Sunday, July 29, 2007

Atlanta

I allegedly got here last night, so that I can reset and zero out my hours. It was a very good week. AND, after delivering right here where I'm parked bright and early tomorrow, I'll have til noon the next day (tuesday) before the pay period ends.

Wish I could get to California or Oregon more often. I make the most of the longer runs, because I can cram the resets in or deliver way early.

I called my second choice of prospective new partners. (As a contractor, I guess "partner" is the correct term.) I found out that they SELL some of their used company trucks.

In other words, they don't strictly lease them in order to hose drivers out of three to four times their value, and trap drivers in the company store. That changes things, and opens up another option for me.

I'm still saving. I was fortunate to have dumped all the stocks I did when I did, because the balance of my portfolio is hurting now. I eliminated my margin deficit and am about 17% cash, so I dodged a bullet. While my overall value dropped about 9% in just a couple days, I'm still well ahead, and what remains invested is in reasonable shape.

I'm glad I got my trading program, Deep Insight. It warned me, and it was right. It's more useful to me tealling me when to bail out that what or when to buy. The biggest part of what wiped me out in the past was my stubborn refusal to get out. TAKE THE BIRD IN THE HAND. The two in the bush are pteridactyls (sp?) and they gonna EAT ya!

Because of my recent moves, and the fact that this will make it two really good weeks, I can get the new truck and do whatever else I need to at any time. I just feel more comfortable piling up more money first...I mean, it's like insurance.

At some point, they have to bring me back to Little Rock, and from there I'll drive over to the other company to check out their trucks and interrogate their drivers (who will tell me the truth about the whole deal). Then, if neccessary, I'll hit the dealerships and see about financing something there. (Don't know what kind of trucks the company has. I gotta have an automatic tranny, a big sleeper, and MPG's).

The photo you see was taken in California--off I-10. When I get a homesite, I will--if it's feasable--have one of these wind generators. A smaller one, of course.

I saw what looked to me like a lot of dummies driving through the southwest. I saw a whole bunch of roofs, and not many solar cells. Man, you got all that sunshine all day every day, and you just let it cook your roof.

The solar cells SHADE the roof, so IT doesn't get so hot or wear out so soon. The SHADE saves energy because the roof isn't transferring heat. As for what electricity they generate, who cares if it's only enough for a portion of your needs--it's FREE!

Man, I'll get ALL the free electicity I can get. Maybe I'll get SEVERAL wind generators and sell the surplus juice, how 'bout that?

Well...gimme maybe three months. The next step toward that will have been taken. Moe munnah moe munnah moe munnah!

Thursday, July 26, 2007

Long Beach, CA

My trading program, TotalInsight, signalled a whole bunch of "sell" signals. Today I had a good connection and was able to check them out. This time, I agreed with several, and dumped a whole bunch of stocks.

In most cases, I took profits. A lot of them...so I need to...email my accountant right away okbye.

Saturday, July 21, 2007

Gulfport, MS

I'm not here yet. I have just left Macon, GA and will arrive here at midnight. It's a temporal space thing. I couldn't leave Macon until 7 pm central. If I had, I wouldn't have the 34 hours off duty required to give me zero hours. Therefore, I did not, and am enroute here now.

I will stop on the way and get a new bluetooth earpiece for my phone.

Well, I'm getting sort of frustrated in the truck-buying thing, but have reconsidered financing one, since the payments could approximate my current lease anyway. I'm headed for Laredo, where I'll need to get inspected after delivering, and also get a preventive maintenance...but there are used truck dealers down there, and they TEND to be cheaper than elsewhere.

Laredo is often slow, and I may have time to scamper around checking stuff out.

Anyway, it's ok--I'm still piling up dough, and will need a lot behind me to take over a truck's maintenance out-of-pocket.

Speaking of which, a certain stock I've held for some time has peaked, and I'm dumping it monday. It will free up a BUNCH of cash, and lock in a big gain...which...oh God I HAVE to buy a truck and sink some money into it...

Not gonna think about it back to internet poker okbye.

Sunday, July 15, 2007

Seabrook, TX


18 hours early again. They let me hit a dock, so all I gotta do is get woke up in the morning. This is one of the reasons I'm always early--nothing to worry about anymore.


I'm "reading" an audio-book on Alexander the Great. This one relies mostly on the word of Ptolomey, one of his generals, and Aristomulus (sp?), his chief architect--and other reliable sources, and I've decided he really was great. I have also suddenly remembered that I was him in a past life.


I know what you're thinking: "What took you so long to realize it? We knew it all along!"


Well, it's just that I'm too humble to realize stuff like that.


Anyway, I should set the record straight. I was the son of King Philip of Macedon and Queen Olympia of Barbaria. (Mom wasn't Macedonian, hence was a barbarian, and out of the gate people were saying I wasn't a legitimate heir. Really pissed me off.)


Anyway, Dad helped organize the League of Corinth, which united the Greek states (except for those bastards in Sparta.) He was named King of it. This alliance was neccessary, because the Persian Emprire kept invading and conquering everybody, and then there were a bunch of lesser tribes that were running around raiding and pillaging.


Worse, the rich Persians kept bribing people and setting us at eachother's throats. The City-States were separate countries, and constantly at war over one thing or another. Athens was a shadow of it's former self, too, and there was a lot of corruption there. But they had to admit that Dad had built the toughest army in the world, and could protect them.


When I was thirteen, Dad sent me to Aristotle's school in Athens for four years. Know Aristotle? Well, he favored me especially, and taught me what a King should be. The DUTY of a King is the welfare of his subjects. He's not there to gouge them and rob them, but to provide leadership, stability, and protection. It's a two-way street. Tyrants wreck everything for everybody, including themselves.


Aristotle is known to you as a perhaps the greatest Greek Philosopher, but in my time was the acknowleged expert in many fields, including the hard sciences. Later came Da Vinci--Aristotle was like that. And he was my teacher for four years, can ya dig it?


I believed in the highest Greek ideals; largely formed by Aristotle's predecessors, Socrates and Plato. (Socrates was a soldier first, you know. Fought in five campaigns.)


Men should be free, and allowed to speak their minds. We still had slavery, of course. That's what we did with people we defeated. But it was more like indentured servitude, and you could earn or win freedom. You'd get fined heavily or sent to prison for abusing a slave.


People should be educated, and then make intelligent decisions about their own government. Although in Macedon we had a monarchy, and this was hereditary, the new king had to be approved by the Companions. This was the ruling class.


Now, see--monarchy and "ruling class" triggers revulsion in you, but that's because most of them throughout history have been abusive and self-serving. We had a very strong code of ethics in Macedon, which understood that our duty was TO our people. We were a nation of farmers, mostly. People had to work hard, and were glad to have us take care of the larger affairs of state, so long as we didn't tax the hell out of them or push them around.


In Athens, thanks to abuses in their DEMOCRACY, people were impoverished, and many of their young men were mercenaries--some employed by the Syrian Empire--you believe that? (Don't get me started on the Spartans. They had actively fought alongside the invaders whenever it suited them. And, too, they were ruled by ruthless tyrants.)


At any rate, Dad (King Philip) wanted to knock out the Syrian threat once and for all, but first had to bring the rest of our enemies under control, or they'd be all over us as soon as the army left. All along our northern border, there were large tribes who kept raiding and pillaging us.


Before he could really get started, though, he was assassinated. At the time, I was about twenty. I'd served as one of his generals, and done a nice job. I had also replaced him at the Palace while he was away, seeing ambassadors and running things, and people liked how I did that, as well.


I was pretty popular among the common people, most of the companions, and especially the soldiers (we had a professional army, by the way.) But some said that because mom was a barbarian, the real legit heir was my half-brother from his second marriage; and infant. There was a big move to install a regent on his behalf. (His mother's Aristocrat father).


Further, Athens eagerly declared the league of Corinth null and void, because that deal was with Philip. (Athens never liked us much: "buncha farmers".) Thebes, too, split away. Everything looked like it was going to collapse. But I got named King of Macedon, anyway.


I had to take action fast, and I did. I went up north and kicked the hill tribes' butts. I left garrisons, but also well-diggers and other experts to help those people learn modern agriculture and stuff. They were expecting me to sack, pillage, and enslave them, but I didn't. In fact, my soldiers were forbidden from molesting any of the women. I put two of them to death for doing so. I set one captive woman free--she'd killed a soldier who'd raped her, and was honest about it. I would have killed him myself.


Because I was benevolent, and even allowed them to continue governing themselves, they loved me. DUH!


Point is: I wasn't a conqueror. I was a liberator. You don't seem to know the difference. Wise up.


But Thebes crossed the line. They killed two of my emissaries. It was bad enough that they'd withdrawn from the league the first chance they got. They were very powerful, and felt they could defy me.


I'm telling you here and now, I did what I did for the sake of the league, and that I had a broader vision. Ask Ptolomey or Aristomulus: I spoke of all men as brothers, beyond race or country. I spoke of one overriding God. I did what I did to make the world a better place for everyone.


Well, when I showed up with my army 6 miles from their capitol, they wouldn't even apologize for killing my people. They even killed more of them, and called me names and stuff. I tried everything to avoid a conflict and reunite us. Hey, you remember Abraham Lincoln? See how it was?


Well, they wouldn't listen, so I had to kick their asses. Now, when it was over, I turned to the various peoples that Thebes (another tyranny) had been stomping on for generations, and left their fate up to them.


Big mistake. They slaughtered and enslaved them. My bad. But it was sort of neccessary:


You see, upon hearing first of my mercy in the north, and then my brutality with Thebes, people saw the writing on the wall, and sent emissaries to me from all over to offer their allegience--to me, as to my father. (Except Sparta, naturally. Today you romanticize them, but let me tell you--they were rotten bastards.)


By the way, my soldiers loved me because I shared all their hardships, and LED them into battle. Yes, in my shiny armor and plumes and stuff. And I don't mind telling you, I personally killed a lot of enemy soldiers. (The Oracle of Delphi had told me that I was invicible. And I was not afraid to die).


Today, many think I was just a maniac who loved war. True, I was unafraid, but didn't do it just to prove something, or to get my jollies, or for any of the other crappy reasons you assign to me. You are jealous, and simply WANT to think that I was just as lousy as you are. Your level of cynicism is disgusting. You want think everybody sucks, so that you don't feel so bad that YOU suck. WRONG. I really WAS a superman. DEAL with it.


Aristotle's student believed in peace and freedom for all people, and had to do some nasty stuff to get there.


Anyway, with most of Greece at peace and the hostile tribes subdued, it was safe for me to get after King Darius and the Persian Empire.


That clown Demothsenes in Athens was always orating against me, for some reason. Wanted them to pull out of the league and act like Sparta. He'd produced witnesses to my death in the North, which was partly why Thebes grew big ones...they'd thought I was dead! Demothsenes would, throughout my life, campaign against me, and everything I did--and many would believe him.


Oh! I forgot. While I was away trying to get confirmed as King, mom had both my half-brother and his mom killed. I raised hell, but what was I to do? Put my mother to death for protecting me?


Anyway, my dad (King Philip) had assembled a professional army of 40,000 infantry. The Companion Cavalry 10-15,000 consisted of sons of the aristocracy, and themselves were severely well-trained, professional, and fearless. It was recognized as the most effective force in the world, and this was partly why Dad, with Aristotle's help and influence (and despite Demothsenes), was able to unite most of Greece...uneasily...sorta.


Now, I was going to put a stop to constant Syrian wars of conquest against us...you see? It was my duty to protect my people, even if I didn't have the higher ideals I mentioned in mind.


To be continued.




Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Pineville, NC


Got an email from Landstar saying they sent my package. Early again, waiting to get unloaded. Got creamed in poker. Updated photos. Put order in to buy some more of a cheap uranium stock. Can't believe I got more bread now than before I lost all this time.
Above left: US 69 in Oklahoma. Probably a ticked off citezen doing his civic duty--or possibly some sneaky cops. Got 'em set up northbound and southbound. And yeah...there is one. A bunch, really. Every freaking 4-8 miles wham--you gotta brake it down from 65 to 50. Up and down like a yo-yo for like 50 miles.
Above right: Here, about 3 hrs ago.
That is all.

Monday, July 9, 2007

Shelby, OH


I'm stuck waiting for a load. Freight traffic is slow, and sometimes you're stuck someplace waiting for several hours, or even a day. Fortunately, thanks to high tech, I have the internet to kill time with.

No internet poker today yet. Instead, I contacted Arrow Trucks. They have 2,500 trucks in their inventory. Last night I emailed them with my specs: I want a truck they're going to auction that I can rebuild.

This morning (monday) a salesman from their St. Louis branch got right back to me. He said that they had two that were going today. He was hoping I'd jump, of course, but I asked him how often they got those. Every thirty days or so, he said. Ok, well, I'm not in a hurry and want the RIGHT truck. He'll give me as much notice as he can so that I can get by there.

They're actually in IL off I-55. That's off my company's primary lanes for mere mortals, but I know a shortcut through northern AR, and can get there on any runs to or from the middle southwest to the northeast or back without burning extra fuel or losing time.

I called and talked, and then emailed a followup, mentioning that I'd be open to other deals, as in on a truck they'd normally finance that's not due for a rebuild, for a certain price-range. I doubt that they'll be able to satisfy me there, but it's worth a shot.

I've got to tell you: They have free truck-sale papers at the truckstops, and dealers advertize online. One add: A truck with EIGHT HUNDRED THOUSAND miles on it for 37k. Made my blood boil. That truck is within 200,000 miles of a rebuild, of it's not due for one already. Probably gets a half-mile per gallon less than it did new and struggles on hills. WTF! I couldn't look at it much for fear of going blind, but it must have had a lot of chrome on it. Must have been a very pretty pile of junk.

I might get lucky and get one with, say, 600k on it and in need of some bodywork for under 18k. One that I could count on 300,000 more miles on before I need to sink 15k into rebuilding. With this truck, I'd probably go ahead and get a refrigerator, see if I could find a used generator (so that I needn't idle my truck and burn more fuel), upgrade the sound system, and consider bodywork.

The tough part is this: Moving out of a truck is like moving out of a house. Not just all my clothes and stuff, but my inverter, which is wired into the batteries. I'll have to go to where the new truck is, park next to it, and spend at least a DAY moving stuff into it. I'll probably have to pay a technician to take care of the inverter, then or later.

Then I return the old truck to AEL and start fighting them over the 20k they say I owe on it. Then take a bus or something to go back up and fetch the new truck. Then get everything processed through my O/O company all over again...I think.

You see, the whole idea of this is to make my move to bigger money--and why not Landstar, since that's where I aim to end up anyway?

But you can't apply without your own truck, so I won't be able to until I have the new title in my hands, and the truck in a condition to meet their requirements. Every company, to varying degrees, sweats "image", and also doesn't want drivers running trucks that are likely to break down.

So what I'll do is, as soon as I'm finished here, go to the Landstar website and get an application sent to me. I'll have that filled out and ready to fax when my newused truck is ready. You need to send them photos of it too, sometimes.

I can run with temporary tags for two weeks or a month, I think--not that it matters.

If Landstar accepts me, I'd probably want my own authority. But I may not be able to get one, since my address is a post office box, and using my Gman's in Ohio would subject me to Ohio taxes...well, when I incorporate it will be in Nevada with a resident agent. There will be a physical address there, so maybe I'll just do that later and make ten cents less/mile til that's settled. The authority will need to be in the Corp's name anyway....

I hate this stuff.

With the newused truck I can probably get it to a bodyshop and wherever else it needs to go, along with the bulk of my junk stashed in it, and then continue driving this truck for this company until that's all done. Then return this truck to the leasing company in Little Rock, but not start the battle with them over the money yet.

Then bus--no, rent a car--to go get the newused truck and bring it back. Complete the move, and THEN engage in battle and pay the leasing company off. In the meanwhile, I'll have been in touch with Landstar already. I may not know yet about Landstar, but my backup is the high-paying reefer company which is only 60 miles from Little Rock.

They're smaller and I have a contact person there. I will have disclosed my driving record and (ideally) confirmed that there is a gig waiting there for me once I have a truck. I'll wait for Landstar's decision and delay everything else, meanwhile taking care of my inverter and (ideally again) a used generator installation.

(As soon as the bastards realized they could gouge for truck generators, they went from 3 to 8 grand. I won't pay that, so I'll try to find a used one.)

Anyway, I won't burn any bridges. As I said, I like my current company a lot, and the only reasons I mean to leave is for more money, longer runs, and--in the case of Landstar--self-determination (freedom).

Trucking companies don't take it personally when you leave (on good terms). Or when you get tentatively accepted and then tell them you're going somewhere else. Good faith here is calling and TELLING them this, rather than just not showing up.

I will, of possible, give at least a week's notice to my current company of my leaving. But unlike in other industries, this is common. Companies are always trying to lease new drivers and never have enough, and my departure wouldn't change anything; one driver isn't enough to put them in a bind.

It's going to be stressful and difficult physicly and mentally. For me, especially, it's going to be hell. But sometimes you just have to put in your mouthpiece and go through this sort of purgatory. In a couple weeks, I'll come out the other side in a nicer place than I've ever been. It's worth it. It really is.

There you go. I just mapped it out (roughly) for myself, well in advance. Now I know that I need to contact the two companies and get those balls rolling. I've got a foundation, and as I think about it further over the next few weeks, I'll refine it. By the time I get to the newused truck, I'll have it mapped out like a commando raid.

There's something to be said for being obsessive, ya know?

Sunday, July 8, 2007

CLEVELAND


Oops! I hope this photo isn't redundant--I need to take some more. I'm kind of lazy, and just pick one out of my collection without checking previous blogs for it. I need to organize them, but for me it's harder than for normal people.
I hate reading directions, so I just stumble around learning by trial and error. My most important tools are "undo", and "no", (and sometimes "restart").
Being a dumbass, I forgot to take my digital camera to my nephew's wedding, so I can't put photos from it in here.
Man, I was impressed by a lot of things. For one thing, my nephew (I'll call him Eman2, since he's my fraternal twin's kid), is a hellacious dancer. I never liked dancing; just did it because it was (in the 70's) the only way to get dates. And because (to me) it was a silly ritual, I never enjoyed or got any good at it.
But seeing that kid making his entrance with his new bride filled me with a sense of roads not taken. It was just so COOL! And it was clear that he really dug it, so it was genuine. What moves the kid had...so smooth, so easy...(sigh).
Then there was his bride, who for lack of a better fake name I'll call Mandy. For her dance with her father, the song played had been recorded by her. I have never heard a more professional, flawless execution. Benetar, Twain, etc. move over--she was that good (in only three takes).
I felt regret for not having spent more time with Eman2 as he grew up, but the fact is I am who I am. I'm a loner, and in an earlier time would have been a mountain man, or possibly a freight hauler--somewhere away from other people. It's not a matter of being antisocial. It's more like being a-social.
Yeah, I know: mememe. Well, it's my blog, see?
Anyway I'll bet that my gift to them was the most important. I sent them a one year subscription to the Dines Letter www.dinesletter.com . If they invest in the stocks he recommends, they'll make a great return on their money, and be off to a nice start. I'm up over 300% on one of those stocks, and over 100% on a few others. I've taken big profits on a couple, and bought back in.
My two big sisters were there, who I haven't seen for years. They hate that I still smoke.
I can't write a damn soap opera here, but there are some subsurface issues in the family relationships here. I've found that G3, my other nephew, is fond of nursing grudges, making mountains out of mole-hills, and overreacting.
In dealing with other people, inevittably there will be conflicts, and oversights of protocol or courtesy. I've always dismissed them. In reality it's really rare that anybody would personally offend you deliberately, or without what (to them is) a good reason.
For G3, NOTHING goes unnoticed, and his reaction is always an OVERreaction. He would make a good Cicilian...spending his whole life pursuing assorted vendettas.
When our father died, he left the bulk of his estate, including the house we all grew up in, to G3. G3 knew that this was patently unfair, and voluntarily met with the rest of us to make a redistribution. He came there (to Eman's house), with his reallocations all pre-determined, and determined not to bend or compromise.
My biggest sis, Carol, thought that partial ownership of the aforementioned property would be in order. She is separated from me by a generation--was in college as of my earliest memory. She was the first-born and a female, and treated differently by our parents than us boys were. There were some serious issues and resentments left in her from that time, and she never forgave it.
I don't know many details, but I do know that she resented being treated as females were traditionally treated in that dark era and prior to it. There was no Gloria Steinam to help her out. I also know that our family doctor and his wife sort of took her under their wing, and, for whatever reason, our father forbade her to see them anymore, and cut off contact with them himself (until my appendix burst when I was 13).
Probably, she rebelled--or else tried to communicate with Dad--and he felt that this couple was undermining him and turning his child against him. At any rate: BIG mistake.
Another issue was that my parents fought like cats and dogs when Eman and I were infants. We heard it nearly every night. Later, it settled down, but there was no affection to the relationship; they were strangers in the same home. I guess the walls broke down temporarily sometime later, as Gman was born.
But the conflict no doubt began when Carol was young and alone, and then when Lee, the second sibling, was added to the mix. Carol might have also felt that Lee was treated better than she was, but that's just a wild guess. Carol is inarguably damn smart--too smart to be the forst-born who reflexively gets jealous of the new sibling's treatment. I'd assume that if she does feel that way, she has reason to.
She's referred to our home as an insane assylum. But I contended, and still do, that such households were more common than she wishes to believe. Nobody divorced back then, and in most cases spouses cheated on eachother, then came home and fought like cats and dogs just as our parents did. They stayed together--probably mistakenly--for the sake of the children.
But there were no beatings or physical violence. We were safe, well-educated and fed. It was far from ideal, but...but I digress:
She tried to persuade George to split up the house. I'm not certain why, but she did.
Gman refused, and Carol let it drop. Simple, right? WRONG. Because G3 found out about it, and Carol became public enemy number one.
My reaction? Aw, for cryin' out loud, kid! Is it possible, I wonder, that G3 and Carol are similar? Carol is immune to anything I ever said about the commonness of such households, the prevalence of attitudes like my father's (and my mother's--who failed to stand up for her), the fact that parents make all their mistakes with their first children and improve subsequently, etc.
G3 is immune to what I've told him about Carol and how she felt--and the fact that her request was for her a matter of principal, having nothing to do with him or his father.
In fact, when G3 was a tot, knee-high to his dad, I mentioned to him that when his dad was his age, his head was too big for his body, and the kid shouted "it was NOT!" in a state of outrage. I saw an element of his personality right there--and was alarmed by it. I know me, too. I would
have said "Really?"
Later, Gman gave Carol and Lee the family album, which they said they'd scan into the computer and return in digitized form. They failed to do this, so G3 doesn't know what his Dad's family looked like. G3 is resents this, but it fails to rise to the level of hatred. But G3 got ahold of it, and...well, that's just ALL I needed, ya know?
Gman refuses to bother them about the photos. I understand--I'm like that too. To some extent we all are. It's on me. I'll do it. Hell, it was just an oversight. They just forgot about it, like everybody does. You procrastinate, or think somebody else was supposed to do it, or whatever.
Another thing, about our father: I believe he was a sociopath. Carol should check with her husband, the shrink. People hear that word and think mass-murderer, but most sociopaths live relatively normal lives.
They are incapable of empathy. Most of their social behaviors are rote; a matter of duty or obligation. They are born this way; they have something "missing", and are, depending on how you look at it, more or less than human. And our mother? Intelligent, but far too emotional and somewhat manic--another PHYSICAL condition. A manic depressive and a sociopath...a match made in heaven!
FORGIVE THEM!
Lee is the sister I remember. She was in highschool when we were little. We stole gum from her purse and stuff. She was well-adjusted and mild-mannered. She was kind to us--except when we had raided her purse and she was chasing us around. Every one of us are really smart, by the way (blush-blush). Carol proved it clinicly, with several advanced degrees.
I feel as if I'm the most pragmatic of all of us, though. My emotions don't interfere so much with analytical thinking. This was substantially the result of my Air Force training. I was fortunate enough not to have served in war, or be used in an analysis role, but you must understand this:
For an intelligence analyst to allow emotion or personal opinion to influence his estimates is incompetance. Emotional detatchment is CRITICAL. Had we been at war I would have been a ground-based foreward air controller or an analyst. If I played "hunches", or perhaps allowed the fact that my friend had been killed by a certain enemy unit to influence my thinking, I could target civilians or friendly units. I could cost us position. I could lose a war.
You target the arms depot, looking right at women and kids. If you don't, you'll find that shrapnel and those bullets in the bodies of americans later--aimed at them by the combattants you left alive amid their weaponry. That is reality. DEAL with it.
When you really understand this, it alters you, permanently. Emotional detachment becomes a tool, and TRUTH your highest ideal. Truth is not morality, or actually an ideal at all (I just used the expression). It is reality. A reality that includes extrapolation and permutation into the future, and on the broadest scale.
Others pay lip service to this, but it's like going to church and acting holy for one hour a week. They really don't GET it.
They will vote for a woman or a black because they are female or black. They will declare someone innocent or guilty because they like them or don't. They will recite platitudes and sound-bytes they heard verbatum, but make each and every choice contingent first and foremost upon how it will effect them personally (and damn the community and their children's futures).
Ah, there I go again--off on a tangent. But I never go off on these without reason. I'd hope that someday Carol and G3 might read this, and understand how short life is. (You tie it up--it's over MY head!) Haha.
Anyway, I also saw my favorite aunt. The wife of my late favorite blood-uncle; my dad's middle brother. Went to the Phillipines in WW2. Probably saved from being killed in an invasion by the two nukes. Came back and went to school on the GI bill. The only brother to get degrees. Worked his way up to superintendant of one of the foremost school districts in the country. Organized every family reunion. Beloved by all--especially every generation of children.
Aunt Mary, his cultured, refined, intelligent and classy wife, NO DOUBT had everything to do with the man he became. And she told me this at the reception: After the war, he was beaten down attending school and working full-time. He called the V.A. (with Aunt Mary eavesdropping). She heard him say "Hello, Susan. I need you to send me the papers. I've got to quit school.--"
He was due for a 2-week break in another week. Aunt Mary called the V.A. behind his back and asked for Susan. She told her not to send the papers. Bob might change his mind.
And he did. And she even told him to go to school full-time, and they'd scrape by. And he did. She didn't talk about how, but I suspect that he borrowed money, perhaps from her family. Which he no doubt repaid with interest.
And so he became a great man. Sweet!
Too much to talk about with the family, really...
I go back to Shelby, OH tonight to try to get an empty trailer from a Goodyear plant. If they've got one for me, I can settle into a parking place I know there for a good night's sleep and report in before my dispatcher arrives monday morning, ready to roll. I'm glad I have a Qualcom unit, which is like email--or maybe a chat room. I have a series of numbered canned messages that I send.
To return from my time off, I'll first send in my hours for the last seven days--mostly zeros. Then a 34-hour reset message (meaning that I have zero hours and am available). Then (because my dispatcher never assumes) a written message stating that I am ready to roll.
And then it's hammer-time. I've got to pile up some more cash. I'm not in a big hurry, but within the next couple months, I need to dig up my next truck, buy it for cash, and probably get it rebuilt and fixed up--for cash. Up to 25k. Then turn in my current lease-truck. They say I owe 20k on my maintenance account (which is like a medical savings account for trucks).
There will be a fight. They charged me for the replacement of a transmission that blew up only three weeks after I got the truck from them. I'll have on my attorney persona, and doubt that they'll force me to get a lawyer and sue them...but it'll still cost me 16k or so to get out from under the truck. (The other charges are legit. I know it, because unlike most truckers, I read the contract before I signed it.)
I could remain with my company, with which I've been happy for some time, but won't. I'll have two choices. One company runs reefers (regrigerated trailers) and pays 66% to owner-operators. This translates to approximately 1.75 per mile (the load charges vary). I'm currently paid 87c/mile. The reefer co. runs longer distances on average, which suits me well.
Here I'd make the most money I could without driving on ice in Alaska or hauling military stuff on flatbeds (I'd never even think about oversized loads--you got to stick with a convoy with those, and I'm a lone wolf.)
The other choice is Landstar. They pay the same percentages, but the average load charge is lower. If I bought my own authority--(or commercial truck license in my own, rather than the company's name), this percentage is higher by a good ten percent, but I'd have to secure my own insurance, etc. and probably pay for repairs out-of-pocket, but I can handle that stuff.
Some can't. They NEED that maintenance account because they blow all their own money on chrome and stuff. Then they get hammered with a $6,000.00 repair and they don 't have the money for it. I have trouble feeling sorry for them. I've saved, invested, and compounded money since I started. I leased the oldest and cheapest truck, with the cheapest insurance and the best fuel economy, and never spent a dime on cosmetic stuff.
I'll be forced to dump a lot of stock to engineer all this, and potentially wipe out half my savings, but (if I do get my own authority, which I probably will), will never have less than ten thousand bucks available for a catastrophe--and the ability to go liquid the next business day and free up more. That's just plain common sense.
And I still won't pay extra for fancy paint or chrome. I'll just have a refrigerator installed, and a better sound system, maybe. I won't wash it unless it's salted-up. Who the hell do I need to impress? That stuff is so silly!
I'll end up with Landstar anyway, so they are probably my first option. This is why: They have a network of brokers, who list loads on the Landstar website. From my truck and my laptop and with my wireless internet connection, I can shop around and grab those loads, essentially dispatching my own self.
If I want to take two weeks (or months) off, I simply do. I needn't inform anyone--I just don't take any loads for awhile and remain wherever I am...after having got myself paid for getting there, that is.
This is another reason why I want to pay cash for my next truck. No weekly truck payments. My weekly expenses could be less than 200 bucks (I think), so taking time off to scout out some real property--or to fix it up--wouldn't start sucking my accounts dry at a prodigeous rate.
I'll be keeping the hammer down hard for at least another two years before doing anything else. I still love the job and might as well exploit that to max out my savings. I got a late start (misspent youth, the road not taken, and all that). Now, I'm fortunate enough to be able to buy my freedom. Cash for land. Cash to build a home. Cash for a recording and art studio.
GOD BLESS AMERICA! I just hope the gaping rectums in our government don't destroy the industry first.
We build our own fences.
We lock our own doors.
We forge our own chains in smoke-filled rooms,
Of meaningless words like "someday".
Is it the fear of failure,
Or fear of success--
That has us listening and believing,
What a beaten world has to say?
How clearly can a mind's eye see?
Beyond misty dreams to what can really be?
We make our own reality.
I wish I'd never heard the word "someday."
-Robert Morris-

Friday, July 6, 2007

CLEVELAND




Well after more repairs (yawn) I needed to take hometime early for my nephew's wedding...well...reception.

I hate weddings, and all other formalized rituals. That's just the kinda insensitive bastard I am. My bro Gman and his kid G3 are all worried about offending the bride (a beautiful kid who teaches welfare kids) by not attending.

My other bro, Eman--the nephew in questions's daddy--told me the wedding part was "optional". I dunno...I got to do what Gman does. Jeez, you'd think she'd want mainly people she actually KNEW fairly well there, but who can say with wo...ok nevermind.

Bub tried to fix HAL and couldn't. It said "What are you doing...Bub?" But bub (the closest thing any of us are to a computer expert), gave me some tips on choosing Hal's eventual replacement (SHHH!).

I heard that...Wile E.

Shut the hell up you pieca crap. When I get the stuff I need out of you there's a BMFH with your name on it if you keep it up. Dammit.

G3 needs to be a general because he slaughtered me in Allied General again. Lousy Hun bastard.
He won some money on my poker account, though. He's more aggressive than me, and pretty good in his own way. Except I kind of like to play some poker myself occasionally...ya know?
I think I've decided to become an S-Corp after all, and had E-Trade send me a SEP IRA application. My nephew is a CPA and told me the 40k I can put in doesn't all qualify for reducing my taxable income. He said 15k. That's ok, I'll take it.
The S-Corp can insulate me from the horrendous and despicable medicare and social security gouging.
For this year I should be ok too as an individual, since I'm going to have to blow about half of my savings on a newused truck, and the (alleged) 20k deficit on the Carey's maintenance account.
Well, time to idle Carey some and go to bed. Looking foreward to seeing some of my clanpeeps tomorrow. Okbye.