The French’s Fried Onions people can go to Hell

Being a good southern(ish) boy, I like things fried. So whenever I eat some pasta dishes or a casserole of any kind, I reach for my trusty can of French’s Fried Onions. There’s nothin’ in em but onions and the oil.

For years, the can’s looked like this:

1001029 041500220208 A 400

Perfect. Big, easy to open, keeps stuff fresh and you can shove your entire face into the can. Now, because they’re thoughtless assholes, they’ve changed their package design. Probably in the name of “corporate rebranding” or “enhanced product placement” or some other bullshit. This is what the new package looks like:

IMG 0523

Yeah, that sorry piece of crap. That’s me trying to shove my mitt down in there. What’s the first thing you wanna do when you pop off the lid? You wanna stick your grubby hands down into it and pull out a big handful of fried onions to eventually shove into your maw.

Instead, with this new god awful container, you can’t get more than four fingers down in there. If you expect to be able to move your fingers, you can stick in three and under no circumstance can you get your thumb down in there, too. Which means you can’t get any of them out of the container unless you stand on one leg, say a prayer, sacrifice a goat and pretend to tickle the bottom of this stupid container like some three-fingered sloth.

Terrible. Just terrible.

I’m switching to the store brand. I’ll never buy another can of French’s Fried Onions for as long as that can sticks around.

December 13, 2011  3 Comments

The pursuit of happiness

I know it sounds hyperbolic, but this is how I feel:

Up house1

That’s my house, with me in it, and the rest of the world is just sitting outside making me do things I should have never reasonably needed to do.

This weekend I had four kids trying to ring my doorbell and run away — except they’re all too fat to move with any speed or grace, so they just sorta fumbled around. After their second attempt to get near my property, I walked outside and yelled at the top of my lungs, “This stops now or I’m calling the cops and chasing you down.”

I came inside and said to myself, “I hate this house. I want out of here.” I can’t deal with people near my stuff. I can’t handle people even looking at my things with malicious intent. Everywhere I go, I think, “I hope no one’s around my house.” Or, “I hope my bike is there when I come back.” I live in constant fear that other people are going to ruin everything I hold dear — probably because other people have a fantastic record of ruining everything I hold dear.

I walked out to the garage so I could get on my bicycle, and I saw my Rav 4 sitting there. I said to myself, “I hate having a car. I want it gone.”

After I came back from my ride, I stepped into my house and said to myself, “I don’t even need half of this stuff. I don’t use it. Why do I need a bookcase when I refuse to buy paper books?”

And then it hit me, the realization I had been attempting to make for a year or more: that so little actually matters. Personally, I don’t know what really matters in my world, because I don’t share much with other people and not a lot of people come around. For me, I guess it’s about two things:

  1. I don’t ever want to have to ask, “Do I have enough money in the bank?” I should be able to live comfortably on about $30,000 a year.
  2. I don’t ever want to use things that offend my sensibilities.

Call it the Apple-ification of my lifestyle, I guess. But I’ve been doing it subconsciously for years by never buying music from anyone that doesn’t consistently produce phenomenal music, by not buying hardware that isn’t the best on the consumer market, by never eating food that isn’t from natural ingredients.

I’m probably never going to be wealthy with a bunch of assets, and that doesn’t bother me. What bothers me is having to figure out how to pay for things I actually need, like food, shelter, clothing, etc. I want to be able to spend my money on things that matter, like supporting book authors, supporting local businesses, buying good food, having good stuff that I actually use everyday — like a really great tea maker or knife set.

Heck, sometimes I find myself not even wanting to do that. My desire to simplification extends all the way to not wanting to eat food. I was at India Garden Saturday for lunch, like I always do, and I said to myself, “I don’t want to pay for this. I wish I didn’t have to eat sometimes.” If I could have a cheap pill that delivered all my sustenance and left me feeling “not hungry”, that’d be great.

Which confuses me sometimes. Am I striving for simplicity by trying to unload my car and hopefully in the not-too-distant future the house and the half of my clothes I don’t wear and the knick knacks that I have to have to fill the space in the house I don’t like so it doesn’t look like I’m broke because I want to life a simpler life. Or is it because I’m cheap and incredibly frugal?

I suspect a bit of both. The house is fine, the car is fine, but that’s just it: they’re just “fine” to me.

At this point, after having achieved what most people achieve when they’re in their 30′s, I’m ready to go the other way. Ideally, I’d live somewhere mild year-round so I could bike absolutely everywhere. I’d live in a very small house or one-bedroom apartment away from kids and anyone who might potential pop out a kid. (Kids are fine for the continuation of the species, I just don’t care to be around them much. Or at all.). I’d live somewhere void of young couples (because, like kids, it’s just a constant reminder to me of something I will never be able to do or be granted permission to achieve). I’d live somewhere quiet, but where I could get to a store or someplace that offered needed supplies and entertainment that I enjoyed (like a library) within a few miles.

Of course, I can’t ever have that.

Because, by definition, the things I want and need are found only in cities. Typically in very dense cities. But I don’t want to live in a city because I don’t want to live that close to other people. And when I lived in an apartment, whenever I was gone I’d constantly think, “I hope some other person doesn’t burn the building down.” I actually feared for the safety of my pets in my old apartment because I was afraid someone would ignite a grease fire or throw a cigarette somewhere and it’d kill them and I’d come home to a smoldering pile of ash. Even now, when I leave the house, I’m afraid someone’s going to do something to my house. It’s why ADT, while not necessarily efficient, is worth $40 a month to me — peace of mind that if something does happen, I have a fighting chance to know about it quickly. So after all that, that means I’d have to live in the country, which I don’t want because I couldn’t have high speed Internet access or quick commuting to a library or grocery delivery.

So I guess what I need is something like this, just in a city:

Bubble tent france dining camping nature 590jn111610

Life is hard.

(Yes, yes, first world problems.)

December 12, 2011  Leave a comment

Why do we all still put up with Facebook?

I’m dipping back into one of those cycles where I’m disenfranchised with Facebook again. Why? Because so many people are just that awful.

Facebook is, by and large, an entertainment platform. Instead of watching TV or reading a book, some people cut into that time with Facebook. So much so the phrase “I have to check Facebook” has entered everyone’s vernacular. But why? Why on earth do you need to check Facebook? I also need to check my bank account from time to time, but I don’t do it twenty times a day. “But Justin, your bank account doesn’t change as fast as Facebook!” Maybe, but it sure doesn’t feel that way sometimes.

Facebook brought most of us into the social networking realm. A lot of us had MySpace pages, but I think most of us gawk at Facebook more — and that’s strictly because Facebook brought good design to social networking. Remember when you had to sit through a MySpace page with a green background, yellow text, two videos playing simultaneously and some shitty pop song you never heard of playing in the background? That offended my sensibilities, so I blocked it out.

Now, Facebook’s content is offending my sensibilities. I don’t block hardly anyone, but I unsubscribe or hide a lot of people. Play Facebook games? You’re gone. Post song lyrics all the time? You’re gone. Post sappy poems and bullshit “feelings”? You’re gone. Post vague nonsense like “That was fun!” or “Can’t wait until it happens!”? You’re gone.

You have to agree with one sentiment: none of that crap matters. Why does anyone want to see that? I certainly don’t.

Then there’s the other side of the coin, when people post things of some level of substance, but it’s completely and factually wrong. Particularly when someone posts crap they heard on FOX or MSNBC. This Occupy Wall Street stuff is overrunning my stream. The other day someone posted a photo of a woman complaining the bank is making her pay $300,000+ on a house she bought even though it’s only worth $91,000 now. Really? Maybe it’s because she bought a fucking house for $300,000 and the bank loaned her that money? Signatures and contracts were traded. Deals were made. You were there! But I digress.

But why anyone would want to consume this stuff at all hours of the day is beyond me. It’s all just stuff and people I’d mostly rather forget. I have just under 400 friends on Facebook and now that I’ve hidden so many people, I see, maybe, 70 or 80 of them. And a tier of 20 or 30 generally dominate the whole place.

“But Justin, why don’t you just close your account?” I’d kinda like to, but feel I need to keep it for some reasons. It’s good for keeping my name in front of clients and potential clients, and I get a lot of traffic to sites through Facebook. That pains me to say it, because it suddenly makes me feel like some crummy marketer.

I’ve hooked my Twitter account back into Facebook so I can just tweet and get it cross-posted to Facebook. I did that once before but disabled it because I thought it redundant for people who followed me in both places. But now I’ve reached a tipping point where the duplicate followers are in the minority. I have a highly curated list of about 100 Twitter followers who say things that are actually intelligent. They don’t necessarily follow me back, but Facebook missed the boat on being able to read things from people who haven’t “friended” you. They just now introduced the whole “Subscribe” gamut.

For me, Twitter shows me things that are likely to be true, useful, relatable to me. Not just how many imaginary beans you you pretended to faux-grown in your make believe farm or pictures of your kid. (I *really* hate that  – how would you like it if I posted photos of my cat all the time?)

Plus there’s that whole slew of privacy issues Facebook keeps bumbling over.

Aside from me commenting in responses to my cross-Twitter-posts on Facebook, don’t expect me to hang around here much. Or, just follow me over on Twitter.

December 12, 2011  Leave a comment

Un-driving the car, Part 3

My experiment with not driving continues, and I’ve been consciously thinking about lifestyle choices this week that I thought I’d share. First, if you missed Part 1 or Part 2, go, read them now. I’ll wait.

This week has continued winter’s long slow ascent into our part of the hemisphere here in Indiana. Temperatures have been chilly, but not uncomfortable, in the upper 20s to mid 30s.

Monday, I needed to go downtown to a speaking engagement. This meant I needed to be dressed nicely. I had intended to ride my bike downtown, and it was dark and raining, but I didn’t for two reasons — I actually drove. One, I would have ordinarily taken the motorbike, but since I’m still not allowed to ride at night until I get my full endorsement (and after the obligatory waiting period), I couldn’t. Also, I had taken the Rav out that afternoon to get it appraised at a few places and ended up not having enough time to get from where I was, to home, then to downtown. So I just drove straight downtown. But I was prepared to ride the bike and have spare clothes handy.

On Tuesday, I rode to Lowe’s to pickup some lightbulbs. They didn’t have what I needed, so I left empty handed and wasted my time. It was, however, chilly enough that my hands were cold. The rest of me was fine, but my hands were cold so I need better gloves. I kinda already expected that — they’re $6 things from the Gap after all.

Today, Wednesday, I recognize I still need lightbulbs, and may just order them online at this point since I don’t know where else to go for the bulbs I need. I don’t want to go traversing around the city from hardware store to hardware store. I also need to visit the bank to cash a check, go to the library to pick up a book and swing by somewhere to look for gloves and rain/snow shoes.

It occurs to me now that, ordinarily, I would have hopped in the car and went. Went to Lowe’s yesterday, go again today. Go to the bank today, go again tomorrow because I know another check is on the way. Go to the library today, go again tomorrow, because I know another hold request is on the way and will probably arrive tomorrow.

So, instead, I’m exercising some prudent patience and waiting. I’ll cash both checks tomorrow, pick up both books tomorrow and visit Lowe’s again for bulbs. If they don’t have them in yet, I’ll order online. Then I’ll go right next door to check out some cheap snow shoes and gloves at Wal-Mart.

They’re several things at work here, all good, I think:

  1. I’m saving fumes. By not driving 3 miles to Lowe’s today, another 3 to the library and 1.5 to the bank and instead saving them for tomorrow, I’m not wasting (albeit a little) gas or polluting (what little I do with the motorbike). I’m cutting my mileage by half. My carbon footprint on the bicycle is already very, very low, but now it’s even lower.
  2. I’m saving time. By just waiting and exercising a little patience (that I absolutely would not have thought about before), I’m able to stay here at home and keep on working.
  3. I’m saving some money. By not adding any wear to either bike (and I’d take the motorbike because it’s windy — I hate pedaling in the wind), I’m saving a tiny bit of money.
  4. I feel a lot calmer. Forcing myself into not rushing around to be “busy” all the time is very satisfying.

“Well, Justin, you could have always done that and saved yourself the time.” Yes, I probably could have, but I didn’t nor would I have even thought about it. You probably don’t think about that much either unless you actively have something else that needs your attention. We think we need something, we hop in the car and go and our time can be much better used elsewhere or consolidated.

At this point, my driving looks like this assuming I know I have to go somewhere:

  • Is it under 10 miles one-way and is the wind calm? Yes? Then ride the bicycle.
    • If it’s windy or longer than 10 miles one-way, I take the motorbike.
  • Is it raining? Yes? Then take the motorbike. It keeps my drier.
  • Is it dark or will it be dark soon? Yes? Then take the bicycle if it’s under 6 or 7 miles one way and turn on the lights.
    • If it’s dark and further away or windy or raining, then I’ll take the Rav. Until the BMV allows me to take my skills test, I can’t legally drive the motorbike at night.

The experiment continues…

December 7, 2011  Leave a comment

Un-driving the car

Here now is the continuation of my probably boring no-driving series. This may actually be interesting for those of you interested in my seemingly unusual lifestyle choices. Otherwise, I’m writing this for the myriad of Googlers that come across site from time to time looking for advice or learning how it is to live without driving a car.

I talked to you before about my experiment with not driving. Or un-driving, perhaps. I want to reiterate my personal expenses for driving. I drive a 2003 Toyota Rav 4. It’s all wheel drive, gets about 28 miles per gallon and weighs about two tons. My trip to the post office requires me to lug two tons of steel along with me. I live in Indianapolis, Indiana, where mass transit is virtually non-existent; our bus system is ranked 99th out of 100 of all the metro-area mass transit systems in the country. Driving’s also expensive, per month:

Car payment: $256 (over five years)

Car insurance: $105.33

Gas: $60 a month (two fill-ups, 400 miles)

TOTAL: $421.33 per month to run the car. That doesn’t include parking fees, titles and registration, wheel taxes, more gas for longer trips, oil changes and any other minor or major maintenance the car requires — like car washes, wiper fluid or new tires or brake pads. At best, with no maintenance problems or oil changes or hiccups, I’m spending $5,000 a year on a car. Most Americans spend about a fifth of their income on their cars. People in places without good mass transit, like central Indiana, spend about a third of their income on cars.

The bigger issue, in my mind, is the car’s depreciation. I’m going to spend $10,000 over 5 years to end up with a car that’s worth, maybe, $4,000. That’s the dumbest financial move anyone could make, and we seem to do it over and over again.

So I experimented with not driving for a few weeks, and I only drove a couple of times. Both of those times was to check out a motorbike in another county. It was too far to ride my bicycle comfortably and it was, after all, only to go find an option for replacing the car. I consider it a success.

The motorbike

And now I’ve made a purchase. For $4,000 I bought a new motorbike. It gets 80 MPG (conservatively, in the city, I’m going to say 60 MPG), which is more than twice as good as the Rav, maybe even almost three times as good. It holds just 2.7 gallons of gas.

It rides smooth, works great and is crazy fast and cheap. Now my expenses per month look like this:

Payment: $167 (over 36 months)

Insurance: $56

Gas: $12 (for about 400 miles)

TOTAL: $235 a month. After the 36 months, it’ll be about $67 a month on the high point and the value of the bike stays steadier than a car.

This does require some lifestyle changes to be sure. Here are some things I regularly do, or am prepared to do in the near future:

  • Drive to work.
    In the spring, I’ll likely be teaching two days a week at a high school across town from me. It’s too far to bike comfortably, especially in the wind (which is the worst thing to cycle in). So, the motorbike can get me there in 20 minutes as it travels just as fast as a car (up to 188 MPH in my case). I have a $50 outfit of rain gear I wear on top of my “work” clothes that I can put on and take off quickly, stash under the seat in the storage compartment and go on my way.
  • Deliver packages.
    Sometimes I have to take packages to clients or elsewhere. Sometimes I need to pick up something rather large from the hardware store or elsewhere. In this case, I can do a few things. I can try to mount it to the rear rack of my bike with ties, I can get them delivered and pay the nominal shipping charge (for a few bucks, that’s much, much cheaper than the car), get the package picked up by the Postal Service or FedEx or UPS, or just rent a car some weekend and get it then. Rental cars on weekends sometimes run as low as $10 a day.
  • Go to meetings.
    Like traveling to other jobs, just throw on my rain gear and go. The full-face helmet keeps my head dry and warm, too. Vents on the outside can be opened to give me a lot of fresh air in the spring or summer to keep me cool. Or, just put on a coat or bring a change of clothes to quickly layer into or out of. I can dress for the occasion, and make it as easy or difficult to change into or out of as I need, like if I’ve got access to a bathroom to change or not.
  • Get groceries.
    I recognize for some people they still go to the store. If you live in Indy, for heaven’s sake, use PeaPod.com already.
  • Get supplies.
    Amazon Prime is amazing.

The extra fees I pay for delivery charges or shipping is minuscule compared to the cost of owning the car. And since I work from home, this makes even more sense for me.

There are some other lifestyle choices that have pros and cons of not owning a car:

  • You can’t just get up and go wherever whenever.
    The epitome of American excess: I WANT IT NOW. You’re sitting on the couch, you want ice cream, you go to the car, hop in and go. Well, I don’t really do that so much anymore. But, I save more money because I’m not as interested in bicycling 3 miles to get some ice cream or some other equally needless thing.
  • It requires a little more planning.
    I spend a few extra minutes each day thinking about my travel plans and getting things done all at once. I used to go Lowe’s for things two or three times a day. Now I take more time to sit and think about what I need before I go so I can get it all at once and be done. I also think about the order of things so I make my commutes shorter. All stuff people should probably already do anyway, but don’t, because we’re spoiled car addicts.
  • You have to let go of some of your ego.
    If you’re one of those people that thinks your car defines you, you live a sad, pitiful existence. Your car doesn’t define you, it just tells people how much debt you’re willing to go into. It’s like a stupidity tax. Our culture, driven by ads from car companies, tells people that bicyclists and people on motorbikes are dumb or weird. I think you’re the stupid one, as I stream by you on the shoulder or leave you in my dust on my motorbike that goes 0-40 in about 2 seconds. Plus, nothing garners attention like something sexy and red.
  • You have to recognize the hidden costs.
    The costs you spend on depreciation,  fees and taxes at the BMV and so on add up. A lot. I’ve done some research and read some books, and everything I seem to read comes back to edmunds.com and their “True Cost to Own” calculator, which often suggests taking the purchase price of your car and doubling it. That’s how much it truly costs to own and operate the car over a period of a few years.
  • You have to do something smart with the savings.
    I’m keeping my Rav for a little while longer, just in case, but I want to sell it (anyone interested?). I’ll get out from under that loan, pay off the bike in about 6-7 months (if I pay the same I am for the car and just divert it to the bike). Then I’ll be debt free except for the house. With the savings, I can store it away, put it in my retirement, invest it, or put it towards the house. Over a period of just 10 years, the savings in cash will be at the very least $50,000. If I invested it or put it in my retirement plan, that’d make me a millionaire by the time I’m ready to retire. Just from not owning a car.

Some common questions I know you’re thinking:

“What do you do when it gets cold?”
I put on a coat.

“What do you do when it gets hot?”
I wear less clothing.

“What do you do when it rains?”
I put on something waterproof and get over it like a man. Dressed properly, and I’ve tried this, I don’t get wet, I don’t get cold and I don’t have a hard time seeing because the water just rolls off the side of my helmet.

“What do you do when you need to go someplace really far away?”
Rent a car. It’ll cost about $60 for the day or two I need it, if it’s during the week. Enterprise will even pick me up and drop me off, too. It’s cheaper on the weekends.

“What do you do if an emergency happens?”
I’d probably call 911, like in any other emergency.

“What happens if it’s snowing or icy?”
I probably won’t go out unless I have to, just like I would with the car. If I have to, then I’ll do what any rational person would do: put on the right gear, take my time, exercise caution and get on with it.

“What if you have to take a passenger?”
They can hop on the back of the motorbike. Or, they’ll have to figure something else out. Maybe we can bike together — I have two bicycles now.

“What if you have to go somewhere at night?”
I’ll turn on my lights.

“That seems awfully uncomfortable. I think I like my car.”
Fine, drive your car. Doesn’t bother me. My bicycle burns fat and saves me a ton of money. My motorbike saves me a ton of money, too. Your car makes you fat and burns money. I feel better, look better, live better and save money to put toward things I actually really care about — like technology equipment, books, food and better living stuff, like buying a better set of cookware or a better coffee maker. All without going into debt.

I’ve taken my motorbike out for a test drive in cool air (50 ish degrees), cold air (28 ish degrees), windy weather, rainy weather and sunny weather. It’s not a problem. When it’s 2 degrees and snowing, that might be a problem, but I’ll get over it. I’m sure I can manage. And if the weather is just so shitty that I absolutely can’t get out and I absolutely have to go somewhere, I’ll spend the time taking the bus or call a cab. It’s miserable the most in Indiana in January and February. Eight weeks, and if I have to go somewhere and it’s the actively sleeting or snowing, then I’ll have to put up with that for a few trips that, out of the entire year, are piddly in comparison.

There is no inclement weather, just inclement dress. If you live in a city, you almost certainly do not need a car. Unless you’ve got a bunch of kids, you work in construction, live on a farm or have to do sales calls all day long from one spot to another, or have health issues that your doctor is concerned about, maybe car-free living isn’t possible. But for the vast majority of people, it most certainly is.

December 4, 2011  Leave a comment

This Morning’s “The Dumbest Thing I’ve Ever Read”

In Northwest Indiana, a hospital put up billboards:

A northern Indiana hospital that erected billboards with the message “Obesity is a disease. Not a decision” is facing a backlash from people offended by the signs’ suggestion that obesity isn’t a lifestyle choice.

One opponent to the billboard says:

“There is no disease that causes your body to drive to McDonald’s to go get some fries. There is no disease that makes your hands unwrap a candy bar. It’s all habits,” her email said.

And the hospital says:

…the reasons why a person gains and carries weight involve more than just eating.

Sleep, stress, access to healthful food, a decrease in movement due to technology, people’s genes and even what a mother eats when she’s pregnant all impact weight of adults, Stanish said.

And one area resident says:

Ward said she was compared to her thinner sister, who ate the same food she did. She said she tried to get the weight off, sometimes eating only vegetables and cottage cheese.

“No one comes in the world and says, ‘I want to be overweight,”‘ she said. “It’s with you. You don’t choose that.”

After having two daughters, Ward had gastric bypass surgery and lost about 150 pounds. She now has a personal trainer and rides bikes with her daughters to help them live a healthy lifestyle.

So, let’s recap: a hospital thinks being fat is a disease, some people think that’s ridiculous, because what kind of disease makes you eat a Big Mac? A doctor doesn’t seem to grasp that sleep and access to healthy food aren’t all that difficult, considering that crappy food keeps you awake (laden with sugars, harder digest, etc.). And I’ve not been in a grocery store in my life that didn’t have a produce section. A head of lettuce costs 99 cents. A box of hamburger helper and the hamburger is about $5-$6.

The doctor doesn’t seem to grasp the correlation between “sleep”, “stress” and a “decrease in movement due to technology” as all lifestyle choices. Has he ever considered telling his patients to, you know, move? Moving sorta makes you tired, right?

And an area resident sped up the process by getting her stomach tied. Oh, and she started biking and eating better. The two may or may not be related.

I get that if you’re really, really overweight that exercising is almost impossible because of your size. But for a lot of people who aren’t quite “lift me with heavy machinery size”, this does not need to be hard. I refuse to believe that suddenly being fat is a disease. It sounds like restless leg syndrome. If my grandparents didn’t have this problem, I don’t see how it can exist today. People haven’t evolved that much in 100 years. 1,000, maybe, a generation or two, no.

Marketing!

November 28, 2011  Leave a comment

The Jawbone Up

Everyone’s reviewed the hell out of the Jawbone Up over the last couple of weeks, all in a wishy-washy maybe-sorta way. Nothing I read said “buy it” or “don’t buy it”. I’m saying: “buy it and hope for updates”.

I’ve been using the Jawbone Up for a little over a week now. The Up is a rubber band you wear around your wrist. It records your steps, eating habits and sleep patterns in conjunction with the iPhone-only App. It costs $99 and may be worth about $79 of it.

The Band

The band is made of rubber, has a removable cap for the headphone jack that you plug into your iPhone to sync data and is surprisingly comfortable. You’ll probably lose the cap if you’re a loser incapable of holding on to a small piece of plastic, but I’m not worried about that. Because I have the sense to sit down at a table when I’m working with small things.

It’s waterproof, which means you can shower with it…and count your steps? I never wear mine in the shower. That just seems silly. And they recommend you not swim with it. So, feel free to walk out in the rain and use the band to cover your head.

It is comfy, though. I don’t notice it when I’m typing or sleeping. It’s easy to put into sleep, workout or default mode by hitting the little silver button on the other end of the band. And, the package allows you to get the right fit — small, medium or large. I’m a medium but I thought I’d be small. Small would be for kids, I think.

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The App

You use the app to take a photo of your meal. Two hours later, it’ll send a Push Notification reminding you that you ate two hours ago. It’ll ask you to give you feedback about how you feel: energized, normal, tired, hungry, etc. After a while, you’re supposed to use that to help you figure out how you’ll feel next time you eat a similar meal. Of course, if you don’t already know that eating a bowl of ravioli is going to make you feel tired, there’s little this App’s going to do for you. This portion is lame and I never remember to take a picture of my food. I usually end up taking a picture of an empty plate or bowl instead. And you can’t really use it for snacks. If you eat a banana, how are you supposed to feel two hours later? “Freaking phenomenal” isn’t likely.

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The app also shows you graphs and charts about your activity and sleep patterns. More on that in a bit.

Lastly, the app is also how you enroll in challenges. Challenges are Up’s way of being “social”. Since there’s like, ten people using challenges, I’m number one in all the challenges I’ve enrolled in.

IMG 0513

The Reason I Bought It

Up tracks your sleep habits and vibrates on your wrist to wake you up in the morning. It also vibrates during the day to remind you to get up for a break on an interval you set (mine’s 90 minutes). But the sleep tracking is interesting and works pretty well. I have mine set to wake me at 8, which is really “wake me between 7:30 and 8 a.m.”. As I roll around in bed, it knows based on my unconscious movement whether I’m awake (orange bars), in light sleep (light blue bars) or deep sleep (dark blue bars).

I can’t profess to it’s complete accuracy, but in the mornings it wakes me by 8 a.m. when I’m in light sleep and it’s a much more pleasant way of waking up. For that, it was worth buying (although, I think $99 is a bit much at this point). Later, you can see a graph of your sleep, which is kinda neat. In this case, it knew I got up around 4:30 a.m. to get a glass of water:

IMG 0512

It’s only woken me up in deep sleep once, and that was because I had been in deep sleep for the entire half hour before, so it defaulted to just being an alarm. One morning it wakes me at 7:40, another 7:50. If you’re such a baby that you think you must get every last second of sleep the world somehow owes you and the idea of waking up 15 minutes before you “have to” offends your weak little self, I guess you’re not going to get much use out of it.

You wouldn’t think a little vibration on your wrist would work, but it’s a very intense vibration. When it vibrates, you feel it, but it’s not loud or violent like a cell phone’s vibration.

Conclusion

The app is very 1.0. The band only tracks steps, so if you do a lot of cycling or other arm-stationary exercise, it’s not going to be very accurate. At least with me, when I cycle, I take my iPhone in one of my panniers and the App can use the iPhone’s GPS to track my movement. The band, however, still clocks some “steps” as I hit bumps in the road, but it’s horribly inaccurate on that since I’m not really walking. It’d be worthless on a treadmill or stationary bike.

The app needs calorie counting in an easy way to be really great. If I take a picture of a slice of pizza, I’d like to see it say, “That looks like pizza. The average slice of non-meat pizza is XX calories.” Then I could get a clearer picture of my diet and intake.

The band is comfy, has 10 hour battery life (and I believe that) and is stylish enough not to look dorky.

Overall, it’s better than nothing when it comes to metrics. The sleep cycle monitor is worth it, in my book. This would be perfect if you’re modestly fitness-inclined. I think I’m too far above that to be really impressed by it, but for $99, buy it, enjoy what does work and look forward to the free app updates in the future.

November 22, 2011  Leave a comment

I know what killed my mother

Just a quick disclaimer: this is probably going to end up rather lengthy and deeply personal. I’m writing this for myself, for anyone who suffers from depression, anxiety, cancer, disease or any other illness.

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This is a bittersweet time of the year for me. In November, when most people celebrate Thanksgiving, I do not. No one in my family really does anymore since my mom died. November is also the month I put in my resignation to quit my job at the State. December 1 marks the two year mark for me running my own business.

Speaking of December, when most people celebrate Christmas, I do not. The last memory I have of Christmas was in 2000, when I was 14, with my mom sitting on the floor of our living room, her shaved and scarred head wrapped in a thick layer of gauze. She had had her second brain surgery to remove a brain tumor just a month earlier. Like always, she made sure there were presents under the tree for me and my grandmother and my dad. And like always, she made sure to have each of them neatly wrapped and labeled. Except this year, as she sat on the floor, she wasn’t able to write so well anymore. Her spelling was off, her once pretty handwriting had been reduced to scribbles. She didn’t have enough labels, so she was forced to scribble over misspellings. The wrapping paper wasn’t as neatly folded as it once was because her vision was starting to fail in one eye. My memory from that year is of me sitting on the couch, looking down at her, as she squinted at the labels on the presents and refused our help to sort them. It wasn’t long after that that she became completely immobile, blind, deaf, incapable of coherent speech, constipated and in pain. She lived most of 2001 that way and then she died in January 2002, just two years and two days after she was diagnosed.

And in January, this January 18, 2012 at 11:14 a.m., I will travel to a small cemetery outside of Pekin, Indiana, in rural Washington County where mom and her grandparents and her little brother (who died two days after birth), are buried. I will place a wreath of red roses (her favorite) on her grave and mark the 10 year anniversary of her death. She was born on August 26, 1961. She was 41 years old.

Now, a decade later, I’m 24 years old. I know and have experienced a few more things now than I had then. Then, and up until somewhat very recently, I suffered from chronic depression. Taking care of my dying mother, living for two years knowing that she could die at literally any second, coming to terms with my sexuality, puberty and enduring the American Hell that is high school drained me. In recent memory, working at a depressing and draining job, struggling with dating and breakups, close friends that seemingly moved away in a constant stream, balancing finances and avoiding the debt for school, my dad’s near constant four-year unemployment and other things left my physically and emotionally void.

For a while it was incredibly difficult for me on a variety of levels for a variety of things, things that I’d rather not bore you with or rehash at this moment, but know that I’m speaking about things that most people don’t suffer with or endure much (or ever) in their lifetime. I’ve never told anyone personally about the things that happened to me during a period of time in my life between about 2008-2010.

And for a while in 2010 I tried medications to help with the stress and depression. I was diagnosed with kidney stones that year, too, and racked up medical bills that, thankfully, I’ve managed to pay off with the “help” of the insurance company (the same one that later revoked my coverage for ulcers and urinary tract problems). For a while, I tried modifying my diet to reduce some things, but it proved difficult because of my relationship at the time. It was the same ol’ problems, around and around.

And now, in 2011, I feel like I have the knowledge, the experience, the solution and the living proof to my problems of ulcers, depression, kidney stones, headaches, lethargy and weight gain: my diet.

I’ve long sworn-off fast food. I haven’t touched a fast food burger in about 7 years now, since 2005. But it wasn’t until 2010 I got a little more serious, by removing sodas and other sugary and carbonated beverages from my diet. I did it because my research lead me to believe that most kidney stones and urinary tract problems were caused by sodas. I also started filtering my water religiously to remove as much as I can from the city water. In addition, some stones are caused by calcium bond formations in the kidneys, calcium that’s usually delivered in large quantities by red meat.

So, I tried reducing the amount of meat I ate. And I started to feel pretty good.

And now, for the last month or so, I’ve taken my diet to a new level: I eat only whole foods and whole grains, based entirely on plants. I exercise more now than I ever have in my life by cycling, which I found that I love. For it, I feel better now that I have my entire life.

Some say that my diet is too extreme, too hard to live by and too restricting. To that I say: “Name me various kinds of red meat.” To which you will reply “Beef, pork, chicken.” You could go on to say venison, sheep, buffalo, etc., but really, people eat three main animals: cows, pigs and chicken because that’s what’s lining the shelves at the store. And then I will say, “Name me various kinds of edible plants.” To which you will reply, “Grapes, strawberries, cashews, peanuts, lettuce, wheat, corn, green beans, peas, carrots, cauliflower, broccoli, potatoes, bok choy, celery, oranges, apples…” and on and on. I imagine the combinations of vegetarian dishes works out to many thousands. I do not think three meats can do that. Maybe if you’re generous and pretend that different cuts of meat are in fact different “things”. But in my book, chicken tenders, chicken breast and chicken nuggets are all the same.

Going to a whole foods diet sucks for the first couple of weeks. I lived my entire life around concocting meals by asking, “What meat do I want?” And then throwing “something else” around it. Now that I’ve gotten my bearings around this new style of cooking, the food’s actually just as easy and tasty to prepare as any meat dish ever could be. I don’t miss it.

In the last month I’ve lost about 10 pounds. This morning I weighed in at 158.5 pounds. I’ve been losing about a half pound every two or three days and I still eat about as much as I used to in volume. Heck, I’ve got two dozen oatmeal raisin cookies sitting on the counter right now.

My mood is extremely better, my body is clearly (and trust me on this one) pushing out a bunch of crap. Literally. I didn’t know a person could have so many bowel movements in a day. The high amount of fiber I’m taking in is working.

But enough on that matter; the point is this: I feel and am a whole lot better than I was just a month ago. I’m leaner, happier, more focused and more energetic. I rarely feel “stuffed” anymore, to the point of sickness, but instead I feel “completely full”. You know, like how you feel when you eat at a buffet right before you cram in “just one more plate”. And it doesn’t break the bank, I spend just as much on groceries as I did when I bought a lot of meat. I just spend it on different things now.

I’m able to cycle 20-30 miles in a weekend, plus another 30-50 miles throughout the week. This week I’ve not started my car once; I’m not even sure it will start at this point. Who knows; and I don’t even really care.

I’ve done some research, only after I’ve started eating whole foods, and it backs up what I’m experiencing. I’ve read books from the library, including “Diet for a Small Planet“, which is probably the most all-encompassing that I’ve read. I could go into the science behind it, but I won’t. However, I will say that it seems very clear to me that the science is there and repressed a great deal by concerned interests, particularly in the government. I mean, just this week Congress voted to make pizza a vegetable because it contains 2 tablespoons of tomato paste for sauce. Why? Because the frozen pizza companies, yes, those Titans of Industry, didn’t like the idea of not selling all that gray, frozen pizza to school cafeterias.

The gist of the science is this: plenty of things give you protein, not just meat (ever eat a peanut? Those fuckers are great, aren’t they?). In fact, your body can only absorb so much protein, which isn’t much. The rest is wasted, which means most of that protein in your steak just gets wasted or stored as fat.

Why am I so adamant about this now? Why do I see fit to tell everyone I can about this? Because in addition to knowing and experiencing this now at the age of 24, I also know that the shitty diet you have of sodas, fast food, processed frozen crap like frozen pizzas and fries and macaroni and cheese in a box plus the money-driven drugs for your depression, anxiety, pain, jitters and emotions is killing you.

It killed my mother, that’s for damn sure.

We lived in the wide open countryside of Washington County. We didn’t have pollution problems. We had water from a natural well under our front yard. Mom was a homemaker, so she didn’t have stresses of a job. Dad made good money at his factory job at the time (it’s since gone), so we didn’t have terrible financial troubles. I went to a good school and got good grades, I was not causing her any stress.

Her diet, however, consisted of sodas. In the 14 years I knew my mother, I never once saw her drink a glass of water. It was always sodas or heavily-sweetened tea (I still drink plenty of sweet tea, but only with two tablespoons of natural sugar per 8 cups of water). Mom drank so much Big Red soda her tongue was often just as red. We ate a lot of fried foods, particularly sodium-heavy ready-made things like Hamburger Helper meals, things that came frozen like frozen pizzas and fries, plenty of red meat like pot roasts and pork chops and steaks. In the summer we’d eat a lot of fresh tomatoes from the garden, because that’s what my dad would always grow. We’d slather them on white bread (which is completely void of anything nutritious, at all), Miracle Whip and bacon, hold the lettuce. It was a BLT minus the L (the healthiest thing).

Then, after mom was diagnosed, that’s what we kept eating and drinking. Mom went in for three surgeries, endured intense amounts of radiation — even going as far as implanting radiation and chemotherapy wafers directly into her brain — and was on medications galore. She took a pill for something every hour of the day around the clock, including numerous “experimental pills” that the doctors at University of Louisville and Norton Healthcare claimed did “very, very well in the clinical trials” at reducing the sizes of tumors.

Well, you know what, of course they did well in the clinical trials. Has anyone ever heard of a drug that didn’t do well in a clinical trial? Of course you haven’t because they always “do well” at something.

Then, after mom would have surgery or visit the hospital, they’d feed her Jello and white bread (toast); she’d have a Pepsi to drink. Really? Seriously? Did no one think it prudent to maybe give her carrots or tomato juice? Mom loved tomato juice — it was the only thing she’d drink when she was pregnant with me because she said it was the only thing she could keep down. That and 7 Up, because again, she never drank water.

If I could go back in time, I honestly believe that if mom started a whole foods diet in the mid 90′s or even the late 90′s, she’d still be alive today.

You’re saying to yourself right now, ”Well, Justin, we’ve all gotta go sometime! And if we do, I want to enjoy my cheeseburgers.”

To that, I say, “You’re flat wrong.” If you think it’s normal for human beings to sit around like sloths because you’re “always tired”, or for people to die before they’re 40 for something that wasn’t a surreal accident or that it’s normal for people to be grotesquely fat or for you to have random aches and pains in your 20s or 30s, then fine, go ahead. If you think it’s normal to take a pill because you’re always “angry” or “upset” or that it’s normal to give kids pills to make them calm down or that it’s normal for elementary school kids to have diabetes or be so fat they have to use special reinforced chairs, I hope that cheeseburger is freaking delicious. Add a few more and you’ll be dead, or, at best, living on a diet rich in expensive drugs designed to treat symptoms just so you can function.

As proof, one only need to visit Japan. Ever see a fat guy in Japan? No you have not. Ever hear of a cancer epidemic in Japan? No you have not, because they have one of the lowest rates in the world for overall cancers. Rates of some cancers, like breast cancers, barely infects half a percent of their population. This is, of course, changing now that the Japanese are leaving their diets high in fish and vegetables for…”the traditional western diet.” KFC and McDonalds are growing fast there. In addition to the Japanese, this is why I don’t worry about the Chinese, because our diet will kill off their people with hardly anyone paying attention as to why.

Hippocrates believed that the body had an “innate ability to heal itself”. He believed that it was up to the doctor to help springboard the recovery of their patient by just giving them the right vitamins and minerals. The human body would take care of the rest. You have to agree that as our diets have gotten worse, the amount of deaths by cancer keep growing, even after the outlays in spending to research cancer treatments grows and grows each year. I don’t think that’s just a coincidence. And when’s the last time you felt like your government was really doing anything useful for you anyway?

Our medical system is so expensive because we have the worst diet of anyone in the world. All that crap people eat is killing our hearts and brains and keeps us inventing other things that don’t naturally exist to help the problems that also shouldn’t naturally exist! Granted, our system is great at trauma — if you get hit in the head or get stabbed with a rod in a car accident, our system does wonders. But disease? It’s pathetic.

I’m convinced eating crap turns you into crap. I’m convinced that the drugs people take for a medley of issues are completely made-up and designed to “temporarily cure” the symptoms, but never the problem. What use is it for people to take Prozac once if they can’t ever take it again? Keep taking it and paying for it and hey, everything’s “better”. Your Big Macs make you sad and depressed, not your life. If you have to take pills just to “function”, why does that seem normal to you? Do you think people in the colonial era had problems with ADHD and stress and depression? Certainly not at the rates we see today.

You can take expensive pills, or just eat foods rich in Niacin (Vitamin B3; like mushrooms, peas and beans), which has been proven to lift a person’s mood. At a fraction of the cost, that’s for sure. Bill Wilson, the co-founder of Alcoholics Anonymous suggested that his patients take Niacin to help their recovery based on his own experience and research of dozens of patients. But, by the time he suggested it, other medical groups had already inserted their influence and decided against that. They favored new drugs on the market instead. Somehow, in our society, a multivitamin can be dangerous in large doses, but Ambien is just fine (another pill, of which, I took for a while because of sleeping problems caused by two years of waking up at odd hours of the night to be with mom).

At the very least, stop eating white bread (look for “whole grain”, not just “whole wheat” — by USDA standards, a bread can be considered “whole wheat” just by sprinkling the wheat grains on the top of the bread after it’s been processed out, which makes it completely nutritionally defunct, like sprinkling boiled and rotten apple slices on top of a doughnut.). And stop eating fast food — tacos aren’t supposed to cost 69 cents and come in boxes labeled as “MEAT PRODUCT”. Food isn’t supposed to be manufactured, period.

Why isn’t everyone shaking their heads and wondering what’s gone wrong? How are people not questioning things they put into them more?

I know I’m right about this. I just wish I knew it in 1999.

November 19, 2011  Leave a comment

I think I’m going to run for Indianapolis Mayor

Indianapolis just had an election for Mayor, with Republican Greg Ballard winning, albeit closely, to Democrat Melina Kennedy. I think Greg Ballard’s a pretty good guy and I’ve had the opportunity to talk to him a few times, too. I voted for him in the last election.

The next election for Mayor is in 2015, and I want to run for the position as an Independent. This two-party system is ridiculous. There’s no reason why a fiscally smart guy like me can’t also be open to liberal and progressive thought, freethinking and diversity. Those two things can exist inside the same brain. It’s not water-and-oil.

I’m actually very serious about this, and I’m curious whether this strikes your fancy. For now, I wanted to share with you a brief overview of some of the ideas I have. Some won’t win me any fans in entrenched circles, but I’m not really bothered by that.

Transportation

We’ll have to wait and see where Greg Ballard takes us in the next four years on transportation. My assumption is “about as far as IndyGo can take you now.” Which is to say, not very far.

Because of our 19th century model of county government, this region doesn’t actually think like a region. The people in Hamilton County act completely independently of Marion or Johnson and other counties, yet people wouldn’t exist in those locales in the numbers they do today if it weren’t for Indianapolis. As a result, it’s up to the State legislature to approve the funding and taxation required to build a good transit system.

That worked for Lucas Oil Stadium, which arguably, a very small minority of people in the region actually use. Yet we all pay for it with our cheeseburgers and sodas through a food and beverage tax in the nine-county area. There’s two million people and the whole stadium holds, at most, 70,000 people. Someone got screwed, and I think it’s “most of us”. Yet, there’s a big difference between a $720 million dollar stadium and a $2.5 billion dollar 25-year transit plan, albeit, the differences in utility and vast.

Since the State Legislature is comprised mostly of people from places “not Indianapolis”, I doubt anything happens. People in Crawford County don’t give a hoot what Indianapolis wants or needs.

Screw the state legislature, it’s time for Indianapolis to do what’s best for Indianapolis. I’d try to get all the mayors and county councils from neighboring counties together in a room and I’d say, “Look, we can’t just build highways out of this problem. This is not sustainable. Half of you can’t even handle the soil problems coming up because of all the urban sprawl.” With any luck, we could create a mutual transit fund to help our suburban friends get to work.

But since that would require people in far off lands, like, uh, Carmel, to contribute to something that also benefits Indianapolis, I doubt that happens, either.

So it’s up to Marion County to fund what Marion County wants. We might not be able to afford a $2.5 billion transit plan to build light rail and hover cars, but there’s no reason why we couldn’t afford $500 million to beef up IndyGo.

I don’t actually think Indianapolis is quite ready for a light rail system — I just don’t think the density is there. At least not right away, but maybe someday. instead, there’s no reason why Indianapolis can’t have the best damn bus system in America. Currently, we’re ranked 99th — just behind a guy with a potato cart in Boise, I think.

I honestly don’t think there’s any money to be found in making the current IndyGo more efficient. If anything, I think that’s the one agency in Indianapolis we can all agree is barely scraping by and isn’t wasting much of anything except the time and patience of riders and would-be patrons. It costs money to run busses all over the place all the time.

I support IndyConnect’s proposed bus enhancement plan. It’s supported by businesses and residents alike, promotes cross-city routes that means you won’t have to hop a bus to go Downtown only to go up the road to Castelton from Irvington. With the expanded bike routes that Indianapolis is building under Greg Ballard’s tenure, bicycling a short distance to go a long distance is an added bonus. Imagine an Indianapolis where a bus stop runs within with a mile of your front door, at most, and when you get there, a bus is there in 10 minutes or less. Hop on and go.

At least 15% of your income goes to your car if you make a payment, maybe more. Think about the savings you stand to gain.

To pay for it all, there’s no bones about it, it’s most likely going to come from tax increases. I also think tiered rider fees are fair. If you’re on welfare or unemployment, you can get a temporary discount until you get a job or until your discount expires. If you live in a million dollar home in Washington Township, expect to pay full price for a ride.

It puts more money in the pockets of more people, increases disposable income for residents to spend locally and makes us even more attractive to the young, the elderly in need of transportation and businesses looking to setup shop someplace with a lot of people traffic.

Crime

I’ve asked a lot of people and talked to a lot more about crime in Indianapolis. By the sound of some people, you’d think we’re all about ten minutes from a shoot-out at the Ok-Coralle smack in the middle of Meridian Street. Most don’t feel one way or another on crime, however.

Police forces by their very nature are reactive. Maybe, if they’re lucky, they can be proactive by being in just the right place at the right time, like if you were about to see someone back into a car and you could stop them. But that’s rare. Even if the number of police on the streets reached a ratio of 2:1, there’d still be crime. And to be truly proactive, that would require a level of Orwellian surveillance that none of us are excited or impressed by.

Murders, assaults and rapes do not happen because everyone’s crazy or insane. I happen to believe that most people are inherently good. Crime happens when people reach a situation where they are completely incapable of identifying any other alternative. They have no money, they need to eat, so they rob a gas station and someone gets hurt in the process. Again, unless you want to pay for armed guards at every gas station in the city, all the restructuring and rejiggering of the police force in the world won’t solve this problem.

Crime prevention programs aren’t very effective because most criminals don’t exactly pickup a copy of the Indianapolis Star each morning and read about all the programs and things they can do.

And this is because they probably don’t have much respect for education. No one disputes that educated people are much less likely to commit aggressive crimes.

In most of America, it costs more to send someone to prison than it does to send them to school. That’s a pretty striking example of some messed up priorities.

So here’s an idea everyone can get behind because it helps adults, reduces the prison population and saves money at the same time: how about we start turning prison cells into classrooms? There is absolutely no reason why a person in jail, particularly if they’ve done something “soft”, like drug or alcohol abuse, has to sit there and stare at a wall or play basketball or lift weights all day and not know how to read. Instead of training jailers and prison staff to be disciplinarians, how about we also train them to teach?

Give prisoners real support, so we can return them into society and hopefully not encounter another run-in with them again. Plenty of people are in need of just the kind of labor former prisoners can provide.

But what about preventing them from getting into prison in the first place? That leads me to my next issue…

Education

Education at this level of government is hard. The state has an increasingly dominant role in public schools. Indianapolis Public Schools and its Superintendent Eugene White and the school board do  not report to the Mayor. The Mayor’s office has absolutely no control over what IPS or Warren or Wayne or any of the other township schools do or do not do.

So it’s with a heavy set of shackles on our arms that we try to move forward by offering ideas, but ideas are cheap. Execution matters.

Prior administrations have made Charter Schools, a form of public school that exists outside of the control of the school districts and are directly under the Mayor’s office. They’re some good charters out there, and they’re some crummy ones, too, that should be shut down.

Running a sort of phantom school system just to run around another is costly, ridiculous and unfair to students, teachers, parents and tax payers.

But, that’s the boat we’re in now and it won’t be easy or quick to change it. It’s seemingly the only solution we’ve got, so let’s run with it. Ideally, under the charters, I’d like to see an increase in teacher qualifications, standards and prior experience.

I’ve sat in a lot of classrooms, admittedly not charter classrooms, but I’ve sat in a lot of classrooms where the teachers are teaching a topic and they’re not necessarily up-to-date on the content themselves, and they willingly and knowingly admit this to me. This is particularly true of courses centered around science, technology and engineering.

A lot of teachers (not all, but some) might even admit that in retrospect, their training and education was focused on “how to teach”, not “what to teach”. This is useful in a lot of circumstances, like trying to help a young student learn to read when they’re struggling, but this isn’t the best approach for every situation.

Most of Indianapolis’ elementary schools are actually pretty good. Things start to break down in middle schools and high schools are what most would describe as deplorable.

If I’m learning chemistry, I’d rather be taught by a really passionate chemist who actually worked in the field for a number of years, not just someone who went to school 20 years ago to learn chemistry and has been teaching it ever since. Getting professionals to teach brings in a level of excitement, passion and subtle skills and knowledge that’s contagious, and it infects the students around them. My own experience teaching tells me that when students know actual, valuable, useful work is being produced, the interest level is sky-high.

Colleges and universities do it all the time, hiring adjunct faculty that teach a class after having done their trade themselves for years. Some of the best classes I ever had at IU were by those people, not career professors. I want to bring that to our middle and high schools. Let Language Arts be taught by actual writers and poets, let Journalism be taught by actual journalists, let web development and computer programming courses be taught by actual computer programmers and designers.

Giving students the access to people who are actually making something of themselves brings a level of inspiration to the classroom, just like some students get inspired to be teachers by seeing their teachers teach. Let’s broaden that and allow qualified and upstanding professionals teach their trades. No one knows better what they want to see in future co-workers than people in their industry.

Let them do what they do best: innovate, inspire and produce results.

Miscellaneous Matters

  • I want to blog my entire time in office. If the office is to be truly transparent, then that should start with me and my work. If I have a meeting with the water company about repairing some pipes under Washington Street, then I should write about it, let people know and explain the decisions we reached. If we decided to delay repairs because of bad weather, then I’ll explain it. If we decided to do it right now, despite some traffic flow issues, then I should explain that, too.
  • I’d invite a journalist from The Indianapolis Star, IBJ or Nuvo to hang around during the day, but I doubt they take me up on my offer to have someone reporting on everything.
  • I quite literally want to remove every copy machine from the City-County Building. There is no reason why, in 2011, that everything must still be printed on paper. I’d be taking a serious look at the number of administrative assistants in that building, too. Some are needed, no doubt, but people can and should manage their own resources, schedules and work.
  • I think the era of direct-democracy is darn close. I’d like to build a website that functions similar to Digg or Reddit that allows people to vote up or down issues of the greatest importance to them. It’d be secure, allow you to vote only once on each issue (and you can change your mind, of course), and it would help me and the City-County Council keep our finger on the pulse of the city. Residents can propose ideas, post responses and offer their ideas on a host of matters that might otherwise go unnoticed but reflect on the livability of the city.
  • I’ll only stay in office one term unless it’s clear that my leaving after just one term is clearly not the majority opinion of residents.

Sound like a good start? Sound worth my time? Worth fighting for?

November 16, 2011  Leave a comment

Someone has to explain why gross income is a thing

Let’s pretend for a moment that you’re a baker. I own the bakery, you work for me and I ask you to make a cake. I might say, “I need you to bake me a cake. Make it two layers, with frosting, sprinkles and pretty icing along the edges.”

You say, “OK! Great!” And you get to work. You get all of your ingredients ready and at arm’s reach. You have just enough to make what you need to make a really great cake. But just as you start to work I say, “Oh, but I’m going to need one of those eggs, half of your sprinkles, about a cup of sugar and half a pound of flour. I hope that’s okay. I need it so I can give some smaller cakes to some kids down the street.”

“Oh, okay.” You say. “But, that won’t make for a very good cake for them. And it means I won’t have enough for the cake you requested.”

“Hmm. Well. Just make a cake anyway.” I say. And so you do and it turns out like crap. And the smaller cupcakes I make for the other kids are crap, too.

Now you’re thinking, “Yeah, you’re insane. I can’t make a cake if you take away any of of my ingredients!” Maybe you can do without the sprinkles, but that’s hardly anything in the grand scheme of the cake.

But this is what the government does all the time with benefits and services — it looks at your “gross income”, as opposed to what you actually have to, you know, use. Things like health insurance and other non-government benefits even look at gross income for tax purposes. In this case, the baker had his gross, in that he did have all the ingredients he needed to make a really great cake. But I came by and took some for the benefit of others, a noble goal, but now we’re left with crap. Neither of us gets a good cake now.

Now you’re thinking, “Oh Justin, he wants to have his cake and eat it, too.” Well, yes, actually, I do. Shouldn’t everyone strive for that? I’ve not even been bitten by this problem, either, it just strikes me as dumb.

When I worked at the State and my boss told me I was getting a raise the first thing that popped in my mind was, “Great! Now how much do I really make?” I don’t give a shit if I make a $50,000 dollars a year if I only get to take $30,000 of it home with me to actually spend on food and rent.

Someone has to explain to me why gross income exists. It shouldn’t, because it adds confusion and obfuscation to already complicated matters, which is precisely how you trick people into doing the wrong thing (see: the phone companies).

I wish I could say I had a solution to this problem, but I don’t. My best idea is that you have to do away with tax withholding and send people a bill twice a year — like property taxes. They get their income and they can do whatever, but they have to be prepared. And they would know precisely how much they pay in taxes each year. You show me a guy who has tax withholding and I’ll show you a guy who has no clue how much he pays in income taxes each year.

The existing system is going nowhere positive, but again, this strikes me as dumb. I imagine gross income exists because politicians and companies needed a way to artificially inflate people’s earnings to make them sound like they make more than they really do.

I’m not even ranting about lowering or raising taxes. It’s just that one component to it seems designed from the very beginning to be a way to screw people.

November 16, 2011  Leave a comment

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