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X ` Man September 28th 11 02:52 PM

Yet another reason...
 
....why we are becoming a second-rate nation.

Crumbling infrastructure. Took a road trip on I-95 north and was
appalled at the miserable condition of the main north-south interstate
on the east coast, the bridges and the fact that in most places, it
still is only two lanes on each side. Massive traffic jams, bridges that
look as if they are ready to fail, crumbing surfaces. And our railroads
are in even worse shape.

Meanwhile, countries that take their economies seriously are building
and fixing infrastructure like there's no tomorrow.


--
I'll believe corporations are people when Texas executes one.

Drifter[_2_] September 28th 11 03:08 PM

Yet another reason...
 
On 9/28/2011 9:52 AM, X ` Man wrote:
....why we are becoming a second-rate nation.

Crumbling infrastructure. Took a road trip on I-95 north and was
appalled at the miserable condition of the main north-south interstate
on the east coast, the bridges and the fact that in most places, it
still is only two lanes on each side. Massive traffic jams, bridges that
look as if they are ready to fail, crumbing surfaces. And our railroads
are in even worse shape.

Meanwhile, countries that take their economies seriously are building
and fixing infrastructure like there's no tomorrow.


I 95 isn't shovel ready in the north yet. Fact is the population is
shifting southward toward warmer climes. That's where all the
infrastructure repairs and improvements are happening. *Shovel ready, baby*

JustWaitAFrekinMinute! September 28th 11 03:55 PM

Yet another reason...
 
On Sep 28, 10:08*am, Drifter wrote:


I 95 isn't shovel ready in the north yet. Fact is the population is
shifting southward toward warmer climes. That's where all the
infrastructure repairs and improvements are happening. *Shovel ready, baby*


Yeah, it's obvious they are getting ready for another "no-jobs, only
payoff" plan in Washington on our childrens backs.

John H[_2_] September 28th 11 08:59 PM

Yet another reason...
 
On Wed, 28 Sep 2011 09:52:20 -0400, X ` Man wrote:

...why we are becoming a second-rate nation.

Crumbling infrastructure. Took a road trip on I-95 north and was
appalled at the miserable condition of the main north-south interstate
on the east coast, the bridges and the fact that in most places, it
still is only two lanes on each side. Massive traffic jams, bridges that
look as if they are ready to fail, crumbing surfaces. And our railroads
are in even worse shape.

Meanwhile, countries that take their economies seriously are building
and fixing infrastructure like there's no tomorrow.


You gotta wonder what Obama did with almost a trillion bucks he was going to spend on those shovel
ready infrastructure jobs.

And now he wants more.

Canuck57[_9_] September 28th 11 11:02 PM

Yet another reason...
 
On 28/09/2011 7:52 AM, X ` Man wrote:
...why we are becoming a second-rate nation.

Crumbling infrastructure. Took a road trip on I-95 north and was
appalled at the miserable condition of the main north-south interstate
on the east coast, the bridges and the fact that in most places, it
still is only two lanes on each side. Massive traffic jams, bridges that
look as if they are ready to fail, crumbing surfaces. And our railroads
are in even worse shape.

Meanwhile, countries that take their economies seriously are building
and fixing infrastructure like there's no tomorrow.


You wuld think for $5 trillion in debt in 33 months that Obama would
re-build some roads or something. But guess big fat ineffective
government, banks and buddy deals are more important than the people.
Hey, stop listening to the mans lips and watch his walk.


--
Eat the rich, screw the companies and wonder why there are no jobs.
-- Obama and the lefty fleabagger attitude

JustWait September 29th 11 12:47 AM

Yet another reason...
 
On 9/28/2011 3:59 PM, John H wrote:
On Wed, 28 Sep 2011 09:52:20 -0400, X ` wrote:

...why we are becoming a second-rate nation.

Crumbling infrastructure. Took a road trip on I-95 north and was
appalled at the miserable condition of the main north-south interstate
on the east coast, the bridges and the fact that in most places, it
still is only two lanes on each side. Massive traffic jams, bridges that
look as if they are ready to fail, crumbing surfaces. And our railroads
are in even worse shape.

Meanwhile, countries that take their economies seriously are building
and fixing infrastructure like there's no tomorrow.


You gotta wonder what Obama did with almost a trillion bucks he was going to spend on those shovel
ready infrastructure jobs.

And now he wants more.


He distributed it to those who bundled money for his election. They did
pretty good too, donate a couple million of other peoples money, and you
get 50 million in return. Pretty good for a days work...

Eisboch[_8_] September 29th 11 08:42 AM

Yet another reason...
 


"X ` Man" wrote in message
...

....why we are becoming a second-rate nation.

Crumbling infrastructure. Took a road trip on I-95 north and was
appalled at the miserable condition of the main north-south interstate
on the east coast, the bridges and the fact that in most places, it
still is only two lanes on each side. Massive traffic jams, bridges that
look as if they are ready to fail, crumbing surfaces. And our railroads
are in even worse shape.

Meanwhile, countries that take their economies seriously are building
and fixing infrastructure like there's no tomorrow.

------------------------------------------------------

That section of I-95 has been in a state of perpetual repair for as long as
I can remember.
When we used to drive south for the winters one of the worst parts of the
trip was from just north
of the New Haven area down through southern Connecticut and, of course,
through New York.
One of the problems is the amount of daily traffic in that area. The roads
are worn out faster
than they can be repaired. In fact, as I remember, the roads really didn't
get a lot better and
driving a little more relaxing until we got well into Virginia and points
south.

I often took the "long" route via Rt. 84/86. Much longer, but nicer and
more scenic.

Best trip was by boat!



X ` Man September 29th 11 11:47 AM

Yet another reason...
 
On 9/29/11 3:42 AM, Eisboch wrote:


"X ` Man" wrote in message
...

...why we are becoming a second-rate nation.

Crumbling infrastructure. Took a road trip on I-95 north and was
appalled at the miserable condition of the main north-south interstate
on the east coast, the bridges and the fact that in most places, it
still is only two lanes on each side. Massive traffic jams, bridges that
look as if they are ready to fail, crumbing surfaces. And our railroads
are in even worse shape.

Meanwhile, countries that take their economies seriously are building
and fixing infrastructure like there's no tomorrow.

------------------------------------------------------

That section of I-95 has been in a state of perpetual repair for as long
as I can remember.
When we used to drive south for the winters one of the worst parts of
the trip was from just north
of the New Haven area down through southern Connecticut and, of course,
through New York.
One of the problems is the amount of daily traffic in that area. The
roads are worn out faster
than they can be repaired. In fact, as I remember, the roads really
didn't get a lot better and
driving a little more relaxing until we got well into Virginia and
points south.

I often took the "long" route via Rt. 84/86. Much longer, but nicer and
more scenic.

Best trip was by boat!



East Haven *to* the NJ Turnpike was pretty grim in terms of disrepair
and traffic, but the entire route demonstrates that our national
priorities have been wrong for a long time. Trillions of dollars on the
military and moronic wars, but not enough on our roads, bridges,
airports, rail systems, power grid, et cetera.

To me, the worst part of I-95, aside from the sections leading to NYC
from the north, is from the Virginia border up north through North
Carolina. The traffic thins out a bit after that, but then it picks up
mightily south of Jacksonville, Florida, to Miami. Too much traffic, not
enough lanes, too many kamikaze truck drivers. too many oversized
campers weaving too and fro.

Near Baltimore, we take the Harbor Tunnel route to I-97, by Thurgood
Marshall Airport, and then just west of Annapolis, we get onto a state
road. Much nicer than taking I-95 to the Beltway.


--
I'll believe corporations are people when Texas executes one.

Wayne B September 29th 11 12:20 PM

Yet another reason...
 
On Thu, 29 Sep 2011 03:42:13 -0400, "Eisboch" wrote:

I often took the "long" route via Rt. 84/86. Much longer, but nicer and
more scenic.

Best trip was by boat!


==========

We went offshore yesterday from Beaufort/Morehead City south to
Masonboro Inlet/Wrightsville Beach. There were a few bumps in that
road also but not too bad. Nice sunny day for a change.


iBoaterer[_2_] September 29th 11 02:03 PM

Yet another reason...
 
In article ,
says...

"X ` Man" wrote in message
...

...why we are becoming a second-rate nation.

Crumbling infrastructure. Took a road trip on I-95 north and was
appalled at the miserable condition of the main north-south interstate
on the east coast, the bridges and the fact that in most places, it
still is only two lanes on each side. Massive traffic jams, bridges that
look as if they are ready to fail, crumbing surfaces. And our railroads
are in even worse shape.

Meanwhile, countries that take their economies seriously are building
and fixing infrastructure like there's no tomorrow.

------------------------------------------------------

That section of I-95 has been in a state of perpetual repair for as long as
I can remember.
When we used to drive south for the winters one of the worst parts of the
trip was from just north
of the New Haven area down through southern Connecticut and, of course,
through New York.
One of the problems is the amount of daily traffic in that area. The roads
are worn out faster
than they can be repaired. In fact, as I remember, the roads really didn't
get a lot better and
driving a little more relaxing until we got well into Virginia and points
south.

I often took the "long" route via Rt. 84/86. Much longer, but nicer and
more scenic.

Best trip was by boat!


84/86 is a nice way to go. There's lots of factors that cause road
deterioration, like subgrade conditions, freeze/thaw cycles, etc.


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