money

SOLD: Choose Your Own Adventure - You Are a Millionaire - Vintage Book

Jul
13
2011

SOLD: Choose Your Own Adventure - You Are a Millionaire - Vintage Book

F--- yeah. These books are amazing. Like a book version of a video game, but more riveting and imagination sparking. I remember my childhood adventures through these books well.

"You're playing baseball in a vacant lot when you stumble upon a beat-up old briefcase -- full of hundred dollar bills! It's more money than you've ever seen in your life, and it's all yours. But now you have to decide what to do with it. Will you visit your best friend who's away at summer camp or go on a wild shopping spree down at the mall?"

Decisions decisions; this book will lead you on more adventures then just summer camp or the mall. This was one of my favorites, and because of this book I have had intricate plans of exactly how I would handle finding $1,000,000 randomly on the street.

This book is in used condition, and is 118 pages long. Copyright and printed in 1990.

http://www.etsy.com/transaction/49744174

Posted By obscurities

A top 10 list of what NOT to do when quitting your life to start a remote homestead

Aug
11
2010

 

Someone in the forum asked us this question: "So if you had to make a top ten list of what not to do, what would it be for this latest endeavor?". This was a really good question, and I spent so long writing an answer that I decided I would have to post this as actual content, as well as a reply in the forum.

SO here it is, a top ten list of what NOT to do when quitting your life to start a remote homestead. This is, of course, coming from our experience, and based on our resources. If you have something like $25,000 to sink in to a project like this, you will probably be fine, although a lot of this advice will still be applicable.

 


 

1) Don’t blow a bunch of money on the way down. You have to understand, we quit our jobs and our lives to do this, and we wanted to have a fun trip down. So we didn’t take a direct route. This ate substantially into our funds. Although, it was an AMAZING road trip.

2) Don’t make an attempt until you have a SOLID budget. This was our largest problem; we sort of left creating a budget as an activity to do once we got to Texas. And then we pushed it back further, since we had to wait for the land surveyor to get started building, anyway. By the time we had our land surveyed, we were a month and a half in, and the damage had been done. Research building materials and have clear idea of costs beforehand, and put these into your budget. Have a food budget, an a gasoline budget. Plan your budget by conservatively over-estimating costs, and only try to cut costs once you are actually on the ground. Look up as many prices as you can on the internet; for prices you can't find out online, just CALL.

3) Create a way to earn revenue BEFOREHAND, don’t just assume it’ll happen. Unless you’ve saved up SIGNIFICANT cash. We had a plan to start up an internet store relatively soon after landing on our property, where we would sell crafts and things online for a profit. We didn’t really have a solid plan, just this concept that it would all come together once we were there. It didn’t, so we’re not going to go back down until we actually have a source of revenue in action, and then we can expand upon it greatly once we’re there. 

We had also been warned by a number of homesteaders that found the Texarrakis webpage that this sort of project generally takes tens of thousands of dollars to accomplish. I don’t see myself having that sort of money, at any point, so we will be dependent on some sort of income.

If you don’t have any sort of income, you will probably suffer the same fate that we have.

4) Do not plan to start the project without having already spent a significant amount of time in the area.  We had done extensive research on the area before hand, and had spent a week there years ago, but this was not enough. You can only find out so much about remote areas on the internet. You need to actually spend real time where you are setting up your homestead, especially if you are on a very tight budget. You need to know the community, and know the environment. Our most recent trip served this purpose quite well, even if it wasn’t exactly what we had set out to do.

5) Don’t assume that the land is all set up to build on before you get there. This was a large problem for us. I had spent a long time trying to get the only land surveyor in the county out there before we got there, but he wouldn’t get back to us. Once we were actually there, it was only until I was unwittingly behind him in line at the post office that I was able to get him to nail down a time. He turned out to be extremely helpful and friendly, I just don’t think he took us seriously at first. He's not to blame in this instance, we are, since we counted on him being able to work on our schedule. He is a very busy man.

Also, don’t expect there to be easy access to your property. Our property is in a huge, fenced and locked in area that a local rancher controls. It took a better part of an afternoon just to get his phone number. He was very friendly and helpful, but only gave us limited access to one of his gates, as the roads went over his property in a lot of spots; we had to repair about two miles of road to a different, more public gate that we could actually get in and out of, which took time.

This same rancher wasn’t keen on us building without our land being surveyed, but we decided to start a project a few days before the surveyor came out. We were fortunate, one edge of the structure we started turned out to only be about ten feet from our property boundary.

If we had all this taken care of BEFORE getting there, it would have saved a lot of time and energy.

6) Don’t show up with out something solid to live in, living out of tents doesn’t quite cut it. It’s fun and adventurous, but hardly creates a suitable living environment when everything you own is on the floor of a tent. Sleeping can be difficult some nights when the wind slams into your tent all night, creating an excess of noise, making you worry the whole thing is going to collapse on you. The tent will start to disintegrate in the sun and wind after a time, all of a sudden just keeping your tent standing becomes a whole project in and of itself. 

Our original plan involved dragging a trailer down, but the amount which this would affect our gas costs was way too high. Next time, we will be showing up WITH a trailer, so we can have proper shelter right off the bat. With a travel trailer as well, we would have a dry, dust free environment that already has a water, electrical, and propane infrastructure, which could be expanded upon once we have other structures set up.

7) Don’t underestimate the power of making lists. Can’t say this enough. Everything we successfully accomplished, was thanks to well crafted lists. When you’re living in the middle of the desert and only visiting town once a week, you only have one shot at getting all the supplies you need the next week. Forgetting something as simple as another pound of nails will set you back.

8) Don't assume you can get all the components you need for a specific project upon arrival. For instance, we had all of the components to set up a working wind generator, except for the specific kind transmission wire it needed. Which turned out to be impossible to find, we ended up ordering it online, but it never showed up at the post office, at least while we were there.

9) Don’t let days simply happen as they will. Organize your time carefully, and prioritize different project components. Set yourself deadlines.

10) Publicity is not necessarily your best friend, you probably don't want to seek it out, until you are established. Sean Cole of Marketplace is an amazing person, and it was a pleasure to have him recording us as we planned. The Marketplace story is actually a condensed version of a much more fleshed out story which will be the pilot episode to a new Canadian Broadcasting Company program called “Money Changes Everything”.  I have no regrets about that.

But when the Boston Globe contacted me after I posted an ad for our yard sale on a local Livejournal community, I really should have flat out said NO. The resulting article got linked on Something Awful (which I always used to enjoy, but now I have to evaluate what I find enjoyable on the internet). A few errors on part of the reporter got blown into these insane assumptions about who we were. The biggest example of this, was the article saying I put the land purchase on my Mom’s credit card; it was MY credit card, but one that I wasn’t supposed to use ever, and that my parents monitored. This was nearly a decade ago.  That got turned into us being called a bunch of wealthy trust fund suburbanite hipsters.  The webpage we had set up and was intended for our friends and family turned into this huge weird thing.

The amount of hate and bashing we then received was ridiculous, and hard to combat from a cell phone with limited 3g connectivity, in the middle of the desert. People thought we were out to prove something, and talked about us as if we were in some reality show with other off grid homesteads as the other contestants. They certainly didn’t cause our failure or anything, but occasionally after some really mean or nasty comment, we would feel demoralized and less motivated. A huge population of internet people making things up about you and making fun of you, as much as you tell yourself it doesn't matter, can actually hurt.

 


 

THERE. There's the list. I've written this as much for myself as I have for you. I think #4 is the most pertinent. You need the experience, to get the lay of the land, before you can jump right in and set up shop. The trip is seen as a failure by a large portion of the internet, and admittedly, we did fail to reach our goals. But, I sincerely doubt our goals could have been reached before having this experience, even if it is just because of how little experience in all of this we initially had.

It must be said that a huge amount of planning went into this; the problem was just execution. We planned a great deal, but left a lot of execution of our plans until we had already landed in West Texas. 

 

Posted By gene

something i just rescued from an archive of my old 15 year old webpage

Feb
26
2005

I am the Root of All Evil

By Jason Wehling

I am everywhere: I infect your daily life; I appear at nearly every turn, at every transaction. My power is immense: I make decisions for you, I determine victories in war; I determine what is produced, what is not, and who gets what. I overthrow governments, subjugate poor populations and exploit the natural resources of the planet, leaving environmental ruin in my wake. I am money. I am the new God.

My actual material make-up seems harmless enough. I most often appear as a mere scrap of paper, yet my shape takes many forms. I can appear as a bank statement, a check, gift certificate, a winning lottery ticket, a plastic credit card, even a surreal maelstrom of billions and trillions of electrons that are fired across the planet every single day in a matter of seconds. I maintain an illusion of inertness, an unbiased objective tool, a mere medium of exchange. But I am much more than that.

A geographic analysis of the world reveals how the operation of the current social organization that humans have chosen is structured to accentuate my power. Cities are located largely on sea ports, perfectly positioned to ease my movement from one port to another, from one country to another. Millions, perhaps billions of miles of cables have been laid, satellites have been launched into orbit and microwave communications have been developed in order to better accommodate my electronic flow.

Walk through the downtown section of any major city in the world and look up at the buildings. Not even a hundred years ago, the tallest buildings were churches of another faith. Now they are temples erected in my name: banks, institutions that produce absolutely nothing and exist only to further my power.

Christianity itself, the dominant ideology of the western world for the last millennium, has waned in the face of my new religious following. In his book, The Midas Touch, Anthony Sampson argues that my origins are linked to worship. "Early coins emerged from temples, and the word Moneta, 'she who warns,' was the title of the goddess Juno, whose temple was used by the Romans as a worship to make coins".

People purchase goods with me, get paid for their work with me and people regularly invest me in order to increase my power. The word used to describe my system -- capitalism -- is just another way of saying moneyism. People worship me every single day of their lives, not just once a week on Sunday. Large returns are a sign of my blessing.

The United States of America has declared itself the crusading paladin of my faith. America is the self-proclaimed protector of my sacred church: the free market. Any person, organization or country that holds views at odds with my religion will be destroyed in my name: money. The Cold War was largely a manifestation of this crusade. Marx's Communism was the largest and most powerful heresy and therefore required obliteration to satisfy me. It's not the authoritarianism of Marxism that was blasphemous. Many brutally authoritarian governments in Latin America have the blessing of my arch-angel, the United States. Even the ostensibly Communist countries such as China, have my favor. It is heresy against me that is not allowed.

I have a way of perpetuating my power, even by those who remain unconscious of my power. I am a mere scrap of paper, yet I gain power in every time you use me. I am worthless unless I am transacted. That is the beauty of me -- if you possess me you must worship me. It's like an addiction, once you join my system, you can't exit. Consumerism breeds more consumerism.

My church is changing everything. Anything that is not ready to sell must be transformed into a commodity. Only then can I grow. The environment is worthless unless it is exploited, creating capital and thus enlarging my congregation. I care not for the destruction of ecosystems. I need only production and consumption.

I have changed the entire way society looks at itself. People used to grow food to eat, wove clothes to wear and build shelter to live in. Now, everything is done for me. People don't work with the idea that what they are doing is necessary to themselves and the community at large. They are merely fulfilling a individualistic need to worship me.

Even better, people are no longer human beings. They are mere cogs in my great machine. The more a person can conform to this reality, the more holy a person becomes, and therefore receives more of my favors. People are referred to as 'consumers' or 'producers'. Read the newspaper. It never reads: "a human being died today". No, instead it might read: "A doctor died" or "the President died" or "a police officer died." People are defined by how well they worship me. Those that worship more are remembered more than those who worship very little. Bill Gates, my new high priest, is well known, but who is the guy on the downtown street corner? I do not care and neither will you.

If I did not have this power, why is it that millions of people starve and billions go malnourished daily while the world produces more than enough food to adequately feed everyone? Why is it that a person must go without necessary medical attention merely for the fact that he or she hasn't the means to properly worship me? I am so very powerful.

The most important element of this faith is the fact that it is nearly impossible for members of my religion to even envision a world without the father, the son and the holiest of ghosts: private property, money, and the so-called free market. Language has been constructed to discourage such an undertaking. Any words that were created to describe a society structured differently, without me, have been altered with negative connotations or have been forgotten -- words like socialism, anarchism, collectivism, solidarity, mutual aid and autonomy.

There have been heretics through the ages such as Gerard Winstanley of England, Jean Varlet of France, Peter Kropotkin of Russia, Emma Goldman of the United States and Che Guevara of Argentina who have dared to dream. But I had them harassed, brutalized or murdered for their idealism. Just as heretics of the Catholic Church were erased from memory, so too, these visionaries have been removed from the history books by my new Inquisition.

I am God, I am money and in God you will trust.
http://web.archive.org/web/19991002010113/www.sudval.org/users/spamfire/...

Posted By gene

gotta get out!

Dec
04
2003

i'm dying to get out of boston for a little bit. i've been thinking of taking a 4 day train trip along the "empire builder route" to portland or seattle, spend 5 hours making a back pack full of sandwiches, then after 5 hours of non-training-around, i would begin the 4 day train ride back. I DON'T HAVE ANY MONEY THOUGH. :(

Posted By gene
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