Monte wrote:
Texas roads suck, too.
From personal experience, I spent 8 weeks and something like 30,000 miles or more on the road over the course of the last year. The trip went from Houston to Maryland to New Mexico, back to the East coast (new york, new jersy), then across the country to the midwest (MN, Wisconsin, Kansas), then to Montana, Then Utah, then California, then Aaaaaaall the way the **** back across the map to the east coast and then back to Texas.
Rafael wrote:
There are very specfiic metrics and monitoring methods used to determine the adequacy of a given component to provide its service function.
Common public misconception and rhetoric about the matter, you driving over a bumpy road, or whatever bloggers have posted recently are not substantial evidence.
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Our roads need help. Our bridges need help. Our infrastructure needs help.
Our infrastructure includes how our energy is distributed (the grid), our education, our sustainable use of natural resources, our reliance on foreign oil, our energy efficiency, our civil engineering, and countless other factors.
Our infactructure does not include our "energy effeciency". That's just an attribute of different distribution and transportation systems that comprise the infrastructure. I'm not sure what "our civil engineering" means. Or supposed to mean. It's not very convincing in any case.
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As an example, the wetlands around New Orleans were allowed to deteriorate over the course of many years. Had we spent the money and invested in the preservation of those wetlands, the economic disaster that was Hurricane Katrina may have been abated or even eliminated. Wetlands serve as a bulwark against hurricanes.
Demonstrate that this is the case other than just asserting it. I'd lend you more credibility if you would have claimed man-made bulwarks such as dykes or levee, since that's actually the case. What you asserted was just the equivalent of a liberal one-two combination: you can make a fashionable, eco-friendly defense for the poor wetlands while at the same time lamenting our inaction to prevent a hurricane from destroying a sub-oceanic, coastal city.
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Our problem in this country is one of short sightedness. We don't look at the long term as worth investing in because it generally requires short term pain in terms of taxes and slower immediate economic growth.
We need to get past that. We all benefit from infrastructure investment. So too do our children, and their children.
Are you kidding? That's the exact strategy the Federal Reserve has taken - rather than allowing economic restructuring so desperately required, they sacrifice it to perserve consumerism to inflate flawed economic indicators. I can't even begin to believe your defense of such a strategy given this knowledge.