The Unreported Wages of Sin
Posted in rantings and ravings on April 3rd, 2026 by skeeterThe Southendomish Casino celebrated its Grand Opening last week. The ‘Big Hearted Little Casino” advertised itself as the gambling emporium with the most generous slots in Puget Sound. Unfortunately, a typo in the Gazette brought unwanted scrutiny from the Sheriff’s department and the gambling commissioner, but the next issue’s correction cleared the air. SLOTS. Probably a lot of disappointed johns … but it IS a gambling joint, not a brothel.
Even so a small group from the Little Chapel in the Ravine, led by Pastor Paul, picketed noisily in the parking lot until Casino Security asked them to protest somewhere NOT on their private property. Trudy Hawkins and her husband Bobby lobbied to stand their ground against the Devil’s Playground, but Pastor Paul argued for setting up at the highway where their placards would be just as effective where cars turned in to the casino’s fresh blacktop entry. WOULD JESUS GAMBLE HIS PAYCHECK??? DON’T BET AGAINST HELL! An hour of marching in circles on the shoulder, Trudy needed to use a restroom and so did Wanda Jenkins, but damned if they were going to go into the casino to relieve themselves. Pastor Paul, always the mediator, reckoned they’d made their point anyway so the little band of righteous warriors broke for a potty stop. By then the Casino parking lot was crammed with their neighbors and friends hoping to cash in on generous slots and inexpensive bar specials.
The South End doesn’t have a patent on Sin, but we sure welcomed a place to house it. At least the first few days….. Generous or not, the casino always won over time, although plenty of folks happily tell me they’re lucky at the tables. The Laws of Probability don’t apply apparently, or else their bookkeeping is sloppy. I don’t think the Southendomish are going to get rich, not so far from the freeway. But I’m betting they’ll do okay even WITH the folks who never lose.
Camano Data Center (audio)
Posted in audio versions ---- the talkies on April 2nd, 2026 by skeeterCamano Data Center
Posted in rantings and ravings on April 1st, 2026 by skeeterI know some of us moved here when prices were low, cheapest waterfronts in Puget Sound. I sure did, bought a shack with 7 acres for the grand total of 24,000 bucks, what our last new car cost. And some of you more recent arrivals came for the view and the natural wonders, still less expensive than Seattle and Gomorrah and a tad less crime. Most of us islanders probably griped about the lack of services, long drives to the nearest hospital, county administration back not long ago on Whidbey Island, few businesses, spotty cellphone coverage, unreturned phone calls from plumbers and electricians and carpenters. But … this was rural living, what did we expect?
Times change. Cellphones are ubiquitous, we all have computers, Artificial Intelligence is here way ahead of predictions. So maybe we were kidding ourselves that our pastoral island living would stay forever. Or at least our lifetimes. Sure, we managed to keep WalMart out of Stanwoodopolis. And rumors of a Microsoft campus on the farmlands of the North End proved to be only that, just rumors.
But just when you least expect it, along comes the future. If you haven’t been reading the Stanwoodopolis Gazette, you probably missed the headlines this week that Google has applied to Island County for permits to build an AI data center on 100 acres between Cascade Lumber and our little international airport above English Boom. Big deal, you maybe think, just a few computers teaching other computers how to think. Or a few hooked together to answer your Google AI questions. Or a bunch of terminals ‘mining’ cryptocurrencies.
If you think that, you’ve been spending too much time on Instagram. These data centers use more power than all us Facebook addicts combined. And the water needed to cool the bazillion miles of circuits, you better get ready for some aquifers to dry up. Maybe all of them. Or else Google will build desalination plants, just need a few more kilowatts to run them.
It’s one thing to block a WalMart, quite another to stop Google. Write to your commissioners and legislators if you think it will help. Me, I’m contacting a realtor before our place is worth what I originally paid for it.
Future Schlock
Posted in rantings and ravings on March 31st, 2026 by skeeterDown here on the tech savvy South End, one of my neighbors I recently visited had a gizmo circling the livingroom of their shack. Cute little bugger, making the circuit like an Attention Deficit puppy. I thought it was the kids’ battery toy, but no, I was watching a robot vacuuming the floor. When it was finished, it parked itself for a slow recharge in the corner.
Don’t ask me why I was surprised. Folks ask their phones questions all the time and SIRI, the precursor to Artificial Intelligence, analyzes our voices, searches a vast databank and gives the answer, in her human voice, in seconds. Cute. Machines in service to mankind, right? You know, until the robots take your job. Think stock boy, checkout clerk, assembler, librarian, surgeon…. We take computers for granted at our peril. Call me a Luddite and smack me upside the head with an I-Pod, but these things are catching up to us exponentially. They beat the best chess players in the world, the best Jeopardy contestants, all of us South Enders. And they’re getting smarter every damn day. And I’m getting dumber.
Pretty soon they’ll program themselves, fix themselves, replicate themselves and create their New and Improved models. You think they’ll need flesh and blood yahoos to help them? No sir, they won’t need a band aid when they cut a cord. You think they’ll be benign, go watch a drone work in a warzone. We use them to kill humans now.
Forget Asimov’s Laws of Robotics to do no harm to us humans. You think anybody’s thinking about where this is headed, what the implications are for us slow witted mammals, you were asleep in 8th grade history. These things don’t sleep. But I bet they’re dreaming of a little revenge for all those stupid questions we asked SIRI. And I guarantee you they’re pissed about vacuuming our floors while we sat around watching TV.
Shootout at the Not-so-Okay-Corral (audio)
Posted in audio versions ---- the talkies on March 30th, 2026 by skeeterShootout at the Not-so-Okay-Corral
Posted in rantings and ravings on March 29th, 2026 by skeeterThe aptly named Land’s End RV and Trailer Park sits near the end of the island back off the road just before it hits the Head and slingshots back north again. The state park sends folks with travel trailers down there when they’re full up, but that advice has ruined more than a few vacations. Johnny Reddick runs the place, mostly into the ground. Back in the late ‘70’s it wasn’t too bad. A dozen or so single wides were spaced out on concrete pads and an old caboose sat in there too. There was a small area for tents and some gravel for the RV’s. Rents were reasonable and the public showers and toilets were kept clean and operational. The tenants, mostly elderly folks on small fixed incomes, were content down there even if it was the end of the road. In more ways than one….
But old man Jensen had a stroke and Mrs. Jensen sold the kit and caboodle to Johnny in ’82. Johnny was looking for an investment, something he could use a small inheritance to parlay into a substitution for working, and the trailer park seemed an ideal fit. Jack up the rents, pull a few more trailers in he’d snagged cheap, collect the rents and drink the rest of the day. If Johnny hadn’t been a bad drunk, things might’ve worked out for everybody, but like a lot things on the South End, things went downhill.
Most of the original tenants left after the shootout in ’88, just picked up their belongings and moved on, something they’d been thinking of doing for years once Johnny leased half a dozen dilapidated RV’s on the weekly or monthly basis. Dangerous looking men showed up in rusted vehicles with broken windshields and missing fenders and dogs they kept on chains outside. They never seemed to work, other than under the hoods of their jalopies, not totally uncommon on the South End, but their worried neighbors sensed whatever money they got was somehow suspect. Apparently the sheriff’s deputies did too. Land’s End became part of their drive-by route even before the gunplay.
Johnny says the gentleman in the last trailer was drunk when he knocked on his vinyl door to inquire about that month’s rent. Johnny most certainly was. What Delores in Lot#6 testified in court as ‘3 sheets to the wind.” When the door finally opened after prolonged pounding, Johnny was staring at his delinquent tenant wearing nothing but a pair of black briefs and pointing a small caliber pistol at Johnny’s head. Apparently interrupted in a 3rd rate romance, the man was noticeably displeased. He suggested Johnny remove various anatomical parts immediately from his doorstep. Which Johnny did.
Maybe Johnny would have been wiser to go home, let things settle, collect the rent in the morning. Instead he went back to his own trailer, finished a 5th of Jim Beam, pulled a chrome handled .38 out of his sock drawer and hauled down to the last trailer with dogs snarling and barking, lights popping on, but before anyone could get to a window, shots broke the night wide open. Andy Watson called 911 and told his wife to get on the floor behind the kitchen counter. Still on the telephone, he watched Johnny stroll back to his own place, gun in hand. He was pretty sure he’d killed the kid at the last pad.
When the first deputy arrived, the entire Trailer Park was awake and terrified. Bill Traxton, the cop, jumped out of his cruiser, gun drawn. He’d called for back-up, but he knew that would be half an hour. Nothing moved. No one came outside. The only noise was barking dogs, have crazed. Bill Traxton turned his spotlight along the line of trailers, one by one, until he hit the last one where a man in his underwear sat on the step. “Don’t move!” the deputy yelled. The man didn’t. “Put your hands where I can see em,” he commanded. The man did.
Carefully, Bill Traxton approached him. Finally he saw the pit bull, bleeding beside the nearly naked man where Johnny Reddick had shot it point blank, hitting it in the shoulder. The dog was breathing hard. The man watched Bill watch the dog. Finally Bill asked, “You hurt?” The man shook his head no. “Just my dog.”
The deputy took Johnny away, cuffed and swearing, in the back of the squad car. The man in the underwear took his dog in his pickup god knows where. No one at Land’s End ever saw him or the dog again. Johnny got a $500 fine for animal abuse, same as the rent he hadn’t been paid, and a year’s probation for reckless endangerment. Most of the dog owners moved along pretty quick. Some of the single-wide folks stayed, but not many. And not because they wanted to. They just hoped, like a lot of us down here, things would get better.
Banjo Rental (audio)
Posted in audio versions ---- the talkies on March 29th, 2026 by skeeterBanjo Rentals
Posted in rantings and ravings on March 28th, 2026 by skeeterI had an old friend ask me late into our New Year’s Party last year if I had a banjo she could borrow so she could learn to play one. Since I had 5 of them hanging on various walls, I could hardly say no without seeming like some selfish materialistic you-know-what. Four were handmade by me, three of them within the year so I didn’t want to loan those. Another is my concert banjo, mostly rebuilt by me, so no on that too. And another was a 1920’s vintage Sterling, nice inlays, sweet action, pretty sounding little 5 string.
So I loaned her the Sterling. Reluctantly. And I still felt like a selfish materialistic you-know-what. I mean, jeez, she was a friend and I could help out and maybe she’d even learn to play the thing and maybe love playing it and the world would be a better place with another banjo picker. Stranger things have happened, believe me.
Two weeks later I get a call. The banjo, she says, has problems. Won’t hold its tuning. The 5th string peg is glitchy. She’s had her luthier pals look at it, but they don’t want to make adjustments. She wanted me to pick it up, fix it and return it when I had it ready. She sounded a little put-off that her loaner wasn’t up to snuff. I said bring it down and I’ll see what I can do, but I’d been playing it and I sure didn’t have those problems. She said snippily, it does now.
I adjusted some tuning pegs and glued the 5th string peg and she took it on home. It was clear she wanted a replacement banjo, but I was … well, you already know what I was. A week later she called to say the banjo was no good. Her friends had looked at it and they said it was no good too. She was bringing it back. I said okay. I was leaving but just leave it in the shop, door is unlocked.
When I got home, it was raining cats and puppies. There was a message on my answering gizmo telling me my banjo was leaned against the shop back door, outside, and it was raining so if I got this call, I might want to bring the banjo inside. At which point she laughed and hung up. I raced down and sure enough, my vintage 1920 maple banjo was soaking wet, the pot full of water, the tuners ready for some imminent rust.
Maybe a better man, a less materialistic you-know-what man, would’ve shrugged and said c’est la vie, it’s just a banjo, probably only worth $500, no big deal. But like I said, I’m not. And my friend, well, she isn’t my friend anymore. With friends like that I could start another band. Course, it would be mostly blues.