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TOTALLY RANDOM POST II

tobedetermined

Well-known member
Premium user
ICMag Donor
You have to buy them from a retailer who include the initial setup as part of their selling price. Let them. After that you can go back to them for changes or learn to do your own.
 

moose eater

Well-known member
Premium user
Exactly. Taxpayer's money . . . but the great unwashed somehow don't see it that way.

I am going to buy some seeds with my cheque. :rasta:
All Alaskans receive the Permanent Fund Dividend Check, which former 'Bush Rat Governor' Jay Hamond (a very good man, by the way) helped to put into the State statutes back then, somewhat naively believing it would give cause for the average Alaskan to watch oil markets and make sure their jointly-owned resources (in this specific case, oil) were being sold and/or developed wisely by the Producers and the often co-opted legislature..

In retrospect, as I've put it years ago, instead it taught a bunch of lesser educated entitlement-oriented idjits to note heavily when the first week of October is each year; the date which most PFD checks are issued.

Key issues being that while the Permanent Fund itself (a State savings account that's divided up various ways including investments into stocks/portfolios) is a matter of State Constitution, the PFD checks are merely statutory, and not necessarily guaranteed despite statutory classification, as each legislature has the authority to handle the budget, putting a lock on a budget from one legislative body/fiscal year to the next is unconstitutional here, and after years of uneducated and/or corrupt legislators allowing our oil to be retrieved at what were OFTEN WELL BELOW market rates, in violation of Article 8, sections 1 & 2 of the State Constitution, we're not nearly as self-sufficient or 'fat' as we might've been, had many not been so spend-thrift, including engaging in what amounted to vote-buying by promising full PFD checks during years we shouldn't have issued such.

Many people are truly shallow and self-serving, as exhibited on these boards many days.

As I've put it publicly in the past, when my family's in debt, we DON'T typically choose that time to go out for steak and lobster dinners or eat out at all. It's called common sense, which seems more and more uncommon.

In the past, both (infamous) former Governor Sarah Palin and current Governor Mike Dunleavy have both somewhat successfully engaged in this 'legal' rouse.

This year, Cornell West has managed to gain ballot status via the Borealis Group/Party here, for the US Presidential race, and in what seems to be a parody of all parodies, he's mocking the shallow folks of Alaska by putting in the State's election pamphlet that if he's elected, every Alaskan will receive a $10,000 PFD.

Now, mind you, an independent (60% non-partisan) but heavily red State like Alaska isn't apt to vote for a political activist with a late 60s/early 70s afro and a history of willingly being arrested at OCCUPY, etc., but the prospect of those who are shallow enough to make decisions based on such promises from a man who likely can't otherwise win even 3% to 5% of the vote here is utterly hilarious to me. Putting the shallow greed of the masses to a test, as it were.

When you see Bubba voting for such a guy, I hope someone's got the cameras rolling. Ought to be something to save in the voter comedy archives for generations to come.

We put all of our PFD checks into debts and #1 home heating oil purchases this year, of which I'm now sitting on about 1,000 US gallons, which is good for this very warm house for about a year and a half or so of hot water and heat, so when I pass, if during this timeframe, my wife is set, other than for needing help transferring drums into the main tank..

Many will fly off on some elaborate vacation, buy a new snowmobile or ATV, buy Christmas gifts, or pay off debts like us. I always told my kids when they were growing up (and still do), debt is invisible prison. Pay it off and free yourself up. Otherwise, it'll impact many decisions down the road a ways.
 

moose eater

Well-known member
Premium user
I just phoned a local feed store where I've sometimes scored my headlamps in the past, knowing they had been discontinuing some of their more affordable but 'decent' brands, and sticking solely now with Lupine headlamps. Which, if you're a pro-musher (dogs) and need a truly amazing piece of gear on your head to illuminate the darkness, they're likely in the top ranks.

But I had no idea of price range or features/models, so I took the dive... and reached for non-existent heart medication afterward.

Their cheapest model here that's in stock and available is the Piko X4 and is priced at a mere $390 USD.

I'm starting to think that at that price, if Hellen Keller could learn to effectively stumble around in the darkness and not immediately die from it, then I might be able to over time as well.
 

CreatorJim

Active member
everyday i take walks, in town or i take car and go in to the woods

edit:

looks like bitch take long weekend here, its what piss me of
 
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moose eater

Well-known member
Premium user
I got offered $100 for a 1-hour interview. I guess I'll see if I can work it into my busy schedule... sometime in that crunch period between morning coffee and lunch.

Oddly enough, I am unable at the moment to imagine any specific item I need to spend $100 on currently... Maybe swapping out the rusty steel rims on one of our vehicles for the used (not rusty) alloy rims for said vehicle sitting part-way into the walkway in the basement? Voila!

Once again, more money that's spent before it gets here.

Doubt they'll really feel like they got their $100 worth, though. But they're merely a contracted firm, so I doubt they'll care too awful much.
 
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moose eater

Well-known member
Premium user
Really getting tired of trying to pull a rabbit outta my ass to fix automated machines with no spare parts. Red/Green show reboot.
If you must, ebay.

We run well-maintained cars, trucks, snowblowers, etc., and many are well over 20 years old, some even older.

These days many corporations make parts obsolete anywhere from 8 years to 20 years after production and many shops won't work on anything older than 10 years (must be a lot of yuppies in the world to keep them busy with new stuff), so we end up scouring for (often OEM, as that's my preference) parts. Successfully a surprising amount of the time.

There's obsolete parts buyer warehouses in addition to ebay. Perhaps you're already aware of this? If so, apologies for the redundancy.
 

Ca++

Well-known member
Supersonic should be the norm by now. Instead, they have gone backwards. Making enough money with more basic tech.

We shouldn't forget the arms race, when reading the gov are giving cash out to research all aspects of supersonic travel. Notice, they have no direction towards making planes. That much is just talk. They are looking at going fast. An area where the west has slipped behind. Others are at hypersonic now. Massive amounts of cash can be spent on catching up, behind a smokescreen of how it's good for our holiday plans. Everyone will be happy to see money spent on the basics, that offer both industries what they need. That guy that thinks he is computer modelling for planes... he's a rocket engineer.

Private enterprise were in the air this year. It was only a scaled down mock-up, but it's due further flights, including supersonic. They expect commercial success by 2029. If pricing is right, it will be hard to sell the type of plane in today's skies, as long haul passenger fleets all go supersonic. I think a betting man might want a little investment there. I have not seen if they have patented advancements, or just rubbed off the BA logo's. They are far ahead at the moment though.

 
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moose eater

Well-known member
Premium user
Supersonic should be the norm by now. Instead, they have gone backwards. Making enough money with more basic tech.

We shouldn't forget the arms race, when reading the gov are giving cash out to research all aspects of supersonic travel. Notice, they have no direction towards making planes. That much is just talk. They are looking at going fast. An area where the west has slipped behind. Others are at hypersonic now. Massive amounts of cash can be spent on catching up, behind a smokescreen of how it's good for our holiday plans. Everyone will be happy to see money spent on the basics, that offer both industries what they need. That guy that thinks he is computer modelling for planes... he's a rocket engineer.

Private enterprise were in the air this year. It was only a scaled down mock-up, but it's due further flights, including supersonic. They expect commercial success by 2029. If pricing is right, it will be hard to sell the type of plane in today's skies, as long haul passenger fleets all go supersonic. I think a betting man might want a little investment there. I have not seen if they have patented advancements, or just rubbed off the BA logo's. They are far ahead at the moment though.

The technology that allegedly permits flying at Mach 4 without shattering windows when breeching the sound barrier when close to the ground is more than a little curious.

Makes me wonder why the local Air Farce Base (Eielson) doesn't have such tech when they're intruding over civilian/residential air space at low-level runs and being asses.
 

Ca++

Well-known member
It's 4am GMT. 100,000 are watching the live bbc coverage.
Looks like Donald Duck will be calling the shots next. Giving the current electorate little comeback, for what they might now do with Israel and the Ukraine.
 

moose eater

Well-known member
Premium user
It's 4am GMT. 100,000 are watching the live bbc coverage.
Looks like Donald Duck will be calling the shots next. Giving the current electorate little comeback, for what they might now do with Israel and the Ukraine.
There's a LOT of absentee and early voting ballots to be counted. The Orange Stain might win, but it's WAY early yet.
 

mean mr.mustard

I Pass Satellites
Veteran
It's 4am GMT. 100,000 are watching the live bbc coverage.
Looks like Donald Duck will be calling the shots next. Giving the current electorate little comeback, for what they might now do with Israel and the Ukraine.

They will do the same thing: fund the war machine.

Both sides of Congress are victim to lobbying and funds find their way to the military industrial complex.
 

trichrider

Kiss My Ring
Veteran
da393687b8920130734a12e52e773f20_768x0.jpg
 

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