Posted on 08/10/2007 4:26:18 AM PDT by Kaslin
"How long will it take," I thought, as I watched the coverage of the collapsed bridge outside of Minneapolis, "before someone blames President George W. Bush?" It turns out, not long.
As divers attempted to locate possible victims submerged in the murky waters of the Mississippi, Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (Nev.) said, "I think we should look at this tragedy that occurred as a wake-up call for us. We have -- all over the country -- crumbling infrastructure, highways, bridges, dams, and we really need to take a hard look at this." Calling it "the right thing to do" for the infrastructure and the economy, Reid said, "For every billion dollars we spend in our crumbling infrastructure, 47,000 high-paying jobs are created." Reid also implicated the White House, "Since 9/11 we have taken our eye off the ball."
The way bridge maintenance became the job of the federal government requires explaining.
How many people know that the federal government played virtually no role in the construction of the first coast-to-coast highway? The Lincoln Highway, an improved, hard-surfaced road spanning 3,400 miles from New York City to San Francisco, was conceived and built in the early 1900s, and relied heavily on private and corporate donations for funding. Private-sector visionaries, with the assistance of state and local taxpayers, established the Lincoln Highway in 1913 -- three years before the first federal highway funding (1916), and 12 years before the numerical route marking of the first interstate systems (1925). Entrepreneur Carl Fisher, who conceived the idea for the highway, built headlights for cars. Wanting motorists to drive at night, Fisher pushed for improved roads, which ultimately led to the paving of then mostly dirt roads.
President Dwight D. Eisenhower, on the grounds of national security, sought and received congressional funds to construct the federal Interstate Highway System in the 1950s. But Eisenhower also touted the economic benefits of the highway -- thus corrupting and expanding the framers' intent of the commerce clause in the Constitution.
We now have a federal highway system. But why does the federal government -- rather than the states -- continue to bear the responsibility of its maintenance?
In Indiana, Republican Gov. Mitch Daniels realized that his state lacked the money to maintain the Indiana Toll Road. For $3.8 billion, the state entered into a 75-year lease with a consortium of an Australian company and a Spanish company. As a result, Indiana no longer faces billions of dollars in road maintenance. In exchange, the investors intend to raise tolls for those using the roads. In Chicago, Mayor Richard Daley did something similar. He leased the Chicago Skyway -- an eight-mile elevated highway -- for 99 years in a $1.8 billion deal.
At one time, James Monroe, our fifth president, felt the Constitution disallowed federal toll collection, federally funded repairs and federal jurisdiction over the multi-state Cumberland Road. In 1822, Monroe cast his only veto against such a bill, even though his home state of Virginia stood to benefit.
According to Monroe's biography on the University of Virginia's americanpresident.org, " . . . As the United States continued to grow, many Americans advocated a system of internal improvements to help the country develop. Monroe thought this a good idea; he believed that the young nation needed an improved infrastructure, including a transportation network to grow and thrive economically. However, [Monroe] did not think that the Constitution said anything about the authority to build, maintain, and operate a national transportation system. . . . The issue came to a head when Congress passed a bill in 1822 to repair the Cumberland Road, or National Road, and equip it with a system of tolls. . . . Monroe vetoed the bill, however; it was his contention that the states through which the road passed should undertake the setting up and collecting of tolls because Congress lacked the authority to do so." (Three years later, on his last day in office, Monroe signed a bill authorizing extension of the Cumberland Road, leaving some constitutional scholars scratching their heads.)
Today, the federal government passes highway bills every six years or so, replete with pork projects. The last one, passed in 2005, included snowmobile trails and horse trails, as well as a documentary about infrastructure in Alaska. Some of the money never gets to critical highway maintenance.
So Americans continue the schizophrenia of demanding that the federal government keep us safe against our enemies, while simultaneously demanding a federally funded welfare state that saps time, attention and money from the very business of keeping us safe.
Well, we can always blame Bush.
Siphoning off money from what is suppose to be for roads and road improvement for Trains, Buses, Paths, etc.
We NEED to put our foot down hard and insist on accountability for our already too high of Taxes here in Minnesota.
We NEED to put our foot down hard and insist on accountability......
You can say that again! Building a very expensive choo-choo train for a tiny fraction of people in a very small area while the highways in other parts of the state turn to dust. The Met council must be disbanded or replaced!
I blame the liberals for their welfare state, tax dollars going toward supporting the dead weight of society instead of supporting the infrastructure and providing for well enforced bridges and safer roads.
By the Constitution it is the Congress that initiates ALL funding bills.
That means EVERY SINGLE ONE. The means NO EXCEPTIONS. That means ALWAYS.
If there has not been sufficient funds for infrastructure in the past, then the responsibility CLEARLY belongs with CONGRESS!
What is the record of this DISTRICT’S Congressman in fighting for funding for this bridge?
That is the ONLY question worthy of attention when it comes to funding.
“Calling it “the right thing to do” for the infrastructure and the economy, Reid said, “For every billion dollars we spend in our crumbling infrastructure, 47,000 high-paying jobs are created.” Reid also implicated the White House, “Since 9/11 we have taken our eye off the ball.””
So if we decided to build the border wall, we can expect how many high paying jobs?
Didn’t they just build a new football stadium up there?
Money isn’t the issue....PRIORITIES!
Thanks to Senator Tim Johnson (D-SD)we have a bridge across the Missouri river at Vermillion (Johnson's home town)linking it to some jerkwater town in Nebraska that isn't even on a major highway. It would be a shock if a few hundred cars crossed that bridge in a day The US taxpayers paid millions for this bridge to nowhere while bridges in places like Minneapolis where hundreds of thousands of cars cross it each day will require us to pay higher gasoline taxes to fix.
The mediaWHORES and RATS are getting so ridiculous that Americans are beginning to wake up to the fact that they are politically biased, inaccurate, and insensitive on the folk they report on. There was a poll that came out on Thursday that showed people have been turned off by them. Folk don’t trust them like they used to. The bashing W 24/7 cycle is getting REAL REAL stale! Folk can tolerate so much till they had enough.
Life, liberty and the PURSUIT (no guarantee) of happiness........
Promote The General Welfare....NOT guarantee it!
Funny, I expect most Freepers nowadays would blame Giuliani.
Anyone else up for calling...???
Norm Coleman: 651-645-0323
Tim Pawlenty: 651-296-3391
President Bush is at least six-levels of government removed from transportation safety at the state level. Minnesotans, look to your state DOT, your mayors, and your governor and legislature. They had the money for maintenance - what they did with it is the question!
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