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#1
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In article . net,
"Dudley Henriques" dhenriques@noware .net wrote: You may rest assured that when this thing has run it's course and everything that has made up this horrible experience has been tallied up and the country moves on, life in the United States will have experienced a paradigm shift, and life as we have known it in our country will never be quite the same again. I'd hope that part of this paradigm shift would be a real, genuine recognition that we've got to continuously maintain, repair, upgrade, keep in solid working condition our civic and civil infrastructure, both our physical infrastructure (roads, bridges, dams, levees, pumps, power and communications systems, whatever) *and* our human and governmental infrastructures (people, skills, tools, training, supplies, backups). We need to maintain these civil infrastructures over the long term just as well as the vast majority of the people on this group, for example, will maintain their own airplanes and their personal flying skills, and just as well as many other people -- but unfortunately not all -- try to maintain their houses and cars and neighborhoods and schools. But I don't think it will happen. To be political, here -- since maintenance of civil infrastructure is at base always a political decision -- the loonies of the Left won't do it because they're too diverted by varying combinations of political correctness, inability to really face hard problems and hard decisions, and New Age nuttiness; and the nutcases on the Right won't do it because they're too caught up in their irrational anti-tax and "market forces" ideologies (and as a side issue, too many of them are able to buffer themselves from disasters or just from the deterioration of the society around them, and so have little need or motivation to support its maintenance). |
#2
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![]() "AES" wrote: You may rest assured that when this thing has run it's course and everything that has made up this horrible experience has been tallied up and the country moves on, life in the United States will have experienced a paradigm shift, and life as we have known it in our country will never be quite the same again. I'd hope that part of this paradigm shift would be a real, genuine recognition that we've got to continuously maintain, repair, upgrade, keep in solid working condition our civic and civil infrastructure, No way. We need the money for Iraq...oh, yeah, and for a manned mission to Mars. |
#3
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Hey, don't criticize the war in Iraq. After all, THEY were the ones who
knocked down the World Trade Center (the Alquida Iraq connection remember?). Not only THAT but they have Weapons of Mass Distruction. But even if those aren't true, the war is all about the efficient and inexpensive flow of oil, right? |
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