When the Ebola crisis struck in West Africa, other countries, like Cuba, sent in doctors. Not the United States. Repeating a worrisome trend we saw in Haiti after the earthquake and in Asia after the Indian Ocean tsunami, the U.S. sent in armed troops to subjegate the victim population. http://rall.com/comic/
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Typical Anti American Anti US Military Drivel by Cartoonist Ted Rall
When the Ebola crisis struck in West Africa, other countries, like Cuba, sent in doctors. Not the United States. Repeating a worrisome trend we saw in Haiti after the earthquake and in Asia after the Indian Ocean tsunami, the U.S. sent in armed troops to subjegate the victim population. http://rall.com/comic/
Big Gator in our Pond Today - PONDZILLA!!
Gator in our back yard pond today. Biggest we have seen yet. I think he may be 8 feet or more long.
Click to see the video
http://youtu.be/wiBQKseA2Ts
____________________
I called my friend Gator and Snake expert Jim Nesci for an estimate about how big the gator was, but Jim said it was too hard to estimate the length of the Gator from the video. He did say that the head is usually about 1/7 of the body length.
I estimate the head to be between one foot to 18 inches long, so I am saying that PONDZILLA is 7 feet to 10.5 feet long.
Jim said that his Gator Bubba will be in a couple of movies in the near future. Will let you know when. More about Jim and his critters at:
Today on CityLab
Today on CityLab
Thursday, September 25, 2014
Romanticizing Rail Is No Way to Save Amtrak
The #AmtrakResidency program bolsters the notion that train travel is a ponderous luxury, not a useful public good.
KRISTON CAPPS
Its Streetcar Stalled, Kansas City Mulls the Best Way Forward
Many cities face a similar challenge finding the money to expand a starter line.
RON KNOX
Global Warming - Sea Level Rise - Raising City Grade
One of the concerns over global warming is the rise of oceans and flooding of coastal communities. We hope that we can arrest this problem before it floods, but if not it is certainly not impossible to raise our low level communities. Here is how Chicago did it many years ago.
Raising Old Chicago
The city of Chicago is just above Lake Michigan. There was little natural drainage. Standing water festered and caused living epidemics including typhoid fever and dysentery.
The crisis forced the city install storm sewers. Much of the city was raised several feet to the new grade. Homes, sidewalks, and streets were raised. Older homes were moved to other lots and new homes were constructed.
Fire Hydrant Redesign
The Fire Hydrant Gets Its First Major Redesign In 100 Years
Today's hydrants break, leak, and freeze, sometimes costing people their lives. The tamper-proof and incredibly durable Sigelock Spartan, designed by a former New York firefighter, is intended to work when people need them.
“It would shock you how often fire hydrants don’t work when you need them," George Sigelakis, founder of a company called Sigelock Systems, tells me.
“How often?” I ask.
“All the time. It’s always in the back of our minds.” Sigelakis says “our minds” because he spent 15 years as a New York City firefighter before retiring in 2000. Now, he's the man behind the first major redesign of the fire hydrant in more than a century.
Click to read the rest of the story.
Thanks to Science Writer Jessica Hullinger for alerting us to this story.
Chicago, St. Louis, & the Heartland
The two largest Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSA) in Illinois are Chicago to the north and St Louis to the south. But the composite area formed by the MSA's of Peoria, Bloomington-Normal, Champaign, Decatur, and Springfield also form a significant metro area. The cost of doing business in our region is lower, housing is more affordable, and there are very few traffic delays. Small is beautiful.
MSA ______________Population_ Median Household
_____________________________ Income
Chicago–Gary–Kenosha_9,157,540___ __$51,046
St. Louis, MO–IL _____ 2,603,607 __ _ __44,437
Heartland Composite _ 1,056,543__ _ _ _ 42,103
_____________________________ Income
Chicago–Gary–Kenosha_9,157,540___ __$51,046
St. Louis, MO–IL _____ 2,603,607 __ _ __44,437
Heartland Composite _ 1,056,543__ _ _ _ 42,103
1. Heartland Composite includes non MSA Counties
Bloomington–Normal____150,433_____ $47,021
Champaign–Urbana_____179,669______ 37,780
Decatur, IL___________ 114,706______ 37,859
Peoria–Pekin_________ 347,387______ 42,986
Springfield___________ 201,437______ 43,180
The link below shows the
Champaign–Urbana_____179,669______ 37,780
Decatur, IL___________ 114,706______ 37,859
Peoria–Pekin_________ 347,387______ 42,986
Springfield___________ 201,437______ 43,180
The link below shows the
Metropolitan Statistical Areas of Illinois.
illinoisatlas.com/illinois/basemaps/pdf/il_msa_cx.pdf
illinoisatlas.com/illinois/basemaps/pdf/il_msa_cx.pdf
The blog below shows a larger Heartland including Danville and the Quad Cities, with about 1,700,000 people.
Arguing With Grapefruit
I have a close friend who was in the habit of getting into arguments with an older relative, who holds a number of provocative and politically incorrect opinions. Something like Archie Bunker without the pleasant personality.
My friend argues with him. It is hopeless to change his mind, he knows what he knows, and the discussion rapidly turns into a rancorous argument.
I have pointed out to her that she is arguing with a gentlemen who knows what he knows and cannot conceive that there is another legitimate viewpoint. She has no chance of influencing his opinion. And to argue with him also reflects badly on her - Only a fool would argue with a grapefruit. If you argue with someone dumber than a grapefruit, well, then you are also dumber than a grapefruit.
So when the argument starts I just work the term grapefruit into the conversation. This makes her laugh and she see the futility of the conflict. He can't hear well and so does not hear the word grapefruit.
Smooths things over and we avoid having a tedious and disruptive hassle.
A grapefruit does not have to be stupid. In fact, there are a number of very smart folks who are so angry and obsessed about someone or something they don't like that they become grapefruits, albeit smart ones. They know what they know, they cannot accept anyone who has a different opinion, and often become hostile and abusive. This often manifests itself in hatred of political figures, for example hatred of Presidents Reagan, Bush, Clinton, Bush, and Obama.
It is not a particular vice of either liberals or conservatives. Grapefruititis can strike anyone of any age and any political persuasion. It perhaps gets worse with age, with hardening of the arteries.
It is easy to see others who are grapefruits. It is hard to see ourselves.
Now everyone should want to avoid being a grapefruit. And it is hard to see if you are becoming a grapefruit. Like alcoholism, many people gradually slip into grapefruititis without realizing.
Some danger signs that you might becoming a grapefruit:
- You are sure you know all the answers.
- You have taken to calling other people stupid or liars.
- You are often outraged when you read things you don't agree with.
- You constantly demean elected officials, not with well reasoned arguments, but with name calling.
- You insult people frequently.
- You attack the man, and not the argument.
- You throw out strong opinions without facts.
Best antidote to becoming a Grapefruit:
- Be tolerant of the view point of others.
- Think before you write or speak.
- Practice the golden rule.
- Use logic, not rants.
- Eat and drink sensibly, avoid drugs.
- Get enough sleep.
- Love often.
- Don't eat grapefruit.
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