Category Archives: Uncategorized

Honest

I’m still here.

Really, I am. I’ve just been too stinkin’ busy to write much. Apologies – hopefully I can get back to my normal schedule soon.

We have some new equipment at work, which translates into 50+ hours per week for the lazy-at-heart hippie. The bosses went out and bought a nice four-color printing press, so there have been Heidleberg people running around for the last three weeks installing, setting up, tweaking, installing rollers and generally showing a lot of hairy butt crack that no one needs to see.

Silly me, I thought that the only ramification the new press would have for my happy little department would be that we could actually do creative work in full color for a change. Wheee! What fun… Until I found out that the new press uses plates just an inch or two longer than our old platemaker could produce. Hmmm… Okay, here comes a new platemaker, along with $40,000 in imposition software to learn. Hmmm… We had the software for about twenty minutes before we realized that we didn’t have a site license for the software, but rather one individual license, and the software was designed for dual-processor G5 Macs with OS 10.4, not our old clunkers. When I cornered the boss about it, I learned that each license costs $10,400, and they have no intention of getting us new Macs. There is no more money. So we take turns running the $40,000 software on outdated computers. Efficient. Ask me how happy I am about that. (It’s not so bad actually, but I like to complain. Just ask my wife.)

Whine whine whine waa waa. Poor me.

In any case, we have people flying in from all corners of the U.S. to calibrate the new machines next week. After that our training’s over, and all machines should be operational, and I can take a nap. I have to admit, I am looking forward to seeing some of our design work come off the new press – it’ll bring new depth to what we can do. I’m also looking forward to that nap.

Things to check out…

A few things I’ve tripped over in the past week:

The Woodbury County Democrat pointed out a must-read article in the Rolling Stone.

Birdy wrote another biting little piece that can be found HERE– it’s one of those little snapshots of Americana that you can’t shake once you read it. Watch for suggestive photos and strong language.

Steakbellie came in fifth in his hot-dog eating contest, then forgot how to eat breakfast two days later. The blog community is worried. And slightly scared.

Stalin the Shark posted a nice entry a few days ago. Go HERE and scroll down to “America’s Moral Crisis.” If your blood pressure isn’t high enough yet, read the comments.

The Iowa primaries for the governor’s race (and a few others as well) is coming up next week. New Iowan has made up his mind for whom to vote. (I’m waffling between Blouin and Fallon myself. I will NOT vote for Culver – his attack ads against Blouin showed me his character, or lack thereof. If there have been any other attack ads, I’ve not seen ’em. I’m thinking of voting for Sal Mohammed simply because he stands on my street corner waving a flag. I don’t think he knows diddly about government, but he has persistence!)

Intellectual Insurgent
went on vacation – there are some stunning photos of sea critters on her blog. While you’re there, scroll down and peruse some of her fiscal philosophies. Kinda makes you think.

If you’ve ever wondered what a car salesman is thinking when he’s foisting a rustbucket on you, just click HERE – neat stuff!

Last but not least, for those of you with high-speed, you’ll like this nifty little Yiddish lesson. Trust me.

If you’re reading this on Facebook, you can see the original blog at www.radloffs.net, click on “Blog.”

Westmar Woes

The Campus is Gone, Sort Of…

Yesterday I took a few hours and rode my motorcycle around. After an hour or so of tootling about the countryside, I ended up in my hometown, LeMars. I decided to swing past the old campus to see what’s changed. Turns out that quite a bit has changed…

I went to Westmar College from the fall of 1986 off and on until I graduated in 1992 or 1993. You know, I always thought that Westmar was going to be my life – I was going to go to school there, get my degree, work there for a while in the Communications Department, and eventually end up teaching there. It never occurred to me that I would ever leave the warm bosom of the campus… But life intervened and I ended up working for a living some 30 miles away in Sioux City.

It also never occurred to me that Westmar may not even exist someday. But in the fall of 1997 the college closed, after 107 years of higher education… For a campus that covered a mere eight square blocks (more or less, give or take) it sure held a lot of memories for a lot of people!

Some of the buildings are simply gone (Wernli, Dubs and Thoren Halls, and that old dorm between Bonebrake and Weidler), others are being “repurposed” (the library was a church for a few years, Weidler is home of a mental health institution, the dorms are now apartments, etc.). But for me the biggest change was the “Memorial Park.” In the space where Dubs, Thoren and Wernli were is now a memorial to America’s veterans. I won’t bore you with all the memories I have of Westmar (and I have a LOT), but I will tell you it was rather emotional for me to wander through the campus, thinking of people now scattered the world over, remembering buildings that aren’t there, wondering where the faculty and staff ended up…

I took pictures. As usual, you can click on any photo to see a larger image…

The old “Activity Sign.” For years it was my job
to update the sign weekly. Now it’s empty…

The Library, with a “For Sale” sign in front.

Part of the new veteran’s memorial. Interestingly enough, between the
jeep and the church there used to be two buildings that housed the mail room
and the Institutional Advancement office. Those two buildings were “repurposed” military barracks. They’ve been torn down now.

This new structure stands in what used to be the amphitheater.
Inside it is a plaque containing a poem.

Circling this monument are a number of plaques, one for each war the
United States has fought, listing the number of casualties.
There is no plaque for the Iraq war yet, oddly enough,
nor did I see space set aside for it.
You can see the “new gym” behind it.

Another view of the statue and plaques.

The art building. At least, that’s what it was used for
when I attended Westmar. I guess it used to be the
largest gymnasium in the area at one time…

A memorial to Dubs and Wernli halls

A closeup of the plaque on the above memorial…

This statue is how I felt, too. Despair.
It’s sitting on the cornerstones of some of the earliest buildings on campus.

This gate used to be the main entrance to the campus, leading to
Thoren Hall (which was the tallest structure in this part of the state).

Another view of the gate

The science hall still looks like it’s in good shape!

Westy the Eagle

The entrance to Weidler.

Bonebrake still looks like it used to, though there is now a
funeral home and a fire department in the “back yard.”

I’m happy the city is using the gym as a Community Wellness Center.

The Commons is now used for a Convention Center.

Centennial used to be a men’s dorm.
It was odd to see a street running between Centennial and the Commons.

Between Memorial and the Library there’s now a water tower.

Back to the start of the tour…


There is a web site dedicated to Westmar HERE. I also found out that there will be a reunion of “The Decade of the Eighties” this summer, July 8 and 9. You can sign up on the web site. I hope to be there…

If you’re reading this on Facebook, you can see the original blog at www.radloffs.net, click on “Blog.”

Bizzy Daze

Ye cats, I’ve been busy. I haven’t forgotten about this blog, trust me, I just haven’t had much time as of late. Things are busy at work, yardwork needs done, and I have a motorcycle. Therefore, not much writing is being done.

Sorry.

If you’re reading this on Facebook, you can see the original blog at www.radloffs.net, click on “Blog.”

Youch!

Advanced Dentistry

“It’s only quarter after six,” my beloved Austrian Snowflake mumbled into her pillow. “Vhat are you doing up? Go back to bed.”

“I can’t,” I replied. “I have to be at the dentist at eight.”

“An hour and a half you have before you have to leave. Go back to bed.”

I sighed. “I can’t. I have to start getting ready…” With that I heave my carcass out of bed and start the morning process. One cup of instant coffee – lukewarm so I can gulp it down in one swell foop. Check e-mail. Off to the bathroom. Brush teeth, comb hair, bathe, floss, brush teeth again, gargle with generic Scope, brush teeth, use waterpick, put clothes on, brush teeth – I think I’m ready. I swish with mouthwash again and head for the door, grabbing some mint gum on the way. “I’m off to the dentist,” I say. “Wish me luck!” My wife pats me on the head and kisses my nose, and off I go.

Fifteen minutes later and I’m sitting in the waiting room, desperately trying to keep my breath fresh. I should have brought some mouthwash with me. I could have gargled again in the waiting room…

As I sat staring out the window, waiting for my name to be called, my mind started to wander. The last few times I was at the dentist it really sucked. It sucked quite bad. I remember staring past the torturer’s bloodshot eyes at the ceiling, sweat running off my face and pooling in my ears, hands clenched on the torture chair so hard the fingerprints must still be imprinted in the metal. “We’re almost done,” said the torturer as she grabbed yet another meat hook and headed in for round five…

I shook my head to clear the memory and bring myself back to the present. (I have an Etch-a-Sketch kind of brain. Shake my head and it erases the last five minutes and leaves a blank slate to work on…) The other guy in the waiting room is hogging the only Sports Illustrated in the room as he fidgets nervously. I don’t really want to read a ten-year-old issue of Vogue, so I continue staring out the window, trying desperately to think of anything other than dentists.

When I lived in LeMars I had a root canal. It was kind of spooky, but after about five minutes of laying on my back, staring past the two intent faces that were peering into my gaping mouth I realized it wasn’t all that bad. Disengagement is wonderful — I remember keeping a mental chant/mantra going, “That isn’t smoke coming out of my mouth, that isn’t smoke coming out of my mouth,” over and over again. My mantra was broken, however, by the head torturer suddenly blurting “Oops” at the same time the drill made a very odd noise. I glanced at the faces hovering over me — there were four very wide eyes staring at my mouth. After a second or two, they continued working. Having no choice but to lay there, I promptly forgot the “oops.” About an hour later I was wandering numbly through the grocery store, hoping to find something mushy to eat before I had to go to work. I noticed no one at the store wanted to get too close to me, and they were all staring, slightly horrified looks on their ashen faces. When I got home and looked in the mirror I realized why. The dentist had dropped the drill into my mouth. The drill cut the inside of my cheek, then flopped out and made a delicate cut from the corner of my mouth to my chin. My numbed face was covered in blood. It was running down my neck. My shirt was covered in blood, and I had no idea. I never went to that dentist again.

“Chris?” calls the receptionist, breaking into my reverie. “Come this way, please.” Back to the present. Man, I hope it’s not bad…

“Have a seat here,” said the lady, pointing to the chair in Torture Chamber One. I sat. It’s best to be polite to someone who is soon going to be waving sharp things around in your mouth. Once again I found myself staring at the ceiling, mouth open, total stranger sticking pointy things in my gums.

“You have an extra tooth,” the lady said after a few minutes. She glanced at my X-rays. “Oh, your wisdom tooth erupted. We’ll have to ask the doctor about that…” With that she went back to poking at my teeth, occasionally pausing to drown me with a little squirt gun. The whole time she kept asking me questions. “Do you drink soda pop? That’s bad for your teeth. Do you chew gum? Don’t do that.” I kept waiting for her to tell me that eating is bad for my teeth. After slightly less than an eternity she stopped hurting me and started grinding my teeth with sand. (You know, if you have your teeth ground with sand first thing in the morning, you know it’s going to be a good day! Absolutely nothing else that happens that day can be worse, so it’s all downhill. You may as well enjoy the rest of the day — the hard part’s done.)

“I’m going to get the doctor now,” she said, putting the sand away. “We need to see about that wisdom tooth.” Out the door she bustled.

About the time I got my jaw popped back into joint, the doctor wandered in. He looked at my X-rays. He looked at me. He looked at the X-rays again. He harrumphed a bit, then looked into my mouth. Then at the X-rays. “That tooth has to come out,” he said. “We can leave your other three wisdom teeth, but this one has to come out.”

“Out of my head?” I asked, just to be sure I heard him right.

“Yes,” he replied. “I can do it here at the office. It really won’t take more than ten or fifteen minutes.” I could feel myself getting paler. The doctor continued, “You won’t even notice it’s gone. Post-op pain should be minimal…”

“You want to pull one of my teeth out of my head?” I asked again. “But it’s attached! And there’s nothing wrong with it.”

The doctor gave me a dirty look and pointed to the receptionist’s desk. “Make an appointment,” he said. I made my dejected way to the front desk.

“That will be twenty-two dollars,” said the receptionist, taking my insurance card.

“You mean I have to PAY to get tortured? That’s not right!”

“Doctor says you need to come back in June for the extraction,” she said, handing me an appointment card. “And we’ll go ahead and make an appointment for you to come back in November.”

“Wait,” I said. “Why do I have to come back in November?”

“To get your teeth cleaned,” she replied.

“But I just got that done!” I wailed. “Why do I have to have it done again? Didn’t you do a good job?”

“You have to have your teeth cleaned every six months until the doctor’s kids are all out of college,” the receptionist told me with a straight face. “Tuition is high, you know.”

So now I have to have a perfectly good tooth ripped out of my skull. I am unhappy. AND I have to pay for the pleasure.

In about four hours or so I have to go to the eye doctor. Wish me luck! I hope they don’t have to grind anything with sand..

Within Walking Distance?

As people who peruse this blog may know, I’m a bit disenchanted with my neighborhood. My neighbors have mowed their yard exactly once since last August. There’s a man living in a bus in front of my neighbor’s house. Grocery carts can be found in almost any alley in the area. Graffiti and vandalism are rampant, as can be witnessed by my back door. Theft is on the rise, too — ask me about my missing weed whacker, or let me tell you about the time we caught the neighbor kid stealing our door knocker. As near as I can tell, there are four people in our neighborhood that have jobs — the young people are living on government assistance and the old people are retired, leaving Dagmar, myself, and two 70+ year old Vietnamese immigrants as the only legal wage-earners around.

But there’s another blight that’s been creeping up on us in the neighborhood as well. Since the Bush administration gained control of the government in 2000, we’ve seen an increasing number of businesses fail.

The little rib shack around the corner is gone. The diner across the way is only open two mornings a week now. There are two gas stations across the street from each other, both boarded up, and a third locally owned station was recently bought out by a national chain. There’s an abandoned building a block up the street that no one will rent or buy. But the big problem now is the grocery stores.

A few years ago Hy-Vee bought out Boulevard, a grocery store on Hamilton Boulevard a few miles away from our house. We thought that was a bit odd, since there was already a Hy-Vee store just up the street the other direction. The new Hy-Vee raised their prices right away, which didn’t bother us much, as we went to the old Hy-Vee anyway. The new Hy-Vee is part of a mini-mall, a mile or two from the residential district. The old Hy-Vee was right in the middle of the neighborhood — within walking distance for many of the poor and elderly people in the area. In fact, low-rent apartments bordered the old Hy-Vee’s parking lot on two sides.

Sure enough, the new Hy-Vee expanded, and they closed the old Hy-Vee. Now all the people in the neighborhood had to walk an extra mile to get to Cub Foods instead. That truly was a burden on many of the elderly people in the neighborhood. Well, Cub Foods closed about a month ago. They couldn’t compete with the new Hy-Vee either.

So, in the past few years we’ve lost two neighborhood grocery stores in favor of a massive Hy-Vee. Prior to that, we’ve lost three or four small “general stores” in the neighborhood, too — the kind of stores that don’t have much, but you can always get some milk and bread. Yet the Republicans say the economy is booming. It ain’t. Look at the price of gold, compare the dollar to the Euro, look at my paycheck, and look at my neighborhood. The economy ain’t good.

It makes me sad that we can’t walk to the store any more. It makes me even sadder that those who don’t have transportation – the poor and elderly — have no option now but to pay for a cab to go to the store. As far as I can tell there is no bus line that goes to Hy-Vee.

UPDATE: After writing this, I found out that there IS a bus route from the parking lot of the old Hy-Vee to the new Hy-Vee, and the new Hy-Vee actually gives people a $1.50 rebate if they’ve taken the bus, as that’s what the trip costs. That’s a good thing. But still not as good as having a grocery store in the neighborhood…

Alternative Fools

I saw a cartoon the other day that may explain our current oil woes. It starts in 1976 with then White House Chief of Staff Dick Cheney telling President Ford that there’s “plenty of oil.” The next panel, set in 1986, has congressman Dick Cheney telling congress that there’s “plenty of oil.” The third panel, 1996, has Haliburton CEO Dick Cheney telling people there’s “plenty of oil.” The last panel (2006 of course) has President Bush telling Vice President Dick Cheney we need an alternative to oil. Cheney responds, “Nonsense, there’s plenty of oil. And there always will be.”

We’ve elected monkeys to guard our bananas. What did we expect? Bush and Cheney are simply too deep into the oil industry to get us out of this predicament.

If our government was showing true leadership, all government vehicles would be hybrids at the least — preferably E85 hybrids. (If they don’t make E85 hybrids yet, well, they should.) All government buildings would be retrofitted with solar panels and wind generators to jump-start that technology. True leadership would mandate that all new cars get at least 45 miles per gallon. I guarantee you the auto industry could and would find a way to do that if they had to. True leadership might put a hefty tax on gas-guzzling cars — due when you pay your registration. True leaders would be meeting with Brazilian officials on a daily basis to find out how that nation managed to wean itself from foreign oil.

We do not have true leadership. I surely hope we make some changes come election day!

Quote of the Day

From Reuters:

BERLIN (Reuters) – U.S. President George W. Bush told a German newspaper his best moment in more than five years in office was catching a big perch in his own lake.

“You know, I’ve experienced many great moments and it’s hard to name the best,” Bush told weekly Bild am Sonntag when asked about his high point since becoming president in January 2001. “I would say the best moment of all was when I caught a 7.5 pound perch in my lake,” he told the newspaper in an interview published on Sunday.

If you’re reading this on Facebook, you can see the original blog at www.radloffs.net, click on “Blog.”

This is getting silly now…

Website

My website has been up and down the past week and a half. It’s driving me nuts.

My e-mail doesn’t work, either. It’s been on and off the past week and a half. It’s driving me nuts.

Suddenly my password doesn’t work on the server, so I can’t log into cPanel (the software that helps tweak how my website works). I need to log into cPanel to fix my e-mail. I told the server people that my password didn’t work, and that their very own tech support people told me that I needed the password so I could get into cPanel to fix my e-mail. So they e-mailed the password to me.

Anyone see the flaw in that logic? “Oh, you need a password to fix your e-mail? We’ll just e-mail it to you…” It’s driving me nuts.

I have to admit, it’s partially my own dumb fault. I’m sure if I hadn’t missed that day in second grade when they taught you that “Y” is a consonant and a vowel I’d know how to run my website today. But I missed that day in school.

I had a plan. It was a good plan. I was going to switch hosting companies. I know of a very nice hosting company that would take me. Had I been bright enough to realize that I needed to pay them first, THEN try to move all my stuff over, things would be hunky-dory right now. But I’m rather dense. I didn’t set up an account, but I somehow expected them to magically fix my stuff. Once I figured out I needed to give them some moolah, I figured I was home free! All my problems are solved! But no… Alas, my stupid password doesn’t work on my old server any more, so I can’t get a backup of all my stuff to put on the new server. Nor can I check my e-mail.

Did I tell you that they said they were going to e-mail the password to me? It’s driving me nuts.

I haven’t even had time to write in my blog. I’ve been too busy wringing my hands and gnashing my teeth over my silly website and e-mail woes to think of anything else. I pace a lot now. I haven’t slept in days. It’s driving me nuts.

It’s been over eight hours since I first told them I needed my password. I should have heard something by now…

Anyway, if anyone’s been inconvenienced by bounced e-mails or the lack of this blog, I do apologize. I am trying to get things sorted out, but I really am a color-blind historian who moonlights as a graphic designing bassist. I’m just not trained for this sort of thing. It drives me nuts.

Pictures

I take a lot of pictures. As usual, you can click on the photos below to see a slightly larger version. I hope. If my website works. (It’s driving me nuts, I tell you!)

Everyone takes pictures of roses. Me too.
My medieval bunny-chaser. This actually IS my mower. It’s the only one I have.
Sioux City musician Matt D at Sweet Fannies. I like this photo ’cause I turned the flash off,
set the camera for a night exposure, and set it on the table.
The colors turned out way cool…
Music and beer. Abbey and music. They work so well together.
Dagmar and I went to Hillview Park near Hinton, Iowa. They have elk there. Elk are cool.
Cows on a hill.

Self-portrait.
Talking on the phone and taking pictures of my elusive shadow.
Self Portrait II (I must be feeling full of myself).
I like this one because it was pitch dark outside.
I held my little point-and-shoot digital camera as still as I could
with the flash off to get a long exposure.
That explains the pained look on my silly face…
(I was waiting in the car for Dagmar to come drive me somewhere.
I must have had a beer. I don’t drive if I’ve had a beer.)
If you’re reading this on Facebook, you can see the original blog at www.radloffs.net, click on “Blog.”

Server Woes

I’m gonna switch…

I apologize to anyone who’s been trying to access my site the past four or five days. AffordableHost, the company that owns the servers on which I have my site located is having troubles. Their servers are going up and down faster than a kid with a sugar rush on a pogo stick. As soon as I get time, probably tomorrow or Thursday, I’m going to switch to a different host – most likely AxisHost. I can’t say I like the name, but I do trust the people there. (From what I understand, AffordableHost was bought out a year or so ago, and some of the fine people who founded AffordableHost in the first place moved to AxisHost. I could be wrong. I do know that AffordableHost has been getting worse and worse ever since the new owners took control – service has been spotty and technical support is nearly nonexistent other than the occasional poorly-worded mass e-mail.)

Not only has my blog been wiggin’ out, but my entire “radloffs.net” site has been crashing with alarming regularity since Friday. I can’t get any good answers from the server people, which is irritating, and I just found out that if you go to the Smokin’ Clams website you end up on the radloffs.net site. That’s GOTTA be fixed soon! That could affect the Clams’ business, and I don’t want that. My e-mail doesn’t work, either.

As I said, I’m a-gonna switch companies as soon as I have time to figure out all the intricacies of such a move. I’ve never done it before, and, to be honest, the thought scares me a bit.

Again, apologies for the hassle, and I hope to take care of it soon.

HGL

Since I’ve quit the Smokin’ Clams (a fine band indeed – they just didn’t want to play as often as I do) I’ve been happily catching up on my other hobbies (eating popcorn and watching TV). So I was very happy when I got a message from an old bandmate of mine from a pre-Clam band I was in. “Hey,” he said. “I was wondering if maybe we could get Hippie Go Lucky back together again to do a set at a street dance this summer…” Yay! We’re gonna have a few rehearsals between now and July, polish some of the old stuff up a bit, and generally have fun! First rehearsal is tonight, and I’m really looking forward to it!

If you’re reading this on Facebook, you can see the original blog at www.radloffs.net, click on “Blog.”

Untitled Essay #437

Bye Bye Bacon

One of the best political blogs in Iowa has gone into the great beyond. “Who’s Makin’ Bacon” has kept me entertained and informed for myriad months, and I’ll miss it now that it’s gone. The blog went from zero to being one of Iowa’s staple blogs in a matter of weeks due to it’s insightful, non-partisan, clever content. I can only hope that Mr. Bacon, whomever he is, will come back in a different guise some day. With sadness I take Bacon off my blog roll…


Common Sense

Is the phrase “common sense” now oxymoronic? I wonder… It’s common sense that with his poll numbers in the low 30’s, United States President George W. Bush would keep a low profile, check in with the common “man on the street,” do something concrete about the looming energy crisis, and in general try to comfort the citizens of this fair nation. That would be sensible. But from past performance, I predict that Mr. Bush will instead find some poor nation (most likely one that rhymes with “Iran”) to pick on and will try to fan the flames of “patriotism” to get U.S. citizens to rally around him and chant his name.

I put the word patriotism in quotes in that last sentence as Mr. Bush has a different definition of the word than I. To Mr. Bush, a patriot is someone who blindly follows Mr. Bush. To me a patriot is someone who will do whatever it takes to protect this country – including disagreeing with our government and Mr. Bush. There’s an excellent discussion of patriotism that took place a few weeks ago here. Be sure to read the comments – that’s where the good stuff is.

I once played with a guitarist who played louder when he didn’t know the song. I never figured out why… Mr. Bush is a lot like that – the more unsure he is, the louder he gets.

Energy

With gas prices nearing three bucks a gallon (and over in some places), people are now loudly wondering what to do. I have a few simple ideas…

1. Ban the manufacture and import of SUV’s and large trucks. “Oh, I need an SUV to carry my kids around.” Bullpucky. The world did just fine in the world before minivans and SUV’s. We carried our kids around in (gasp) regular automobiles. It worked just fine. Trust me. If you need a large truck because you’re a contractor or a farmer, fine – get special permission from the government to own it, and pay the special “big truck tax.” Anything over 4,000 pounds is considered a commercial vehicle and is taxed accordingly.

2. Ban the import and manufacture of cars with regular gasoline engines. All vehicles shall be E85 capable hybrids. (E85 is 85% ethanol and 15% regular old gasoline.) Heck, I’d even ride an electric motorcycle if it looked cool enough. I’d miss the “vroom vroom” noise, though…

3. We need to make alternative energy affordable. One way to do this is easy enough… Personal windmills. They have these in England, and they really work. You put a small windmill on your house, and it supplies a pretty heft majority of the electricity you need for day-to-day living. Why don’t we have them here? Why are people still dying in mine accidents to supply us with coal to make electricity with when the wind is blowing right past us every day? It is my unproven belief that the energy companies are suppressing the technology. I read about one man who had a windmill installed – it cost him $40,000 – only to find that the energy company wouldn’t let him use it. The energy cartel was worried that the man would dump the excess electricity he generated and didn’t use back into the energy grid, thus earning a refund from the electricity company. In England they’ve made the units much smaller, and the energy companies are embracing the technology. How does this help with the price of gas? Simple – we now all have hybrid cars, remember? Plug your car into your windmill and charge it up. The government NEEDS to push this sort of thing – instead of giving tax breaks to the oil companies, give tax breaks to people who install wind and solar devices, and give more government funding to companies that develop such technology. Perhaps it could even be mandated that every government building get retrofitted with such technology to prove its feasibility.

4. Anyone remember riding a bicycle? Maybe instead of the government giving each citizen a hundred bucks as a bribe to forgive congress (which is what leading republican Bill Frist wants to do – it’s a buyoff, pure and simple) they should give each citizen a bicycle. “Here’s a hundred dollar voucher that can only be redeemed at the bicycle shop, please don’t drive your car quite as much” makes a lot more sense to me than “here’s a hundred dollars, please forgive us for being inept politicians.”

5. How about finding alternative fuels for semis and airplanes?

6. Your teenager needs a summer job? Have him build himself a rickshaw and send him downtown…

We have to remember, folks, that the high price of gasoline is simply due to the high price of oil. We have to remember that we use oil for things other than gasoline. Things like plastics and heating. Heating. I’ll say it again – heating. This winter is going to be harder than last winter.

Something to think about: When President Bill Clinton took office, gas cost around $1.10 a gallon. When he left office, gas was somewhere near $1.25. In his eight years in office, gas went up fifteen cents. Mr. Bush took over when gas was $1.25, and only six years later the price is nearing $3.00 a gallon. Mr. Bush is proud of his “Texas Oilman” persona. I’m sure that he’s equally proud that his oilman friends are getting hundreds of millions of dollars in their retirement packages.

Dreams

I’ve been having strange dreams lately. I went through a period a few years ago where in my dreams people kept cutting my fingers off. (I make a living typing and playing bass, so my fingers are important to me. Especially my nose-itching finger.) Those dreams went away, though… Now I’m dreaming a lot of my grandparents, who are all deceased. I cry a lot in my dreams. I’m often up to my waist in water, and I’m usually running. I’m never running away from anything, particularly, but rather I’m generally running to my wife.

Show Me the Money

Every now and then someone will say, “You should write a book.” I agree. I really want to write a book. I’d love to get paid for my writing, or my photography, or my bass playing… I just don’t know how to go about doing it.

People tell me to start with the underground newspapers. Hmmm… I’ve written enough stuff in the local “independent” newspapers for free, I don’t really want to go there again. It always starts out innocently… “Hey, do you want to write a piece about the local music scene for our paper?” Sure, I’ll do that. No problem. The next week, “Hey, do you want to write something about your cat this week? We really liked your last article…” Sure, okay. The problem is that after the second free article, I’m considered “a writer,” and I’m expected to go to meetings and make deadlines and take assignments. But I never get paid. Sure, it’s nice to get published, but after a while a few bucks would be nice…

A few days ago I was working on a poster for a local photographer who’s targeting musicians. It’s a nice colorful poster, touting the virtues of a band being photographed, videotaped, etc. and what good it can do for a band’s image. At the bottom of the poster there’s a montage of photos of bands that the guy’s taken in the past. When he looked at the proof I sent him, he e-mailed me back. “Hmmm…” he said. “I kinda need to get a picture of a white female singer.” I e-mailed him back and said, “You should go to the Chesterfield on Wednesday nights for their jam session – they have a wide variety of artists you can take pictures of to use on your poster.” I attached a photo I’d taken the previous week that happened to be sitting on my desktop. “Look at the photo I took, for example,” I continued. “You can see that you can get real close to the subject, and the lighting’s good. I recommend you go there and take a few pictures next week for your poster.”

I was a little surprised at his next e-mail. “I really like that picture you took,” he said. “We’ll put that in the bottom left corner of my poster.”

Well, I’m pleased that a professional photographer liked my work well enough to use my image instead of his own on a poster that promotes HIS photography, but I was rather disappointed that he didn’t offer to buy the image for a few bucks. The general public may not realize it, but photographers do charge for their work – often several hundred dollars for a good image coupled with the subject’s legal permission to use the photo. If I needed a photo for a brochure I’m designing, or whatever, I would never dream of asking a photographer to go out and take a professional photo for me for free – that’s their lifeblood, their income. But I guess my stuff’s different. I even got the subject of the photo to give the photographer permission to use the picture. For free.

Am I being greedy? I’m simply thinking maybe it’s time for me to get a little money for this stuff. I want to write for money. I just don’t know how… (Anyone out there need a freelance writer who’s also a graphic designer, amateur photographer, and half-baked bass player? I live in Iowa – my overhead’s cheap…) I’m growing weary of punching a timeclock.

South Dakota

I’m breaking a self-imposed ban today. I have not spent one thin dime in South Dakota since they passed that law banning abortions in the state. (I think that abortion is something that should not be taken lightly. However, I do not think that the state should legislate morality.) My wife and I, however, are on our way out the door in just a minute to go to a performance of A Prairie Home Companion at Vermillion, SD. I promise that after today I shall continue with my economic boycott of the state of South Dakota. (It’s not as easy as you’d think; we live just a few miles from the border. Sioux City is in Iowa, South Sioux City is in Nebraska, and North Sioux City is in South Dakota.)

If you’re reading this on Facebook, you can see the original blog at www.radloffs.net, click on “Blog.”

Random miscellany

His Majesty

I told my wife that people out there in the blogosphere are referring to U.S. President George W. Bush as “the Chimperor.”

“Oh, that’s not nice,” my beloved wife replied. “Those poor monkeys don’t deserve to be compared to THAT.”

(I got the cartoon off someone eelse’s blog. I hope that’s not illegal! If it is, someone tell me and I’ll take it off…)

Bizzy Daze

Things have been busy around here lately. Last Saturday I started sipping on silly Belgian ales pretty early. In fact, we had hot dogs and beer for breakfast. It was yummy indeed! I spent most of the day Saturday sipping slowly on various tasty beers, actually… I had several of New Belgium’s “1554” ales, a couple Boulevard Wheats, a Boulevard Irish something or other that I’ve never tried before, and a few more, I’m sure. Apologies to anyone who tried to talk sensibly to me that day – I was slightly pickled.

We ended up going to the Icky Nickel (a local establishment) for dinner (and beer), then on to LeMars to visit my brother and our nephew, Hunter, and our beloved Goddaughter, Mad-Dog Maddie. (The other niece, Peyton, wasn’t there. That made us sad. But we had fun anyway. Hunter made funny faces at us. We laughed.)

Once we got back home, we happily fell promptly to sleep, smiles on our faces. The next morning, we grumpily awoke, grimacing in pain. Both Dagmar and I were very ill all day Sunday (and she didn’t even have any beer, either). Cramps, nausea, headaches, the whole nine-yard ball o’ wax. It sucked. What made it worse is that Sunday was the best weather we’ve had yet! It was 78 degrees and sunny, not a cloud in the sky, no wind – perfect! We closed the drapes, shut the door, and pretended it was raining.

Poor Dagmar is still ill, actually.

Today (Monday) I woke up feeling a bit better. I held my carcass under the shower for the allotted amount of time, then trudged off to work. I’d almost forgotten that we’d torn the entire office down last week so some contractors could tear up the carpet and put down some nice institutional tile (we chose “Nursing Home Beige” over “Hospital Gray”). So both G4’s, one elderly G3, two anonymous PC’s, scanner, very expensive platemaker, desks – everything – was lurking in a discomboobilated mess in the storage room, blocking the freight elevator and one of the collators. So, when I got to work, feeling vaguely ill, I was NOT happy when the boss said, “Gee, the new tile makes the floor look great, but now the walls look crappy. Do we have any paint? I need you to stop what you’re doing and paint these walls.” Half an hour later, I was slapping white paint on a white wall, feeling about as productive as anyone can be, painting a white wall white. About the time the fumes were really starting to do a number on my poor aching tummy, my buddy showed up.

“Oh, man,” he said. “I’m so hung over I could cry, but I’m too dehyrdrated to make tears.” I looked up from my task. My poor cohort was standing there, very sunburned, with a pasty green complexion peeking through. “If we didn’t need to move our desks back today I wouldn’t have come in to work… What the heck are you doing?”

“I’m painting,” I said. “See?” I waved a brush at him. His eyes crossed slightly and the greenish tint of “pasty” started showing through his sunburned face a bit more. “Gah,” he said. “It stinks!” He made a “glump” sort of noise deep in his throat and bolted for the back room. A few minutes later I could hear the happy “tap-tap-tap” of a graphic designer with a headache working on an Excel database. I knew that’s what he was doing. I could tell by the cussing. Graphic designers simply don’t speak Database. If we could understand numbers, we’d have jobs that pay more.

I have to admit, seeing someone in more pain than you often makes you feel better.

By about 11 in the morning, the boss had come out to say, “I’m tired of watching you paint. We’re going to get back to being a print shop again. I need you to stop what you’re doing and start moving your desk back in – we need to keep feeding the presses.” Okay. Fine by me! So I finished up my corner of the office, realized it was lunchtime, set the paint roller down and went to put food in my head.

When I got back from lunch, my trusty sidekick had finished his database work and was back in the office, slopping paint at a wall. He still looked green. Green and red. “I’d like to help you,” I said, “But the bosses told me to stop what I was doing and get my computers set up again.”

After a few minutes of mumbling and pointing, I got both the bosses to help me move my desk back into my corner. It should be noted that my desk isn’t really just a desk, it’s a “workstation.” It’s kind of like a big “W” that comes in six sections and wraps around behind me. When it’s set up, I have a printer behind me, phone and “works in progress” to my right, Macintosh in front, whatever I’m working on at the time to my left, a RIP station behind me to my left, and a PC station on my far left. It took three of us a good forty-five minutes to move all the pieces in. My hungover buddy was the only one with enough common sense to figure out how the whole thing bolted together, so the poor guy ended up under the desk with power tools. I’m sure that made his head happy.

Just about the time I was plugging the mouse into my Mac, one of the bosses wandered past. “We need to get a plate made on this job,” he said, waving various bits of paper under my nose. “I need you to stop what you’re doing and get the platemaker up and running.” By this time I had a room half painted and a computer half installed. I was getting tired of stopping what I was doing… Oh well – I get paid hourly…

I cleared a path through the debris in the back room and got the other boss to help me push the platemaker back into place. (A platemaker, by the way, is a complicated machine about the size of an ATM that shoots a laser image onto a piece of plastic about 20 inches long by 13 inches wide give or take about two feet, then dunks the piece of plastic into several chemical baths similar to a photographic darkroom, dries it, and spits it out. We then take the plastic plate, wrap it around a cylinder on a printing press, and viola! we’re off and printing. So we go straight from our computer to the plate and skip the manual darkroom process altogether. See? Now you learned something.) We got the machine jiggled into place, slapped a level on it, and realized that one corner was low. Of course, my painting buddy with the hangover was the only one in the room bright enough to turn a wrench…

“Hey,” my boss said to my buddy… “I need you to stop what you’re doing and level this thing.” Eyes were rolled and sighs were heaved. My buddy ended up laying on the floor again. He gave up painting altogether at that point.

By the time we left, the computers were half set up, the walls were mostly (but not all) painted, and the boss was STILL saying, “I need you to stop what you’re doing and…”

If you’re reading this on Facebook, you can see the original blog at www.radloffs.net, click on “Blog.”

Stop it already

Enough is enough, now…

So I tell everyone that the best beer in the known universe is Abbey, brewed by the fine folk at the New Belgium Brewery in Fort Collins, Colorado. Now I go to the only store in a 95-mile radius of Sioux City that carries the beer, AND THEY’RE SOLD OUT. (Well, I didn’t actually go myself. My wife, Dagmar, was running errands and volunteered to pick some up for me, and some for my mother-in-law, too, who tried it and liked it.)

“The man here tells me he’s never seen them run out of Abbey,” she told me on the phone. “They’ve been selling a lot of it lately, I guess. I found one lonely bottle of Abbey way in the back hiding behind a Red Stripe, so I bought that for you…”

I have one bottle in the fridge. My wife is bringing one bottle to me soon. Lemme see… One and one, that’s… Well, that’s two. Two bottles of bliss. (As a friend of mine once said, “Drinking a good beer is like having angels pee on your tongue.” I’ve never really understood that, but it sounds profound. It has an Irish ring to it, somehow.) I have to admit, I’m a little scared. What if I have to break down and drink one of those Miller Lite things that have been lurking in the back of the fridge, terrorizing the tomatoes and teaching my Tobasco sauce bad habits? Now that my palate has been blessed by the Abbey, there’s no turning back.

My wife left our phone number at the Booze-O-Rama. The next six-pack is MINE darn it.

In other news…

U.S. Secretary of Defense Ronald Dumsfeld is being a stubborn old coot and there are rumors of a nuclear war with Iran. All of which pales next to my impending lack of quality beer.

If you’re reading this on Facebook, you can see the original blog at www.radloffs.net, click on “Blog.”

Not much happenin’

Busy doing nothing

Somehow I’ve been so busy doing “stuff” I haven’t had time to write. But, you know, other than visiting my family over Easter, I don’t really remember what I’ve been busy doing…

You know, I don’t even consider it “mowing the yard” any more. Instead, I’m aiding evolution in developing dandelions that have learned to duck.

Dagmar’s mother recorded a bunch of TV shows in German, so I’ve been watching sitcoms “auf Deutsch” the past few days. At least I think they’re sitcoms… It’s hard to tell until you see blood, really. For all I know I’m watching the German version of “Cops.” But it looks funny, whatever it is. I just heard the phrase “Made in Turkey.” The guy who said it was pointing at his pants. That’s funny. Isn’t it?

If you’re reading this on Facebook, you can see the original blog at www.radloffs.net, click on “Blog.”