Here we go

Tonight we start the first of two back to back baseball games. Hope we play well. On another note, looks like here we go again down the road to neck surgery with Lori. This time though I think we’ll fuse the whole neck. This will limit her movement but hopefully take care of all her discs once and for all so we don’t have to go through this again. I need to call her doctors in Vail today and start the process. Good news is we only have a few thousand bucks left to pay from the last operation in November 2013. At least I or we know what to do this time so we don’t waste 2 years trying to figure out what to do. Lucky that we’re selling our house hopefully soon.

It’s getting pretty crazy out there with all the protests around the country. Imagine what will happen when these 46 million people lose their food stamps. Time to wake up people, soon riots and civil disobedience will be coming to a neighborhood near you and you can see it in person instead of just on tv!

Tonight though we don’t care about any of that. Screw anybody’s constitutional rights or the failing economy because tonight is, da, da, daaa, da, the NFL Draft! For football fans, this is an exciting night. I’ll be at the baseball game but hopefully Uncle Tom can keep me updated by text.

So there you have it, the Country and World are failing apart based on a number of metrics but we have football! So let’s all ignore everything that we know is bad thinking it’ll never affect us and see which player our team will shower with a $30 Million contract as of course all football players deserve $30 Million dollars!

Before I go, I was telling my Mom how big banks and governments want to outlaw cash making it easier for them to continue to screw the regular guy. Her’s sort of a long read but I suggest you read it, or at least can down to the second article.

The War on Cash: Transparently Totalitarian

The War on Cash: Transparently Totalitarian

George Orwell once wrote “If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face—forever.”

Not exactly a cheery thought, and one I don’t agree with.

While the forces pushing for centralization of power have been prevailing for decades, they haven’t won a total victory yet. Technologies that empower the individual and that tend toward decentralization—including the Internet, encryption, 3D printing, and cryptocurrencies—offer a powerful ray of hope, reasons to be optimistic about the future.

So the tug of war between the collectivists and the rest of us continues.

One thing that would tip the scales heavily in favor of the collectivists would be victory in the War on Cash. Their goal is to eliminate the use of hand-to-hand currency, so that governments can document, control, and tax everything.

It’s exactly like what Ron Paul said: “The cashless society is the IRS’s dream: total knowledge of, and control over, the finances of every single American.”

One way they are waging the War on Cash is to lower the threshold at which reporting a cash transaction is mandatory or at which paying in cash is simply illegal. In just the last few years…

  • Italy made cash transactions over €1,000 illegal;
  • Switzerland has proposed banning cash payments in excess of 100,000 francs;
  • Russia banned cash transactions over $10,000;
  • Spain banned cash transactions over €2,500;
  • Mexico made cash payments of more than 200,000 pesos illegal;
  • Uruguay banned cash transactions over $5,000; and
  • France made cash transactions over €1,000 illegal, down from the previous limit of €3,000.

I recently spoke about this with Dr. Joe Salerno, an Austrian economist with the Mises Institute. Joe is the best chronicler of the global War on Cash and is here to offer an Austrian rebuttal to the economic nonsense peddled by advocates of this war.

I am happy to bring you his informed insight.

 

Joe Salerno: The War on Cash is the attempt by governments to phase cash out of their economies. Governments hate cash because they hate the financial privacy cash makes possible. And they prefer that you keep your money in a bank to help prop up an unsound fractional reserve banking system.

Nick: How did you get interested in this topic?

Joe: I noticed that every time there was a war on something—a war on crime, a war on drugs, a war on terror and so forth—the more the government encroached on financial privacy. The US government has long been waging a hidden war on cash.

One symptom of the war is that the largest denomination of US currency is the $100 note. US currency used to be issued in denominations running up to $10,000 (including also $500; $1,000; $5,000 notes). The US government stopped printing large denomination notes in 1945 and officially discontinued their issuance in 1969, when the Fed began removing them from circulation.

Since then, the largest currency note available has a face value of $100. But since 1969, the inflationary monetary policy of the Fed has caused the US dollar to depreciate by over 80%, so that a $100 note today has less purchasing power than a $20 bill in 1969.

So in addition to lowering the nominal size of the largest bill, they also reduced the bill’s purchasing power through inflation.

Despite this enormous depreciation, the Federal Reserve has steadfastly refused to issue notes of larger denomination. This has made large cash transactions extremely inconvenient and has forced the American public to make much greater use than is optimal of electronic-payment methods. Of course, this is precisely the intent of the US government.

Nick: Looking around, what are the latest examples of the War on Cash?

Joe: One right here in the United States occurred in 2011. It flew under the radar for a while. The State of Louisiana banned “secondhand dealers” from making more than one cash transaction per week. The term has a broad definition and includes Goodwill stores, specialty stores that sell collectibles like baseball cards, flea markets, garage sales and so on. Anyone deemed a “secondhand dealer” is forbidden to accept cash as payment. They are allowed to take only electronic means of payment or a check, and they must collect the name and other information about each customer and send it to the local police department electronically every day.

Nick: What about Europe?

Joe: In France recently, the limit on cash transactions was lowered from €3,000 to €1,000. The reason given was the attacks on Charlie Hebdo. It turns out that those attacks were financed in part by cash. Well, what a big shock that criminals use cash to finance their operations. They also use, of course, public sidewalks and automobiles, they buy clothing and so on. So this whole thing is ridiculous. It’s just a way of obscuring the government’s true goal, which is to get rid of financial privacy. Governments don’t really think that by lowering the limit of legally allowable cash payments that it’s somehow going to cut down on terrorist attacks. That’s just the narrative we’re given.

Nick: What is the mindset of someone who would advocate the elimination of cash?

Joe: Let me give you an example. Recently Willem Buiter—a prominent economist for Citibank—came out with a proposal to abolish cash. The reason is to enable the Fed to push interest rates into negative territory. He suggested that we could have avoided a lot of the problems with the financial crisis if the Fed could have set the interest rate at negative 6%.

But of course the availability of hand-to-hand currency would get in the way of that plan. People would say “I’m not going to put my money in the bank and have them take 6% every year.” They would avoid the bite of negative interest rates simply by holding hundred-dollar bills.

This really shocked me, that a prominent economist would make a case for abolishing cash, so that the central bank could set interest rates at a negative level. This is really crazy thinking, but it’s their mindset. It’s nuts.

Nick: Harvard economist Kenneth Rogoff made a similar argument. Did you hear about that?

Joe: Yes, I did. In fact, Buiter took his cue from Rogoff. But there are a number of hyper-Keynesian economists who want to remove all barriers to negative interest rates, so that you’ll hurry up and spend whatever cash you have. But the only way they can do that is to corral everyone’s money in to the banking system.

It’s absurd, and they’ve gone way beyond Keynes with this craziness.

Nick: It reminds me of how Paul Krugman advocated for faking a space alien invasion as an excuse for the government to waste money on countering it. Or how he later supported minting a trillion-dollar coin. The real scary part is that he—and his juvenile solutions—are taken seriously by many people. Krugman, Buiter, Rogoff and their ilk have the government’s ear, they are presented respectfully by the mainstream media and are given Nobel prizes in economics. How do people not see what they are advocating, like eliminating cash, as transparently totalitarian?

Joe: I think that harkens back to the progressive era, from 1900 or so to the end of World War I. Government-employed experts supposedly were disinterested and dispassionate and would apply their knowledge and skills to do what was best for society. They would be the technocrats.

That’s how they pulled the wool over the American people’s eyes, by saying, well, you know, we are fixing the economy’s problems. This has nothing to do with politics. This has nothing to do with totalitarianism. We are trying to make the economy better for you and for everyone else.

That was just a bunch of nonsense, and it still is. People who believe it are still living in the 1930s, always worried about deflation, rather than worrying about thereal problem, which is, of course, the Fed’s monopoly control of money and the inflation the Fed promotes.

Nick: What is the response of Austrian economists to this way of thinking?

Joe: Fortunately, the free market provides the prospect of an escape from the fiscal police state that seeks to stamp out the use of cash through either depreciation of central-bank-issued currency combined with unchanged currency denominations or direct legal limitation on the size of cash transactions. As Carl Menger, the founder of the Austrian School of economics, explained over 140 years ago, money emerges not by government decree but through a market process driven by the actions of individuals who are continually seeking a means to accomplish their goals through exchange most efficiently.

Every so often history offers up another example that illustrates Menger’s point. The use of sheep, bottled water, and cigarettes as media of exchange in Iraqi rural villages after the US invasion and collapse of the dinar is one recent example. Another example was Argentina after the collapse of the peso, when grain contracts priced in dollars were regularly exchanged for big-ticket items like automobiles, trucks, and farm equipment. In fact, Argentine farmers began hoarding grain in silos to substitute for holding cash balances in the form of depreciating pesos.

Austrian economists would think that the War on Cash is really absurd and unscientific. We would say, allow people to choose the form of payment they want to use, whether that be cash, gold, debit card, or something else. We want to remove all barriers to people using different kinds of currency, take all excise taxes, sales taxes, capital gains taxes off gold and silver and off foreign currencies. And also get rid of all legal tender laws. You can keep the dollar in existence, but allow people to use currencies that compete with the dollar.

So we want to move in the exact opposite direction from abolishing cash. In fact, we want to encourage people to withdraw money from banks they don’t trust. Fractional reserve banking, apart from the ethical question, is unsound economically.

Nick: We recently published an article from Doug Casey on sound and unsound banking.

If you look at all the skirmishes in the War on Cash in recent years in so many different countries and map it all out, it looks like there is coordination among those governments. Is that right?

Joe: Formation of the Better than Cash Alliance in 2012 is one piece of evidence. The partners in the Better than Cash Alliance include the Ford Foundation, USAid, Citibank, MasterCard, Visa, and a number of UN agencies. They want to abolish the use of cash and force all payments to be made electronically, especially in emerging nations. These are international organizations that influence almost every government in the world. They could be the basis of coordinated efforts to discourage the use of cash.

They are promoting the idea that the use of cash excludes poor people from the economy. But that’s nonsense. Poor people don’t have checking accounts or credit cards; they depend on cash.

Also, so deeply ingrained is cash in the Italian culture that over 7.5 million Italians do not even have checking accounts. The Italian government will continue to attempt to dragoon these “bankless” Italians into the banking system. That way the notoriously corrupt Italian government can more easily spy on them and invade their financial privacy.

Nick: What happens next?

Joe: I don’t see any end in sight. What keeps this movement going are wars—made-up wars—like the war on terror, the war on organized crime, the war on poverty, war on drugs. That’s what allows governments to ratchet up the intrusiveness into our financial affairs. So I don’t see an end in sight to that. I see the US right now with its Russia policy, for example, goading Russia and inviting more hostility. This feeds a warlike atmosphere in the US so that people just give in, time after time, as the laws become more despotic and intrusive.

What might save us is that we’re due for another crash, we’re due for another financial crisis. In the aftermath, politicians might be forced to move to more free-market-oriented policies. I don’t think that’s a done deal, but I’m hopeful.

Nick: What can International Man readers do to protect themselves from the sociopaths waging the War on Cash?

Joe: I think keeping a good part of your assets outside the banking system is extremely smart. Keeping some cash in a safe is also smart, especially in an era when financial crises are likely. I wouldn’t encourage that as a strategy for earning income, but as a way of protecting yourself and your family.

Nick: One solution I like is the 1,000 Swiss franc note (picture below). It’s the most purchasing power you can pack into a single bill of a relatively sound currency. So if you want to hold cash outside the banking system, having a stash of these might make sense. Any last thoughts?

Joe: The War on Cash reflects the desperation of governments. They want to squeeze every last penny out of their citizens. And they are at wits’ end on how to cure the stagnation of the global economy that began in the 2008 financial crisis. So it really says that they are bankrupt, both literally, in the sense that they can’t pay what they’ve promised, and intellectually.

Nick: I completely agree. Joe, thank you for your time.

Joe: My pleasure.

Now if you don’t believe this, at least take your money out of the big mega banks and put it in a smaller community bank, read on…

 

The Banksters War on Cash

Once upon a time, the famous criminal Willie Sutton was asked why he robbed banks, and his response was simple, eloquent, and humorous: “Because that’s where the money is.” Well, soon that adage may be proven untrue. What exactly is the meaning of legal tender?  In order to place money in its proper perspective, examine what the U.S. Treasury says.

“The pertinent portion of law that applies to your question is the Coinage Act of 1965, specifically Section 31 U.S.C. 5103, entitled “Legal tender,” which states: “United States coins and currency (including Federal reserve notes and circulating notes of Federal reserve banks and national banks) are legal tender for all debts, public charges, taxes, and dues.”

Now one might reasonably expect that conducting cash transactions would be guaranteed by the full weight and protection of the Federal Government. Such an assumption would be false, since the Banksters operate as a power beyond the law. The Zero Hedge report in Largest Bank In America Joins War On Cash, reveals a frightening trend.

“The war on cash is escalating. Just a week ago, the infamous Willem Buiter, along with Ken Rogoff, voiced their support for a restriction (or ban altogether) on the use of cash (something that was already been implemented in Louisiana in 2011 for used goods). Today, as Mises’ Jo Salerno reports, the war has acquired a powerful new ally in Chase, the largest bank in the U.S., which has enacted a policy restricting the use of cash in selected markets; bans cash payments for credit cards, mortgages, and auto loans; and disallows the storage of “any cash or coins” in safe deposit boxes.”

There is only one conclusion that can be drawn from such an anti-cash sentiment. Your property is no longer your own. This fundamental attack on the value of money should erupt in national outrage. However, a key reason why people continue in their daze is provided in the following stats. 75 Percent Of Americans Don’t Have Enough Savings To Cover Their Bills For Six Months: Survey. If folks don’t have any significant savings, accepting further restrictions on cash just does not seem that important to them.

Such a response guarantees even further risks that the public cannot avoid. And this condition is not confined just to the United States.

The Mises Institute European cites examples of The International War on Cash, in their extensive archives. Accompanying these cases is a report that The ‘War On Cash’ Migrates To Switzerland. In addition, reviewThe War on Cash Special Report, which provides several references on the assault to ban and eliminate cash. Lastly, The “War on Cash” in 10 Spine-Chilling Quotes provides an inclusive overview of the anti cash sentiment that is building among establishment authoritarians.

All these illustrations forecast a coming disaster. Calling in the Federal Reserve notes and replacing the last vestige of a U.S. Dollar with some new accounting medium of exchange would surely incur a diminished purchasing value, when a swap takes place.

Consumers are so conditioned to the rapid change in color and design of the “Green Back” that substituting a new currency will hardly turn into a national scandal. A run at banks to withdraw the merger sums in personal accounts will be met with the preverbal distain that money center banks are so good at dispensing.

This is the ultimate dilemma, between a rock and a hard place. One can already imagine the public comments from Treasury. Maybe bring back Hank Paulson for his public relation skills might just be the last straw for savers, but for the dependency class, few will even change the channel from their favorite “Reality TV” episode.

“Going to the Mattresses” when your lock box is sealed by your banker is a very poor option for the average consumer. Security in a paper currency that can be recalled and pegged lower by government policy is dangerous.

As for precious metals, who among us would not reasonably conclude that hoarders will risk the criminalization of their preparedness. Electronic money such as Bitcoins could and probably will be shut down as a method to establish a counterfeit money scheme.

Remember that the legal tender laws can and will define what medium of exchange will constitute money under a fiat paper meltdown.

There is no pure play of secure means to provide peace of mind. Those who propose putting all your chickens in one basket have not taken measures to protect against a “bird flu money” pandemic.

Now is the time to place pressure on the entire banking system to demonstrate a modicum of social and economic responsibility to the customers and communities they are suppose to serve.

Defending the too big to fail money center institutions with a zero interest rate flow of credit inevitably results in a climate of eliminating cash as an alternative to earning a negative rate deposit policy.

Banksters continue to operate their debt credit scam with virtual immunity. A historic financial storm is building. It will soon surpass the 2008 meltdown by an unimaginable degree.

Those who believe personal debt will be ignored or forgiven, do not understand the nature of the financial plutocrats. Their control of political power is intact. Little suggests that this will change unless the nation revolts.

The shortcomings of the Tea Party and the Occupy Wall Street movements, while valuable in raising public awareness, never solidified into a national crusade against the international banksters.

In order to grasp the opportunity, when a system wide collapse occurs, people need to get their own house in order. Do not be part of the cashless society, because that course directly enables the monitoring, intimidation and control of your ability to survive.

Boycott the mega banks and seek local and community friendly financial franchises. The war on cash must be fought before the only money available will only buy approved items at the government company store. Act now with urgency.

James Hall – April 29, 2015

God Bless.

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2 days until May

Hard to believe it’s almost May. That means flowers, Lori’s birthday, Mothers Day and the last day of school on the 25th. Also the kids are off Friday and Monday. Add in baseball games Thursday, Friday, Saturday plus 2 rain outs we need to make up, and we’re going to be busy. We also need to get this house cleaned up, rent a storage unit and finish painting around here. So we have no time to rest. We had some baseball pitching practice after school yesterday and then homework until after 9pm. Lots to do, time to run, God Bless.

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Rained out

We prepped all day for our game at 5:30 and just as we were pulling up to the field, they cancelled the game! I and the other parents were not too happy that they waited so long as it was an away game and we had to drive 30 minutes to get to the field. They should have, could have, called the game earlier in the day as it was rainy and wet all day long. So no game last night.

I need to leave for an appointment at 6;45 this morning so no time to waste. Both kids are back in school today. We still have lots to do around here, we just can’t seem to get it all done. Of course part of the reason is we need to wait until we have a bit more cash to fix the last few things. That’s about it, time to get moving, hope all’s well and God Bless.

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Baseball again

Tonight we have a game at 5:30 so no time to waste today. Ty is off today as it’s a flex day, whatever that means. We had a good practice yesterday with about 6 or 7 boys showing up.   Right at the end Jagger took a ball right in his right eye. Apparently his coach threw it when he wasn’t looking or something. Anyhow it’s swollen and maybe black and blue although I haven’t seen him yet this morning. I did make him ice it good for a long time.

The rest of the day was spent doing homework (if you’re Jag), playing, if you were Ty and laundry if you were me!

That’s about it, time to run as it’s 6;30 already. Hope all’s well, God Bless.

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Off day, sort of

Today we have a break from baseball meaning no game but Jag and I and a bunch of boys are headed to the cages for some practice on our off day at 11am. It almost feels like all we do is baseball! Yesterday Jag was thrown in to pitch again which normally we wouldn’t do but he did well again. Due to some errors we lost but we have another game tomorrow.

Meanwhile Ty is still trying to kick his cold and Lori her headache. She’s had one now for almost a week from painting and we need to get it calmed down. I think she’ll go to get her nails done while us boys go to baseball. Then she needs to just chill on the couch. We opted out of a birthday dinner last night to stay home and relax.

Ty and Jag have been going Geo Caching. This is where they look for a hidden spot somewhere on their gps (global positioning satellite on a mobile phone) and then go find it by following the map. It can be around the corner or miles away. Once you find the hidden cache or treasure, you take something but you also leave something. It’s sort of a modern day treasure hunt and there are caches all over town and all over the Country. It’s a lot of fun for them. They jump on their bikes and off they go. All the things they bring back are pretty much meaningless but it’s the search itself that’s the fun thing.

Guess I’ll run so I can get to the gym before everyone wakes up. Hope everyone is well, take care and God Bless.

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MVP

MVP, Most valuable player, that’s what Jagger was, at least last night. He was clearly the best player on the field, on either team. I was going to start him at pitcher but put another kid in that threw a little harder and he did fine with the first few batters but then walked three. Finally I had to pull him and in Jag went. Jag worked the next 2 1/2 innings or almost half the game, striking out 4 batters. At one point he was so happy he threw his arms up in the air after a strikeout. On the hitting side, he hit 3 out of 3 times with one being a double down the third base line right when we needed it. It was a great game all around by the boys and in 2 hours and 45 minutes, we start another one!

Before that, it was work, work, work. Ty was off at 11am and has a stuffy nose, hopefully allergies and not a cold. By the time I picked up Jagger at 2:25, we had little time before we had to leave. Lori came home by a bit after 4 as she and Ty stayed home.

After baseball I need to take Jagger to get his bass clarinet fixed as it won’t play the real low notes for some reason. That’s about it unless you want me to go into all the crap in politics. Briefly, that liar and cheat Hillary is at it again. The arrogance that woman has is beyond me. Not only was she taking money from foreign governments while IN the government, she then changed her position to pass things for those who donated. It’s as if she thinks it’s her birthright to be President. The stuff coming out would send most people to jail and it might just do the same to her! It just makes me sick.

God Bless

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Carpet looks good

Amazing how much carpet can change a room, it looks pretty good. Lori and Ty made it home from work around 5 or so. It was “take your kid to work day” at school so he went with Mom. Today he’s off at 11am and Jag at 2:20. First up I need to get the the gym (in a few minutes) and then to the distributor and then have a call at 10am. Our baseball game is at 5:00pm meaning we’re supposed to be there at 4! Then tomorrow morning we have a game at 9am.

Last night Jag went back to school from 5:45 until 8pm to be a greeter for the incoming class of 7th graders next year. It’s part of being in Student Council.

We also need to rent a storage unit this weekend to get the junk we want to keep, out of the house. Hopefully we’ll get both baseball games in around the rain that’s supposed to be here tonight and tomorrow.It’s 5:24am now and I have to get to the gym now or it’ll never happen today so time to go! Have a great weekend and God Bless.

(you know saying that in certain countries will get you killed!)

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Allergies and carpet

Man I have a headache almost every night due to allergies. I must have picked these up from Lori as I never was allergic to anything before I met her. Anyhow time to whip out the Claritin. Today we’re having the long anticipated carpet installed in the basement. It’s been a long time coming and hopefully by 2pm it’ll be finished. Yesterday they did some prep work to get ready. It’ll be nice when it’s all done.

The kids were off early yesterday and then we had baseball practice from 4 until 6pm. Tomorrow Ty is off around 11am and then Jag at 2:20. Then next week they have Friday off and on it goes. Without all these days off they would probably be out of school by now!

Next Thursday the topper is getting installed on our pickup. I ordered this about 6 weeks ago and it’s finally in. Not the best timing as yes that’ll cost money too. The carpet thing kind of set me back a bit.

Tomorrow is our first of 6 baseball games at 5:30. Jagger has a new bat we ordered on the 15th as his is too short and we hope it arrives. You won’t believe this but baseball bats run $300 to $400! I managed to get his for $249 on line but come on, $250 for a baseball bat?

Guess I’ll run so I’ll stop thinking of all the bills and expenses I have. It’s just part of everyday life. I always say, every morning you get out of bed it costs $500, and that’s in addition to the fixed expenses like your home, cars, power, water, insurance of all kinds (I hate insurance, homeowners, car, medical, etc.) and stuff. Thank God we have pretty good jobs. I don’t know how some family’s make it. Take care and God Bless.

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Half day for the kids

They’re out early again, Ty at 12:15 and Jag at 12:25. Not sure why, I quit asking a long time ago. Then on Friday Jag’s out a little early and on May 1st, they have no school. It’d sure be nice to be a kid again.

Lori’s working away at work and so am I. I have another quarterly review at 9am and should be done by hopefully 11:30. Tomorrow I have my last two also in the morning.

Baseball practice is back at 4pm and then we have games Friday night, Saturday morning, Monday night, Thursday night and Friday night and next Saturday too. That means we have Sunday and Wednesday off and that’s it. 6 games in 8 days, wow.

Today is Earth Day just so you know. Time to run as we need to clean more in the basement for the carpet guy. Have a great day, God Bless.

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Off to Vail

This morning at 6am I’m leaving for Vail. I need to do a few things up there as we haven’t been up in a while. I’ll be going to the DMV to get license plates for Lori’s car, returning the boys snowboard boots that we rented for the season and stop and see a key account. I should be back in Denver by 11am.

Last night we had baseball practice while Ty was at the Science Fair with Vinny. Mom (Lori) showed up to cheer him on and then they stayed until 8pm as there was a cake auction to support the school or something. All I know is Ty came home with a red velvet cake.

Tomorrow the boys are out early and then again on Friday. Something to do with more needless testing. We also have the carpet guys coming in to prep tomorrow and then will install the carpet Thursday. The kitchen looks good, Lori did a great job.

It’s 5:03 now so guess I’ll get moving so I can get on the road. The tunnel (Eisenhower) is closed until 6:30 so I don’t want to leave too early. Hope all’s well, God Bless.

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