Brutal Beatdown
Prince and Pauper
Here are a couple of worthwhile vids about living well.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/31515125#31423980
And then there’s this guy, who is presented as a bit of an oddity, but to me seems like the seeing man in the valley of the blind: he’s sane
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/31515125#31405978
I’ve been thinking about this sort of thing recently: live like a king, die without a penny. The federal government is devaluing the currency (just wait until the “stimulus” gets turned into ten times that amount in debt! I hope they find that the public isn’t buying it) perhaps faster than what you can earn in interest. What if traditional retirement (ie save up enough to live on the interest) won’t work in the future?
Just something that’s been percolating for me.
One plan I’m considering is simply not accumulating any assets, only perhaps some use-able commodities. What else can have value but not be considered an asset? What cannot be looted by lawyers or the IRS? Goodwill with a local farmer? A skill that can be turned into cash easily (bike repairman)? Loyal children with good jobs? There’s your social security. Is there a commodity that has a shelf-life of 20+ years that can be both consumed, sold or traded with relative ease? Deodorant, Soap, Propane?
Right now I have a negative net worth. A bum walking down the road who picks up a $0.05 can and puts it in his bag is richer than me. His net worth is “positive one nickel”.
Response
Shawn,
I think you’re starting to get a little paranoid about these economic things… The United States has been in debt since WW2… If the United States crumbles… burdened by debt… you’re not going to have to worry about someone taking your assets… Besides only reading what the doom and gloomers are saying perhaps you should look at what other economists are saying as well? Carpe Diem is a blog that only sees good news in the economy (I know, I find it hard to believe as well)
The best thing you can do is keep your personal finances in order… That means paying off that debt and then, if you’re sure, the whole FED and Federal govt. is a scam to invest in real assets. Property and commodities… Just make sure you own them…
If you want to be really paranoid, and about something that will probably happen before the US collapses under it’s debt… start looking into what peak oilers are saying: Cheap credit depends on cheap energy. Our culture is dependent on cheap energy. Cheap energy is a thing of the past.
http://cluborlov.blogspot.com/
Enjoying the site and the videos… I’ll be a customer as soon as my own personal debt is paid off!
Sincerely,
JH
I really appreciate feedback on the blog. I am open to differing viewpoints. I would like to air various sides of an issue. If what I write is unfounded, then let’s hear why.
The only thing I would take mild issue with is the use of the work “paranoid”. That means that someone is imagining danger when there is none: an unreasonable fear. I maintain that my concerns are well-founded, and if anything, the majority of Americans are suffering from the opposite of paranoia: there are dangers that are not being recognized. This is not tin-foil-hat-conspiracy-theory. It’s everyday stuff that profoundly affects the well-being of common citizens.
Here are some additional thoughts:
Don’t drink the water from the pool the Banks have created. It is poison. It will hurt you. You don’t need their “products” (so-called). There is a better and healthier way. This from the guy who likes Twinkies! But you get my point.
My sincere hope is that some readers will start looking at things differently. Through my experience as a business owner my life view has changed. I have felt the heavy hand of government. That they can destroy a small business or destroy someone’s life, liberty and property is not some imagined threat. It is real. It has already happened to me. I managed to survive. But now that the sharks have ripped off one of my feet, I am much more careful as I swim in the water nowadays.
What hurts small business hurts the workers. That really bothers me.
Through this experience I started to read more and more on politics. Then I dug down to a layer where it was clear that I had to read more about economics and banking. I’m no expert. The more I read, the less informed I feel. However, the study of it has given me ideas for my business, and helped me to understand how things work.
I no longer wish to trade glass beads for my life essence.
I once read a book called “The Religion Worth Having”. The thesis of the book was that there is a way-the-universe-actually-is and that the more that a religion, or an individual, or a society conformed to the actual and real laws of that universe the more successful it would be. A ship can’t vote it’s way around the Strait of Magellan. It must have accurate maps and follow sound nautical principles. I think the founding fathers referred to this as “natural law”. That’s sort of a blank area for me right now.
PS- some have noticed that I have comments turned off on my blog. I prefer to have people email me comments and then to post them.
Happiness on a Stick
Hero of the Imperium Special
- You get free shipping for your projects.
- During the course of the five to ten months we will make at least five videos related to your projects or dedicated/useful to you somehow.
- You get two shots of free shipping for Forge World stuff (we will cover for shipping, but you cover models).
Thoughts on Tau
I ended up proxying out several ideas and looking at a lot of the Tau lists that are posted on the internet I think the reasons folks underestimate the Tau are sevenfold –
1. They insist on running with loads of firewarriors as their troop base instead of kroot. Firewarriors are really NOT good. At range firewarriors do ok, but once folks start closing they must embark the devilfish and move away or die.
2. They forget to add in a bunch of kroot hounds (the punch in the list) to the kroot. I think this is largely because the models aren’t particularly sweet and being metal, are so expensive. Having said that, it’s NO excuse as there are SO many other alternatives (WFB chaos wolves, flesh hounds of Khorne [just as expensive but better looking], the wolves from Goblin Wolf riders (don’t know if this would work as I’ve never seen the set), Vampire Count Dire wolves [i’m sure some theme could work], heck maybe even get creative with a box of tyranids).
3. They equip their battlesuits with fusion and flamers following the thought that melta and template are 5e essentials for SM, CSM, IG, Eldar etc… This takes the battlesuit away from its core competency – long range death with a move that allows you to constantly stay out of range of basic infantry. JSJ allows you to essentially move 12″ while firing. Since every battlesuit you buy will generally have a misslepod, there should be no transports either.
4. They overload on stealth suits (cause they look cool) without realizing that battlesuits can generally do it better and cheaper (except markerlights).
5. They buy stealth suits to use as markerlight carriers without realizing that pathfinders can do it better and cheaper (plus you can use the devilfish for your fire warriors).
6. Adding stealth suits takes elite spots (the firepower of the tau) and keeps you from having full complement of battlesuits. i think you want 1-3 fireknife groups (plasma, missle and multi-tracker), 0-2 deathrain groups (twin linked missle pods with either target array or flamer), and 0-2 firestorm (burstcannon, plasma, and mult-tracker). I think commander(s) should always be fireknife (I hear airbursting frag is pretty decent too though, maybe with a misslepod…). Fireknife eat marines, terminators, transports and characters. Deathrain = transport death, Firestorm = death to infantry.
7. They use vespids because they were cool in Dawn of War even though they could be the most useless unit outside of Necron Pariahs.
8. They steer away from piranhas with a fusion blaster because a SM landspeeder is about the same price but has better BS, equiv defense (doesn’t count as open top), and probably has a secondary weapon liek a HF thrown in as well. However, by doing so they take away their fastest unit (and fastest anti-mech unit). The points shouldn’t be compared on a relative basis, but rather on a what it brings to your army basis…
Anyway rant over…
PC
Cyclopses
[Up at 4am again]
Today we played our first game of Hordes. Renn’s Trollbloods vs Brigh’s Orboros “Solid Stone” force. I didn’t record it mostly on account of some unpainted figures (I wouldn’t want your delicate eyes being sullied by white primer). Brigh’s army is a tough nut to crack and I think the learning curve is steep. We all learned a lot about how the game is played.
Hordes is more like a game of gladiatorial combat than a wargame of battlefield tactics. It’s very rich and complex. I plan on doing some how-to videos.
For my part I managed to paint a unit of Ferox Riders (guys on sabre-tooth tigers), a Cyclops Shaman and a Basilisk Krea. I am holding off on pictures until the entire force is done, 858 points in total. I painted the Krea a lime-green which really makes it look like a toad. Is that a bad thing? Well, I like it.
The typical game of Hordes is played at 750 pts. That’s like a 2000 point game of Warhammer.
Got the spreadsheets uploaded for Hordes, too.
Here’s how to use them (or just email me a list):
More on Fractional Reserve Banking
I’ve been hunting around for more information on this topic. I found this potent article:
http://www.lewrockwell.com/rothbard/frb.html
The essential part that I’m trying to verify is if the “reserve” is a portion of the total deposits (what we’re taught in “It’s a Wonderful Life” and what most people believe), or if the “reserve” is the base amount of the deposit and the remainder is conjured out of thin air. Naturally, if the latter is true, then there is a great motivation to keep that under wraps and perpetuate the former idea in the minds of the masses.
Hotcakes
Skorne Update
Here are some of the Skorne I’ve painted up so far. Point-wise it’s about half-way through. Um, but really not truly half-way, just trying to keep my steam up. The tradition Skorne colors are brass and red (sound familiar?). But I decided to go with this green-turquoise color. I think it’s working.
Colors used, all Vallejo:
Brass
Foul Green
Cavalry Brown
Oily Steel
After I take pics I see all sorts of flaws that need to be smoothed out. Things not visible in person. It’s really unfair.