Sites I Follow
▼
Great Seal of the United States
Welcome to GreatSeal.com, |
Explore GreatSeal.com Get a brief Overview See Preliminary Designs for the Great Seal: Ideas suggested by three committees (1776-1782) Learn the origin and meaning of the three Mottoes: Little phrases with big repercussions |
Historical content is based on the official history of the Great Seal.
GreatSeal.com is not affiliated with the U.S. Government.
Copyright ©2014 by John D. MacArthur.
GreatSeal.com is not affiliated with the U.S. Government.
Copyright ©2014 by John D. MacArthur.
To Learn More Click: GreatSeal.com
The Forgotten History of L.A.'s Failed Freeway Revolt
The story of Boyle Heights reminds us that urban highway tear downs don't always end in victory.
"What we don't know, however, is the story of the losers, the urban men and women who fought the freeway, unsuccessfully, on the conventional terms of political struggle, who weren't able to pack up and move on, and who channeled expressive cultural traditions to register their grievances against the presence of unwanted infrastructure." — citylab.com
Click below to read the article:
"What we don't know, however, is the story of the losers, the urban men and women who fought the freeway, unsuccessfully, on the conventional terms of political struggle, who weren't able to pack up and move on, and who channeled expressive cultural traditions to register their grievances against the presence of unwanted infrastructure." — citylab.com
Click below to read the article:
Scoop From the Urbanophile
The Urban State of Mind: Meditations on the City is the first Urbanophile e-book, featuring provocative essays on the key issues facing our cities, including innovation, talent attraction and brain drain, global soft power, sustainability, economic development, and localism. Included are 28 carefully curated essays out of nearly 1,200 posts in the first seven years of the Urbanophile, plus 9 original pieces. It's great for anyone who cares about our cities.
NYU Economist Paul Romer gave a great talk at last month’s New Cities conference in Dallas. Called “Urbanization as Opportunity,” it’s now online and I’ll embed below. The first 2-3 minutes are warm up then it really gets going. Great stuff around crime, public space, etc. If the embed doesn’t display for you, watch on You Tube.
There are large number of additional New Cities videos online should you wish to browse them.
There are large number of additional New Cities videos online should you wish to browse them.
More from the Urbanophile at:
The US 41 Momentum Vision
The Sarasota US41 Multimodal Corridor as a grand boulevard from the Airport to the Bayfront and the Ringling Bridge, marketable as the US41 Boulevard linking to the Sarasota Bayfront and the Ringling Bridge– an iconic continuum remarkably unlike any other City in the USA.
Underwater City - Shicheng, China
Chicago Architecture
A potential new project for Chicago is in the works from Studio Gang! At 1,150 feet and 89 stories high, this would be the third tallest building in the city. We'll stay tuned for more details.
Click to see more: http://bit.ly/1rScYPU
Pictures of the Day
These nice phots were sent to me by an email. I don't know who took these photos. If they are yours and you want them removed send me an email and I will do so promptly. |
Walgreens to Move To Switzerland
Move to Switzerland to dodge IRS may give Walgreen blues
By James Covert
June 11, 2014 | 3:40am
If Walgreen wants to save a mountain on taxes by moving to Switzerland, it had better get ready for an avalanche of criticism.
The drugstore giant could save $4 billion in federal taxes over the next five years by reincorporating in Switzerland, according to a report to be released Wednesday.
The artful tax dodge has been advocated by a cadre of shareholders, including billionaire Barry Rosenstein, who this spring shelled out $147 million for a Hamptons beach house, the highest-ever price tag for a private US residence.
But the move could also cause a major public-relations headache for Walgreen, according to the study compiled by Americans for Tax Fairness, a Washington think tank.
That’s because Walgreen gets nearly a quarter of its revenue from US taxpayer-funded Medicare and Medicaid programs, the report calculates — not to mention millions in federally subsidized bonuses enjoyed by top Walgreen execs.
“Many Americans will find it unfair and deeply unpatriotic if the company moves offshore, while continuing to make its money here, leaving the rest of us to pick up the tab for its tax avoidance,” said Frank Clemente, executive director of the think tank.
______________________________________
Lousy deal. And of course part of it is they are leaving Illinois, a grossly mismanaged State with a high tax rate.
Seems to me that a consumer boycott is in order. It won't be any big problem for me to take my business to the other drug stores.
The Feds actually have all kinds of leverage on Walgreens. If you want to play political hardball, don't let Walgreen's service Medicare or Medicaid accounts, which is a huge part of their business. The Feds recently took Tri Care - the military health insurance - out of Walgreens.
Sounds like
Sounds like
Eight Year Old Immigrant
The Dallas Morning News
A Border Patrol agent reads the birth certificate of Alejandro, 8 -- the only thing he brought with him as he and others crossed the Rio Grande near McAllen recently. Alejandro is one of more than 52,000 minors traveling without parents who've been caught crossing the border illegally since October.
Seventy-five years ago, the St. Louis, a German trans-Atlantic liner carrying 938 Jewish refugees, was turned away from the United States and forced to return to Europe. U.S. law didn’t allow them sanctuary.
Writes author and former Dallas Morning News reporter Christine Wicker: "The St. Louis is famous now as a failure of compassion that haunts American history. Today we are preparing to send 45,000 children back to Central American countries controlled by drug cartels that routinely torture, rape and kill children who refuse to work for them. So routinely are children menaced that their families sent them away, alone, across thousands of miles on just the slimmest of hopes that they might be safe. U.S. law doesn’t allow them sanctuary.
A Border Patrol agent reads the birth certificate of Alejandro, 8 -- the only thing he brought with him as he and others crossed the Rio Grande near McAllen recently. Alejandro is one of more than 52,000 minors traveling without parents who've been caught crossing the border illegally since October.
Seventy-five years ago, the St. Louis, a German trans-Atlantic liner carrying 938 Jewish refugees, was turned away from the United States and forced to return to Europe. U.S. law didn’t allow them sanctuary.
Writes author and former Dallas Morning News reporter Christine Wicker: "The St. Louis is famous now as a failure of compassion that haunts American history. Today we are preparing to send 45,000 children back to Central American countries controlled by drug cartels that routinely torture, rape and kill children who refuse to work for them. So routinely are children menaced that their families sent them away, alone, across thousands of miles on just the slimmest of hopes that they might be safe. U.S. law doesn’t allow them sanctuary.
_________________
Comments by readers
"They walked through some of the most hostile, hot, barren, dangerous country in the world. They were sent by poor families so terrified for their safety that they paid many thousands of dollars and entrusted their children to criminals hoping they might arrive in America and be safe.
"Our hearts are not touched by these children. We want the law enforced. This is our country. Ours. And we don’t have to share it. Not now. Not 75 years ago.
"Yes, these are children whom we’ll send back to be raped, maimed and killed. They aren’t our children. Our children are precious."
Read more and share your thoughts: http://d-news.co/yCC21 (Photo: Jennifer Whitney/New York Times).
_________________________
A tough no win situation. Damned if you let them in the country and damned if you don't. If you let all these kids in then many more will be sent. Then you can decide if you want to let them in. And if you send them back you are not compassionate. And of course you are often not sure where back is.
Why Every City Needs a Labyrinth
Why Every City Needs a Labyrinth
The architecture firm Bjarke Ingels Group built a giant maze in Washington, D.C. Cities everywhere should get one.
This is a project at D.C.'s National Building Museum, a summer folly designed by the always-entertaining Danish architecture firm Bjarke Ingels Group, a plywood playground where kids will snap selfies all season long.
The White House is Emailing Me - a Good Thing
Sunday, July 06, 2014 | |||
|