Robert Heinlein Explains How to Write for Money
Posted by freedomforall 10 years ago to Business
For fans of Heinlein, this dated letter will be especially entertaining. It show just how severely the Federal Reserve has ruined the value of the dollar in the past 60 years.
"Never try to teach a pig to sing.
It will frustrate you and annoy the pig" LL
Time enough for love by RH
“The only difference between stealing an hour of a man’s time and killing him outright, is matter of degree.”
My first car was a brand new 1953 Ford which cost me $1,700 and I put a down-payment of $450. in quarters and half dollars.
Pepsi-Cola hits the spot,
12 full ounces, that's a lot,
Twice as much for a nickel too,
Pepsi-Cola is the drink for you.
The local movie theater, circa 1943: Admission 10 cents, popcorn 5 cents, candy 5 cents. Walked there & and back 0 cents. Total, 20 cents.
I sure wish I kept my '69 Dodge Charger with the 440 hemi. It cost me $3,500 and I recently saw one at the car auction selling for $69,000. In 1962, I built a ranch style house in a Detroit suburb. Three bedrooms and a den, full basement, Roman brick exterior for $21,000. I could go on, but I'm sure you get the idea. It just proves that numbers mean nothing because it's value that counts.
Your other memories are definitely for better dollars than mine, too.
thanks, Herb ;^)
$1900; I paid them back. . new '71 Harley FX::: $2544.18
I remember when gasoline was 15.9 and I drained the
hoses at the Esso station to fill my go-cart for an
afternoon of illegal driving in the subdivision. -- j
At any rate, during the gas wars (remember those?) I could fill my tank for two bucks. The downside? Most of the time i didn't have two bucks left over for gas!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peugeot_404...
boy blue, 36 hp L-head 4 cylinder engine -- would do
just a tad over 60 downhill with a tailwind. . drove it
to daytona for spring break in '67. . turn the key, then
pull the starter button and pray. . battery lasted
seven years, though. . amazing. -- j
p.s. this is a green one::: https://images.search.yahoo.com/images/v...
thanks for the insight on warm beer ;^)
:-)
"There has grown in the minds of certain groups in this country the idea that just because a man or corporation has made a profit out of the public for a number of years, the government and the courts are charged with guaranteeing such a profit in the future, even in the face of changing circumstances and contrary to public interest. This strange doctrine is supported by neither statute or common law. Neither corporations or individuals have the right to come into court and ask that the clock of history be stopped, or turned back."
Have you posted your skills here yet?
http://www.galtsgulchonline.com/posts/2b...
Need lots of help ;^)
I can turn wood into pretty household utilitarian items, but electric-powered, not foot or hand...
And judging from the amount of sales I've had (maybe $400 over the past five years, with most of those sales the first year... ) , I'm not sure I've got a marketable skillset for Atlantis OR the Gulch.
I tend to do well with analysis and poorly with implementation. As a friend of mine (ex-Army and also ex-HP) once put it... "We'd be a great team... You'd decide which hill to take and _I_'d take the hill. But it would be terrible to reverse those uses of us!"
HP couldn't let us operate that way so both of us fairly happily left.
I've got LOTS of science left in my mind and a bunch of common-use math and experience. I jokingly used to call myself a Renaissance Man when, compared to many others, I knew LOTS of useful (and useless) information across a WIDE range of subjects. I got many 'best answer' votes on Yahoo Questions across a broad range of subjects, but the remunerative market for that 'skill' has been minimal.
I'm quite good at identifying problem in processes and user interfaces, but most Creators of those things (including problem-creators) fall in love with their own ideas and don't tend to be open to suggestions. Witness: my comments and their responses on things like the AS potential TV series... Them that got the gold make the rules, and "Thank you for sharing your ideas with us, but... we're not changing our minds."
I had enough of that at HP.
I think I'll go to my shop and mutilate some wood on the lathe...
Thanks for listening... :)
Have spent lots of time in coastal NC, no much in R-D. Been there long?
Danger, Will Robinson!!! When you start measuring managers to that kind of precision, they will do ALL kinds of stupid things to 'make their numbers'!
And Carly was much worse.
'been in Raleigh for almost ten years. Love the genteel Southern charm blended with the sophistication of large companies, lots of entertainment and wide range of restaurants. Warmer than the northeast in winter, cooler than the Deep South in summer. But getting crowded, as NC hasn't learned to grow the highway and byway infrastructure fast enough to service the tons of folks retiring to here or moving here for jobs or plain old 'quality of life.' No 20-year plans visible where they really need 'em.
Enjoyed the reading and just the thought of writing for a penny a word is astounding.
Anyone remember the reason for the war for liberty in Heinlein's "Moon Is A Harsh Mistress"?
Scarce resources being wasted, of course, specifically water. California is doing exactly what the moon was doing.
California uses 5.3 million acre feet of water growing Alfalfa- its the biggest single use of water in the state. Alfalfa is a supplementary food for beef production.
"Unfortunately, it’s a plant that’s not generally cultivated for humans: alfalfa. Grown on over a million acres in California, alfalfa sucks up more water than any other crop in the state. And it has one primary destination: cattle. Increasingly popular grass-fed beef operations typically rely on alfalfa as a supplement to pasture grass. Alfalfa hay is also an integral feed source for factory-farmed cows, especially those involved in dairy production.
If Californians were eating all the beef they produced, one might write off alfalfa’s water footprint as the cost of nurturing local food systems. But that’s not what’s happening. Californians are sending their alfalfa, and thus their water, to Asia. The reason is simple. It’s more profitable to ship alfalfa hay from California to China than from the Imperial Valley to the Central Valley. Alfalfa growers are now exporting some 100 billion gallons of water a year from this drought-ridden region to the other side of the world in the form of alfalfa."
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/08/opinio......
If there was a free market on water the cost of growing alfalfa would rise so far as to make it uneconomic to grow in California, but as in Heinlein's "Moon...Mistress", government has interfered and caused a severe problem that it now wants to "solve" with more government.
The lesson on pricing is, "Do not compete on price if your product is in some way special. Instead, find the customer for whom it is especially correct."