxes. In exchange for that he would get a tetanus shot and his kids would receive a sixth grade level of indoctrination.

Better? Absolutely. They call this anarchy. It isn't so. Anarchy is the absence of law. In Somalia, law is decided by clan warlords. The laws change as you exit one territory and enter another, much like as a motorcyclist has to put on a helmet when they cross from Idaho into Washington. Only the biker probably won't get shot for non-compliance.

Monday, May 01, 2006

PSA:NSFW

For all you wanna-be amateur porn stars back in the homelands, this announcement is a bit late but not too late for you to still get invoved. Shayla La Veaux Takes Her Fan Sexxx Audition Tour To Minnesota. Don't forget your hat.