Monday, February 16, 2026

The Fishing Vessel (Photography)

You may be interested in this picture I took a year or so ago. It is a fishing vessel. I do sell some side art so if you want a print or want to use send me an offer to the right contact box. It would look nice in an office, near the cost, etc. 

I do not pretend to be the greatest photographer and painter. You can check out my "Art Page"


Spending, Stability, and the Future: Confronting the National Debt

(Illustrative Only)

Atilla and Janice
are from the hypoethetical
Feather Party which 
is party for independent thinkers
who vote their conscious around
 agreed upon decision making
matrix. Its a non oppositional and
seeks to tip votes.
The party does not work with
special interests and caps donations.
Party line votes are not allowed
and each member is expected to
serve the next generation and all
of the American people's interests
through logic, science, ethics, 
philosopy and
over the horizon thinking. They
seek to create a closer connection
between the average American
and the decisions being made.
 It is for philosophical discussion
and doesn't exist at this
time in history.

Atilla would like to first 
evaluate each program using
a panel of different members
and raise efficiency and effectiveness
while cutting waste.
Janice believes if we reallocate
resources to where they can grow
we may find a greater return
on government investment to
reduce debt, improve community,
and raise revenue. Both 
agree that special interests
are costing us and limiting
the positive impact of our money.
Solving the debt problem may
be served by changing the 
way we think, how contracts
are awarded and where
we decide to spend. With
a growing concentration of wealth
at the top among highly connected
people, some deals likely on the
island, much waste has likely
made its way into the decision
making processes. A new
path forward can be charted.

Three interesting links:

Evolutionary Economics
Spurring Economic Development
Perpetual Sustainable Development
The national debt is hovering around $38 trillion, and there’s no clear sign of it slowing down. Charts and historical trends show a steep rise since the 1980s, driven by costly wars, the COVID-19 pandemic, recession and other major expenditures. What’s certain is that we are spending enormous amounts of money. What’s uncertain is how we’ll eventually regain fiscal long term stability.

To move toward fiscal independence, a nation must, at minimum, bring in more than it spends. That is not easy and many nations run regular debts. While the government isn’t a business, it still has fiduciary responsibilities to the people it serves. That means finding practical ways to improve the financial outlook while continuing to meet public needs.

One will need to weigh the political, social, and economic interests.

There are clear risks. Debt is more manageable when interest rates are low, but far more burdensome when they rise. And in times of crisis, the ability to mobilize resources depends on having reserves—or on borrowing. Borrowing, however, should perhaps come with a clear plan and timeline for repayment.

Debates over the national debt have spanned many administrations and decades, yet the debt keeps growing. Part of the challenge is that it’s often easier to pass the problem along to future leaders rather than address the difficult choices required today.

  • Total Public Debt: ~$38.65 trillion (Feb 12, 2026).
  • Debt Held by the Public: ~$30.96 trillion.
  • Intragovernmental Debt: ~$7.61 trillion.
  • Growth Trend:
  • The debt increased by $2.17 trillion in 2025
  • Interest Rates: Average interest rates on national debt were 3.32% in December 2025.
A Couple of Important Links:

U.S. Department of the Treasury. Fiscal Service, Federal Debt: Total Public Debt 



Types of Fire, Fire Extinguishers & Extinguishing Methods (The Value of Volunteer Firefighting)

(Illustrative Only)

Firefighting in rural 
winter places takes
a lot of skill 
and practice.
 As a part-time volunteer firefighter, ongoing training is essential. You never know when a skill will be needed, and you don’t always have the luxury of pulling out your phone to Google something in the middle of an emergency. That’s why memorizing fire classifications, practicing knots, and understanding how equipment functions is so important—we have to be able to perform without hesitation.

The more we practice, read, and engage with training material, the better we retain the information and the faster everything clicks together when it counts. That’s what makes videos like this useful: not only do they break down fire classifications clearly, they’re also helpful for everyday people who want to know what type of fire extinguisher they should keep at home.

Many part-time firefighters are self-learning and watch a lot of videos, practice their craft, and engage in personal development. The nation rely on our volunteers as one of the largest blocks of safety and protection within the country. Not all people can leave their work right away to go fight a fire. 

An interesting article, Communities shift to all-career fire departments as volunteer numbers decline

If you haven’t done so, consider supporting your local fire department. I know at least one that could  use additional resources for equipment as grants dry up. If anyone is interested in donating to a tax-deductible organization, let me know—I can connect you with the right people.

Sunday, February 15, 2026

Mastering Yourself: The Key to Consistent Success (Samuel Teaches Young Executives)

(Illustrative only)

Samuel teaches young
executives that looking
inward as much as you look
outward will foster
their success. 

If you want to be successful,
first come to understand yourself.
What are you good at, 
what do you want to do, how do 
you react, what are your 
patterns of thinking, how do
you solve problems, etc...

To be a strong manager
you must first master yourself.
 Personality and emotional intelligence shape many parts of our lives. You can be highly skilled and knowledgeable, yet still struggle when frustrations arise if your reactions come too quickly or without reflection. Our personalities often form in childhood, and as we grow older, we tend to repeat those early patterns unless we make the effort to examine them.

Variation in personality is not only normal—it’s essential. As a species, we don’t benefit from everyone having the same cookie-cutter traits. So when someone insists that a certain way of being is “right” or “wrong,” that’s usually an oversimplification. Every personality has helpful and unhelpful sides. Awareness allows us to identify those patterns and adjust them so they actually solve problems instead of creating new ones.

Human survival hinges on diversity of thought and temperament. If we all behaved and reasoned identically, we wouldn’t adapt well. Throughout history, both great and flawed leaders have emerged because of their personalities. The strategists, engineers, artists, philosophers—these different roles exist because people think and react differently.

Most of us naturally strive to grow and overcome our challenges. The key is to understand your own personality: know your strengths, know your weaknesses, and recognize how they show up in different situations. Don’t be thrown off by people who speak boldly or loudly—confidence isn’t the same as capability, and it doesn’t always fit every circumstance.

Real awareness comes from reflection. Sometimes others can mirror our behaviors back to us, though their interpretations aren’t always accurate. Ultimately, self-awareness helps you distinguish what’s genuinely yours from what others project onto you. When you understand your tendencies, you can pause, choose better responses, strengthen your natural advantages, and navigate obstacles with more consistent success.

Thinking about personality Confucious once said, 

"Choose a job you love, and you will never have to work a day in your life."

How your personality impacts your career success (and what you can do about it)

The Risks of Court Misconduct and the Fostering of Corruption by Undermining Rights (The Story of the Clan)

(Illustrative Only)

Lady Justice knows
that to fight for
what is right is through
truth, fostering peace, and 
encouraging the upholding
of social contracts. She
has many enemies
that have benefited
from wrongdoing.

Symbolically her
sword cuts with truth 
to serve society while the 
scales represent fairness
and balance. 

She has a responsibility to
protect all members of 
society. 

Our society is built from
root symbolism and assumptions.
Those who are corrupt, hate, and
engage in wrongdoing use
different symbolic assumptions.
They serve the few at
the detriment of the whole.

Symbolism and Justice-MI
It’s vital that every system—whether in a government, institution, or organization—operates at its best. But even the strongest structures can fail, trip or falter. You can have solid checks and balances and still end up with individuals who misuse power, push ideology, religious preferences, promote friends, lie, or manipulate. That’s part of human nature: most people try to do good, and others exploit the system when given the chance. Some with agendas might say that will never happen but I think we should not be naive. Wiser voices needed.

The real danger comes when people with low moral conscious rise into positions of authority without accountability. When checks and balances are weak or easy to bypass, trust collapses. Too often, systems start protecting insiders instead of serving the public. Mistakes can be corrected, but years of wrongdoing should never be normalized. If it is, it means some leaders are serving personalities and interests— not the greater good. Negligence of duty.

The hypothetical, philosophical, learning thought experiment called the Story of the Clan  that illustrates this. In the story, extremists target and ruin a family out of bigotry with clear financial and social incentives to engage in misconduct. A lot of people knew but that didn't stop anything. The victims were on their own. Society looses much of their contributions. That is ok to a number of decision makers who feel only people like them, accept their distorted ideologies, should be the beneficiaries of institutional outcomes.

They follow them home, spread lies, provoke conflict, seek to intimidate, violated freedom of speech, mocked other religions, picked fights, undermined their rights, look upon disdain to othere races, associated members engaged in sexual misconduct in other incidents,  and even put willfully others children at risk. The dehumanization process embraced. A number of individuals suffer similar treatment by associated actors. Reports are made—by people who have been right before—yet they are ignored due to what appears to be prejudice. It is clear things should not be run this way and it is a sign of a growing trend.

In this allegory there were no backstops whatsoever. A judge, aware of the wrongdoing still enriched the in-group, side stepped constitutional rights, and gives a free pass to what one might view as cleansing behavior. When you mirror back how things might be viewed from others you will quickly find the two different standards.

In this example protecting certain groups matters more than protecting the victims. Saving face becomes more important than serving the people. If we changed the lens to a slightly different angle we might find these behaviors fundamentally a break in social contracts. It may not be whether such laws are broken but who may be breaking them on whom (We should leave the next generation something more focused on its purpose and can maximize societal engagement and support.).

 Consider,

  • 18 U.S.C. § 241 (Conspiracy Against Rights): This law makes it unlawful for two or more persons to conspire to injure, oppress, threaten, or intimidate any person in the free exercise or enjoyment of any right or privilege secured to him or her by the Constitution or laws of the United States.

Within the story, loyalty shifts from merit to racial or religious extremism, reflecting a risk of a broader trend in society. Polarization grows, and both sides contribute to it. Without real checks and balances, extremism seeps into institutions, leaving victims unprotected while perpetrators receive special treatment. Sometimes the abuse is so severe that those making decisions find it easier to blame the victims and move on—creating second-class citizens through dehumanization and character assassination. This is worsened when partisan actors rise to positions they do not deserve through special interests instead of ability or values.

Regardless of why these failures occur, we have an obligation to push for effective, trustworthy institutions. Strong systems benefit taxpayers, strengthen society, and rebuild confidence. It can also help our economy creating more opportunities. A new generation is growing up with deepening distrust—and given the behavior of some bad actors who use their positions to benefit friends, it’s hard to completly fault them for their concerns (Survey on Two-Tier Justice. Others showing that trust is declining broadly. We can reverse the trend by being focused. ). The Story of the Clan shows how unchecked hate and corruption work directly against the public good.

This isn’t about throwing people in jail. That is the last concern because some have learned to change and some have been found to have dark triad traits and need help to curb their urges. It’s about protecting future victims and honoring those already harmed. If we can’t do that, we may not be aligned with true north. It may be time to rethink and recalibrate some of our institutions so they better serve the people. Most individuals in these systems are good, decent, and hardworking—but when a few bad actors cause harm and no one steps in, the entire system loses credibility. If you don't like their opinion, no matter if it is helpful and fair, they go on a list. Apparently to keep them silent so we don’t need to change and act in the best interest of society.

Standing for our nation means standing for high-functioning, non-partisan institutions that respect freedoms. If they can’t do that, they cannot be trusted to lead. Vote your conscious.

*This is a learning thought experiment so take with a grain of salt. Change the elements around and come to your own conclusion.

Show Up: The Real Secret to Fitness Success (Fitness Trainer)

Fitness is important, and it plays a big role in overall health. Some people thrive in their fitness journey—getting stronger, healthier, and more confident—while others struggle to stay consistent. As the piece below points out, most people who start a routine don’t stick with it. The ones who do succeed aren’t necessarily experts; they simply show up through self-efficacy. By being present and putting in the work, they learn, grow, and improve over time.

This lesson applies to many areas of life. If something truly matters to you, you’ll show up for it. But if you keep finding excuses, the habit eventually fades. And sometimes, that’s okay—maybe the goal was exciting at first but didn’t hold long-term importance.

Fitness, however, is something everyone should practice at some level. At minimum, aim for three days a week. If you rotate routines and allow proper rest, you can go up to five or even seven days (you have to be clear on which body party which day), depending on your schedule and goals.

Don’t be intimidated by the gym. Most people there are learning and improving just like you. Yes, you’ll see a few bodybuilders or ultra-fit athletes, but they’re far less common than people think—and certain gyms simply attract them more than others.

I go to a few gyms myself, including the YMCA and The Point Loma Sports Club. I like the YMCA because their nationwide program lets me walk into just about any location when I travel.

I’m a certified fitness trainer with experience in various sports and activities. If you’d like help getting started or want guidance along the way, I can work with you virtually. If we’re in the same area, we can train in person as well—though most sessions will be online.

If you’re interested, send me a message.
Stay committed—you’ve got this.

Why Do Some Stick with Their Fitness Routine


Saturday, February 14, 2026

Platonic Valentines Day in Escanaba (Two Bands and Italian!)

(Illustrative Only)

Tony enjoys hanging
with platonic friends. Less
hassle and good 
laughs. Besides
when you bust out 
the suit you know
your doing some 
dancing.
🙃

Good car, good friends,
and a nice suit is all one needs.
Some people spend Valentine’s Day wrapped in romance—rose petals, candlelight, mushy photos, the whole glittery circus. The rest of us? We squad up with our platonic ride-or-dies and rip up the town like friendship-fueled goblins. Honestly? Way more fun.

No drama. No “where is this relationship going?” interrogation. Just laughter, chaos, and zero expectations except “don’t lose anyone in the parking lot.”. Definately don't forget you left your phone and swear you just had it. 😬

We hit Amvets first—because nothing screams “Valentine’s spirit” like a place that rocks your socks off. Then we rolled over with the Guppy Gangsta Wagon to Eagles, the private club that occasionally opens its gates like, “Fine, peasants, come party.” Membership’s about fifty bucks, which is cheaper than one fancy date-night dinner and comes with something fun every other day. You’ll meet people, might make a few friends, and have a few laughs. Better than Cheers! (Honestly, a low key fun place).

The weather? Foggy. Cool. Not the romantic fog from movies—more like “I hope that’s a person and not a trash can.” Love was not in the air. But the smell of pizza was.

We ended the night at Mueller’s Pizza, investigating their top-secret cheese-and-Italian combo like undercover food detectives. I was trying to eat more vegetables, but it’s Valentine’s Day—you’re legally allowed to eat like you’re starring in your own food documentary. Besides it has tomato sauce and onions on it so that is healthy.

If you want to know the bizarre history behind this holiday of chocolate, heartbreak, and overpriced flowers, go read up on the origins of Valentine’s Day. Spoiler: it’s weirder than any modern relationship.

The Dark Origins of Valentine's Day