If I were President, I would bring back the WPA.
After the stock market crash of 1929 the country (and in fact, the world) faced years of the Great Depression. The banks had no money to lend, businesses closed right and left, unemployment rates skyrocketed. Sound familiar?
America had never had a financial breakdown of this magnitude before, so the government was caught a little off-guard by the far-flung and lasting effects. In 1932 President Herbert Hoover authorized the creation of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation to help rebuild the wealth lost due to the Depression. In 1933, President Franklin Roosevelt expanded on Hoover's 'stimulus package and created a number of other agencies to provide aid, among them, the Works Projects Administration (WPA).
Roosevelt knew that millions of Americans were out of work and unable to support their families, but he was against a welfare system to provide aid. He thought that Americans would take more pride in working for their living than in accepting handouts. With millions of jobs to create, the WPA needed to create millions of opportunities. Roosevelt used this vast labor pool to build roads, bridges, dams, public parks and public buildings. People were paid a fair wage for a fair day's work. Most of America's public highway system was laid-out and built by the WPA. As a result of this work the United States was connected like never before.
It can be argued that the billions of dollars the US government spent on these WPA projects returned huge dividends. The nation's new highway system created the means for business to move its goods to market quickly, and to ship those goods to all corners of the country. The dam-building projects ensured the safety of numerous towns and created power generation for our growing cities and industry. Parks and libraries built by the WPA added to the quality of life for many Americans.
But by 1942 we had largely recovered from the Great Depression. Indeed, with World War II workers were much in demand. Factories were working round the clock to produce war-time goods and many of their strongest and best workers had gone off to war. The WPA, having served it's purpose, was not funded and was allowed to end.
Now, nearly 80 years later we are still driving on those same highways and bridges built by the WPA. A road system built to carry 1940's traffic is struggling to serve conditions in the 21st Century. Bridges are weakening, and even when reinforced, are too narrow to carry the traffic that funnels into them and become traffic bottlenecks. Highways that cross through cities are gridlocked, carrying ten times the traffic they were designed for. Water, telephone and electrical delivery systems are outdated and failing in many parts of the country.
What is the cost of gridlock? How many hours of productive time are lost with workers spending 2 or 3 hours each day sitting in their cars trying to get to work? Those are hours they could spend with their family or volunteering in their community. How many extra trucks are on the road everyday because traffic limits the number of miles and the number of deliveries any one truck can complete in a day?
A modern and robust infrastructure is required if we, as Americans, want to ensure our high standard of living. A dated and decaying infrastructure will drag us down and hinder the efficient running of our economy. The phone companies have done a good job of updating their infrastructure because there is a lot of money to be made there, but our electrical and water delivery systems are run by government-controlled utilities and there is no incentive for them to spend money and manpower on upgrades.
So now we find ourselves again in economic turmoil. Once again millions of Americans find themselves out of work and unable to support their families. And once again, the infrastructural framework of our country is in need of repair and rebuilding. So, let's spend that stimulus money on reinventing the WPA. Let's spend that money creating millions of jobs and give that money directly to the people who need it the most. No more of this trickle-down stuff, where we give the money to companies so they can hire new workers. Let's have the government give every American who wants to work a job building roads, building bridges, building subways and trains and monorails. Let's build the America that will carry us through the next 80 years.
Monday, March 22, 2010
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Why I Stop at Red Lights at 3:00 am
Why do you follow the law?
Is it because you are a good citizen? Do you do it to build good Karma? Are you afraid of the consequences of being caught? Peer pressure? Is it okay to break a rule that you think is useless or unecessary?
Imagine this: It is 3 AM on a Tuesday and for some reason you are alone in your car, driving home from some event. You are near your home on familiar streets when you come to a traffic light and it changes to red before you. You are tired and ready to be home. After 30 seconds of waiting for the light to change you look to your left, up the street and there is not a car in sight. You look to your right and there are no other cars visible. A quick glance in your rear-view mirror shows you to be all alone at this intersection. So, what do you do? Do you cross on the red or do you wait for the light to change?
I mean, really, the traffic lights are meant to keep traffic safe, to prevent accidents at busy intersections and smooth the flow of traffic. Does this red signal really serve any of those purposes at 3 AM on a Tuesday?
So what do I do? I wait for that light to change. Obeying the law is part of our contract with our community. We, as citizens of a community, take much comfort from the knowledge that most of those around us obey the laws. It makes us feel safe when driving on the roads to know that a green signal means it is truly safe for me to drive through an intersection without fear of injury. Imagine what it might be like if people only obeyed the laws when it was convenient for them to do so. So, at 3 AM on that Tuesday I wait for the light to change because, if I don't, that way lies chaos and the end of civilization as we know it.
Of course, I sometimes have been known to exceed the speed limit by a little bit . . . .
Is it because you are a good citizen? Do you do it to build good Karma? Are you afraid of the consequences of being caught? Peer pressure? Is it okay to break a rule that you think is useless or unecessary?
Imagine this: It is 3 AM on a Tuesday and for some reason you are alone in your car, driving home from some event. You are near your home on familiar streets when you come to a traffic light and it changes to red before you. You are tired and ready to be home. After 30 seconds of waiting for the light to change you look to your left, up the street and there is not a car in sight. You look to your right and there are no other cars visible. A quick glance in your rear-view mirror shows you to be all alone at this intersection. So, what do you do? Do you cross on the red or do you wait for the light to change?
I mean, really, the traffic lights are meant to keep traffic safe, to prevent accidents at busy intersections and smooth the flow of traffic. Does this red signal really serve any of those purposes at 3 AM on a Tuesday?
So what do I do? I wait for that light to change. Obeying the law is part of our contract with our community. We, as citizens of a community, take much comfort from the knowledge that most of those around us obey the laws. It makes us feel safe when driving on the roads to know that a green signal means it is truly safe for me to drive through an intersection without fear of injury. Imagine what it might be like if people only obeyed the laws when it was convenient for them to do so. So, at 3 AM on that Tuesday I wait for the light to change because, if I don't, that way lies chaos and the end of civilization as we know it.
Of course, I sometimes have been known to exceed the speed limit by a little bit . . . .
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