Thursday, July 31, 2008

Creditland is ready for your lil' anecdotes

Don't be threatened by the AWESOME architecture of Creditland.org - we need you to go to the site right now and sign up as a user - don't feel like you need to submit content immediately, or that you even need to have content as well thought out as the forms imply.

Send us scraps and pieces of this giant puzzle: It's the specific little incidents that illustrate the big view about the major happenings in the US right now.

But if you can go - we'd love to see you there.

Bloggers: We are working on a way to integrate your blogs to feed into the site.

-The Publisher

PS. Volunteer editors accepted

Friday, July 11, 2008

it's like creditland is writing the story or something

Image: Train cars carrying 18 wheeler trailers. (Photo to coming soon)

I saw trains carrying Schneider and JB Hunt today - 18 wheeler hitches on the backs of trains. The old distribution system in America is changing as fast as oil prices. Truck traffic is looking at a future of localization. Trains to do the long pulling. No more Walmart never raising it's price in an impossible economic model. Shit's gonna get real expensive man.

Rushing not important? Who knows how this might change things. Fuel prices alone are set decrease death by car 1/3 this year. The AP article is out today. Can a non-economic growth event actually be a quality of life improvement?

Hey Economic Growth Mantraist... the answer is "yes." Expensive gas means less death by vehicular crash.

been so long, so long | porcelain prince and pauper set

...to the East Coast and back. Friends Burlington. Friends Bangor. Family Bangor. Work and family Philly. so good to touch what seems so far away and yet is incredibly close.

As a reward for irregular blogging check out these
PresidentialShakers.com I photographed in the crib yesterday for Aldo and Gallery 13's
much discussed Sugarman

custom porcelain for $40 a pair? call me East Coast (please, please call me east coast). But I think that's a steal. Unlimited edition makes it a little Chinese sweatshop, but the American labor is priceless (you'll have to meet Aldo Moroni to understand. he's available for interviews if you bring beer)