I guess Speaker Pelosi's REFORMS from the Left side of the aisle were to make Pork Barrel Projects fully greased and secret for rapid stealth passage with just a hint of bacon grease still in the House the next morning. Add David Obey another Congressman from Wisconsin we can all feel embarassed about. FeinGold, Kohl, Baldwin, Obey - Democrats all representing roughly 2% of us.... Do we eat too much Cheese here? Time to clean House?
Thursday, October 04, 2007
Wednesday, October 03, 2007
House Dems Stall Iraq funding: Or, "I don't support the troops and I hate Bush part 126"
Tuesday, October 02, 2007
Tryphorgetin
For all those who really want to vote for Hillary but still remember all the things she did...
Sunday, September 30, 2007
Dave Blaska strikes again: The PEEDEES: Get our "Guest criminals" back on the street!

The PEEDEES (Progressive Dane) want a policy of "book 'em Dano" and push 'em out the back door. (See link above) Dane not-so-Super Sheila Stubbs wants our criminals 'treated like guests!'
Sherriff: "OK, all you in cell block 9, you'll be doing sleep overs at Sheila's house for the next 14 months."
From Ex Mayor Paul Soglin to PEEDEE Queen Brenda Konkel the accepted wisdom is "poor people cause crime because they are poor". If you disagree with that you are a racist. Huh? Need a blood pressure lift? Click on the "Konkel" link just above- you can skip another cuppacoffee.
Both of these jewels of conventional wisdom from the never revised "Liberal Book of Wisdom and Guilt" are not true and are just plain insulting. Many of us have been poor and worked our way up to comfortable - some even reach rich. Look at Paul Soglin! He's not exactly playing the Tenor Sax on State street nights to pick up his next property tax payment. (I offered that guy that does honk away 10 bucks last night to stop playing!)
Being poor doesn't mean you will commit a crime. The majority of poor and working poor do not commit crimes. Lay off poor people! They have enough to deal with.
In this state, the majority of poor people are white. So using the Left's own "Bible" that only white people can be racist, the majority of people committing crimes are- yup you guessed it- white guys.
So, how is it racist to say get the criminals off the street and into a nice, warm taxpayer supported bed! Should we be demanding that they get the white guy criminals off the street?" Wouldn't that be a Non PC offense at the very least? ( A misdemeanor in Madison)
So if we want to actually put away the bad "people of pinkness"along with the P.O C., you need a jail big enough to put them in and bad enough to make them NOT want to come back. Like anything else, using a public phone is a priviledge you pay for - even in prison. Don't like the calling rates? Don't come back!
All those that disagree are free to open their homes to the criminal 'Guests" or just drop off phone cards for the legally challenged.
We believe in the merit system. If you do the crime, you do the time. If your crime merits your arrest, trial, conviction and slammer time, you have earned it fair and square.
Sunday, September 23, 2007
Congress AWOL on gratitude to Gen. Patraeus Wis. ST. Jrnl. Letter to ed. R 092007

Have to admit it felt great to see this letter to the editor in print.
Congress AWOL on gratitude to Patraeus
Gen. David Patraeus gave Congress the progress report they legislated and demanded in mid-September.
The count of weapon caches found and removed in Iraq (4,400 between January and August 2007 compared with 2,700 in all of 2006), the dramatic drop in IEDs, bombs, sniper, mortar and rocket attacks, and the pacification of Anbar province all indicate that the "surge" is working even better than predicted in late 2006.
Congress asked for and got a "change of direction" in Iraq last November. Now that the change has produced positive results, thanks to our troops' magnificent performance and better counterinsurgency strategy, where was the gratitude? It was AWOL. Gutter politics and re-election dreams trumped a simple, "Thank you, Gen. Patraeus."
Much like our own Congress, the political progress in Iraq has been slow, inefficient and characterized by name-calling, turf protection and grandstanding instead of respectful debate, give-and-take exchange and progress over preening.
Let the surge continue and maybe Iraq's congress and our own will finally get it.
- Bill Richardson, Madison
Friday, September 21, 2007
Censure, impeach and buttkick Sen. FEINGOLD!
Wednesday, September 19, 2007
Petraeus Report Shows Surge Is Working
Monday, September 17, 2007
Bombing the Syrian/N Korean Nuke dump: Nice to have NON PC friends in Israel
Thursday, September 13, 2007
Free Health Care in Wisconsin: Gateway for Illegal Aliens
Click on here or the link above to view a Youtube Salute to Sen Erpenbach, WI. largest tax increase in the history of Wisconsin... Or "wait... here's another $15 billion in tax increases we can tack onto the $3 billion dollars in tax increases to the budget at the last minute." Increase the Gas tax, hospital tax, real estate tax, cigarette tax, garbage tax, auto license tax ah...anyway we can tax the air they breathe?" OK how about free health care for illegal aliens? Wait.... they already have that in Dane County!
Friday, September 07, 2007
1) Never Forget 9/11/01 2) One brave Woman in Madison has not forgotten Jane Fonda's Legacy 3) Profiling quiz

1. 1968 Bobby Kennedy was shot and killed by
a. Superman
a. Olga Corbett
a. Lost Norwegians
a. John Dillinger
a. A pizza delivery boy
a. The Smurfs
a. Captain Kidd
a. Scooby Doo
a. Richard Simmons
a. Mr. Rogers
a. Bugs Bunny, Wiley E. Coyote, Daffy Duck and Elmer Fudd
Tuesday, September 04, 2007
Greatest Movie line ever delivered- Even more true today!
Which reminds of the pro rail arguments made by all the PEEDEES and left wing Democrats that control the democrat party. "Course I'm just a 'primitive' 'Caveman' according to County Supers Matano ( July 19 07 board meeting) and Stoebig (Aug. 16 meeting) (dis)respectively.
Tuesday, August 28, 2007
Commuter rail? NO! 13 against, 4 in favor in WSJ Forum 8/23/07
Wednesday, August 22, 2007
Wis. State Jrnl. Forum Section Su. 8/12/07 Your Views: A War We Just Might Win
Continue surge; drop 'Cut and Run'
If it takes "two analysts who have harshly criticized the Bush administration's miserable handling of Iraq" to convince people that the military surge and new commander is working in the Iraq war, so be it! Before the war began, the President pledged, "When the Iraqi troops stand up, we will stand down." That statement and the definition of victory when the Iraq nation has established democratic institutions and achieved a stabile security for its citizens is as clear an exit strategy as any commander in chief has ever declared, even after a war is over. What is our exit strategy from Germany, Korea, the Balkans? The surge is working. In spite of the Democrats in Congress and their investment in defeat, led by our own embarrassing Sen. Russ Feingold and meekly mimicked by U.S. Rep. Tammy Baldwin, the constant white flag waving is not working. Their "Cut and Run" retreat is not a winning strategy for anyone. However, the surge is working. Yes, if we have the will to continue real support of our troops we will win in Iraq. Is now the time to finally ask, "Do you want to win or lose in Iraq?"
Bill Richardson, Middleton, treasurer, Vote No to Cut and Run Petraeus, troops need help from homefront We are winning in Iraq and now we need to win at home. Our troops are performing brilliantly under Gen. David Petraeus and they deserve our continued support until their mission is completed. Even the liberal mainstream media can no longer ignore the success our military is having in Iraq. Those on the left, who hold a deep-seated animus towards President Bush and the U.S. military, can be expected to continue their drum beat for withdrawal. But the improving situation in Iraq calls for a fresh assessment by fair-minded Americans, who understand the importance of success and the seriousness of retreat and failure. We can either have confidence in Gen. Petraeus and the successful efforts of our troops, or we can let the defeatists at home prevail in their efforts to bring about failure in Iraq. Wendy Fjelstad, Cottage Grove (President, Vote No to Cut and Run)
Tuesday, August 14, 2007
Questions and answers about Traffic Congestion, Fix the transportation systems we have now,Polution, Choice
Monday, August 13, 2007
Dave Blaska strikes again: Dane CTY blows $2,$3 Mill a year shuffling prisoners-Death of a trolley-why can't the Left pay for their campaigns
Thursday, August 09, 2007
TEN steps to [Traffic] Congestion Relief
Ten Step to [Traffic] Congestion Relief
A condensed version of the Balaker & Staley Book. Talking points to oppose rail transit for Dane Cty as a solution for traffic congestion. Most are exact quotes from the book.
Dane Cty. Exec. Kathleen Falk specifically mentioned building a rail system to “reduce congestion” in her press conference with Madison Mayor Dave on June 28 2007. Since about only 2% of commuters use transit, bus and rail additions have not reduced traffic congestion.
Adding 6-13 train stops per hour blocking all lanes of traffic in both directions, even if only for 45 seconds to a minute (as stated on 8/8/07 in the Dane Cty. Towns Assoc. meeting by Mr Trowbridge of Transport 2020) will cause a massive and sudden increase in congestion and travel time in the Madison area. Do we want to spend 800 million dollars to prove that?
FROM: The Road more traveled; Why the congestion crisis matters more than you think, and what we can do about it. By Ted Balaker & Sam Staley. Rowman & Littlefield Pub. 2006. $24.95. Available in new and used editions at http://amazon.com/ and at the Madison Public Library.
Traffic congestion is a top quality of life issue in America. Because congestion in Madison area is “not nearly as bad as Chicago, Minneapolis or St. Louis” does not mean we should accept deteriorating traffic flow, poor highway and intersection design, increasing commuting times and an underperforming bus system. Accept it, and eventually you will have that level of congestion as the cities mentioned above.
From page 177 “final thought” – The notion that we cannot build our way out of traffic congestion is wrong. Wrong historically, wrong technically.
Projects in U.S. and worldwide show us that we have the engineering skills to build new capacity and manage existing networks more effectively. High levels of congestion are due to our failure to make reducing it a local and national priority.
Mobility must be established at the local, county, state and national level as a high priority.
What has been lacking is leadership. “America has never had permanent shortages, except in one thing: transportation. Many Americans think congestion is inevitable; it is not. It is a breadline, it is un-American, and we should not tolerate it” (Texas legislator Mike Krusee who ramrodded the change of legislation in Texas to change the laws to allow public-private projects.)
Pages 168-176 Ten Steps to [traffic] congestion relief.
1. Step one: Admit that mobility is Good
Many urban planners and other “experts” believe congestion is a good thing. It is considered a tool to force commuters out of their cars by making congestion intolerable enough that they will spend more time, energy, money, give up personal privacy and choices to conform to the trolley/train/bus schedule.
Accepting the “congestion is good mantra” means surrendering to a lower quality of life and a lower standard of living.
Congestion is the effect of a failure to keep road capacity and the transportation network on the same pace as economic growth - an indication of a shortage. When one blocks market forces to supply a demand-free flowing, efficient transportation- the result is a Cuba/Soviet style acceptance of shortages and a lower standard and quality of living.
We don’t accept this in any other area of our lives, why would we accept it here?
In Dane Cty. and Madison, we have had in place for years an anti-car moratorium on building better, highways that are more efficient and parking facilities. When was the last major highway built in Dane County or Madison? Road construction is nearly all for maintenance only.
Even Hwy 12 & 18 Middleton to Sauk city took far too many years to approve and rebuild into a modern (1970’s) highway. It handles traffic much better today, but is a study in compromise with stoplights and cross traffic major roads that are an invitation to an accident.
At the very least, roads need to be built to keep up with growth and usage. At best, in a progressive community, transportation networks should be built ahead of demand. Dane county has road capacities that should have been dealt with 15-20 years ago. They have been intentionally ignored. Adding road capacity needs to be a fundamental and defining component of a modern transportation network.
2. Step Two: Recognize that sound transportation Policy should Increase Mobility. (Amazingly enough, this obvious statement needs to be emphasized.)
Local, county and state efforts to force people to change their commuting habits do not work. Nearly 98% of commuters CHOOSE to drive because it is comfortable, convenient, efficient, and flexible, utilizes state of the art technology and is safe and private.
52% of drivers make stops before and after work to run errands, pick up kids, do myriad after work activities that a transit system simply cannot do. 78% of Europeans drive to work and that rate is growing faster than America’s driving rate even though their rail/bus system is firmly established as top notch, more advanced and efficient than ours is and gas is much more expensive there.
Level of wealth of the individual is the single most reliable indicator of choice using a private auto or using public transit. Even 80% of our “poor” have autos.
Madison’s bus system costs $40 million a year in federal, state and local tax subsidies ($9 million from Madison) with only 20% coming from rider fares. In the Transport 2020 report (which could be renamed “Transport 1920” for its championing of trolley/rail and ignoring upgrading the bus system, the least expensive method recommended for improving mobility was streamlining the bus system, not a rail system. The trolley/rail proponents have ignored this recommendation.
Forcing higher housing densities, using zoning to restrict housing choices and growth diminishes both our quality of life and our standard of living. New county motto: “Dane County: We will tell you where to live, where to work, how and when you will move between them and how much it will cost you”
3. Step Three: Recognize there is No Free Lunch
Roads and transportation systems are not a free lunch. We have built roads that are not the right roads in the right places at the right capacities and we have allowed capacities to be grossly exceeded instead of increasing capacities with usage. We need to use fees to tie costs to benefits more directly. Public/private alliances to rebuild and build new capacities in mobility and the wider use of user fees- tolls, gas taxes are needed to pay for the lunch.
4. Step Four: Choose tools that make sense.
Would road tunnels or elevated double Decker quadruple one way reversible express or bus lanes relieve congestion? Would a relatively small investment in computerized and controllable traffic light coordination relieve congestion and speed a free flowing pattern?
Would widening bottlenecked roads, improving intersection design, adding bus and express lanes, brand new toll roads with variable tolls, private sector building and running of toll roads work? (Chicago now leases the Skyway to two companies recently rec'd $1.83 Billion, Indiana has approved leasing out their Toll way to private concerns and rec'd $3.85 billion)
Would upgrading local and arterial roads improve overall mobility? Would faster response times to traffic incident removals increase mobility?
From Metropolitan Planning Organizations (MPO) database find bottlenecks, where most congestion occurs most frequently and determine if it is lack of capacity- road lanes- or poor management of existing infrastructure- traffic lights, turn signals, poorly designed intersections, on/off ramps, lighting etc.
5. Step Five: Identify Leaders and Champions
No one will address congestion unless there is leadership. Identifying the right people to take charge is critical to success. Only a highly visible pro-mobility campaign will identify them. In Dane County and Madison not only do we lack this leadership, the leaders are firmly in the anti-automobile camp.
Business community must be involved. High or rising levels of congestion or higher taxation than surrounding communities for transportation systems that do not relieve congestion is simply a waste of their money and will heavily affect their bottom line.
Measure the number of hours of delays removed per millions of dollars spent to prioritize congestion reduction funding. (Most bang for the buck is NOT a rail system, but higher capacity and better-designed highways/toll ways for bus/car mobility in nearly all cases in U.S. is.)
6. Step Six: Enable Real Solutions
Must have the right legislation locally and statewide to encourage innovation and creativity.
Rule of thumb: New services should be allowed if they make money when users pay for them. This applies to transit as well as new roads. Dismantle government monopolies and controls on transit, taxicabs, and roads and let market forces pay for transportation options rather than only tax dollars.
Provide an environment where different approaches can be tried over a reasonable timeline is critical to transportation policy. Congestion reduction strategies need to embrace the most effective tools for local area- queue jumpers, ramp meters, signal optimization, High Occupancy Toll way (HOT) lanes or express busways.
7. Step Seven: Cut off Ineffective programs
Transit, while popular among the elite, simply has too limited a role in most places to be a major player in congestion reduction.
Transit investments need to focus on maximizing mobility for the transit dependent. Since this segment is normally less than 2% of the commuting population, transit has too limited a ridership to influence regional congestion and mobility for the other 98%.Similarily, roads that do not significantly add to mobility in a region should not be built.
All transportation projects should be subject rigorous cost-benefit analysis that gives a more prominent role to congestion reduction.
Applying cost-benefit analysis to all transportation projects that will reduce congestion will eliminate inefficient projects.
8. Step Eight: Adopt performance measures
Performance measures must be tied to congestion reduction to maintain accountability transparency. Texas and Houston specifically adopted standards that measure the hours of delay and average travel times that became benchmarks to measure effectiveness of congestion reduction and became the benchmarks for measuring other transportation projects, which limited patronage and pet projects appeals.
Performance standards will force policy makers to make commitments to specific goals and standards. Example: a 1:10 travel time index- where peak-hour travel is 10 % longer than free flow travel time on average for the typical commuter. Highway redesign, traffic signal optimization, turn signal coordination can all be evaluated with this tool.
9. Step nine: Require Accountability
Measurable congestion reduction, travel time reduction can be built into the institutional accountability. Congestion fighting is not a one-time event. It is ever changing and must be measured regularly to meet the challenges in a variety of ways. Having congestion travel time triggers in place that automatically start congestion reduction projects must be long term and ongoing goals. Waiting until congestion cripples the local economy and lowers the standard and quality of living is waiting too long and is too expensive to repair.
Accountability should include:
Transitioning to new effective policies as the region changes
Terminating ineffective programs based on performance measures
Expanding effective programs in a timely manner
10. Step Ten: Take the long View
Use hard data and evidence to determine congestion and mobility problems. Local regional planning agencies may be helpful, though some must be forced through the Freedom of Information Act to provide the needed data.
Meet with groups, individuals that have vested interests in seeing mobility improve-business community, community organizations.
Consult experts who have a record of accomplishment for designing and implementing successful congestion relief strategies in U.S. Dane Counties' RTA consultants are the same ones that did Boston’s “Big Dig” Tunnel that is running about ten times its estimated cost. Are these the experts we should be talking to?
Develop long range strategic planning for improving mobility, with measurable targets for routes and corridors (travel speeds not falling below 10% of free-flow travel) specific strategies (variable rate toll roads, HOT (High Occupancy Toll way) lanes, traffic signal optimization) and a timetable for implementation
Develop a ten-year implementation plan, which includes public education, marketing for moving the project forward, with benchmarks for achieving specific elements of the plan
Tuesday, August 07, 2007
Bill, the media whore on WIBA this morning talking about Commuter Rail

I have linked the show to 'show' above but have never put up a audio link before, so if you try it give it about 2 minutes to load- big file- but if it doesn't work for you fagettaboutit! (I will check to see if it works first.)
Yep. A commuter rail that even the Transport 2020 (the study committee)
says will "increase traffic congestion" and may only take 4500 people of 90,000 commuting by car off the road! Yipes!
Monday, July 23, 2007
SEVEN myths about traffic congestion.(from "The road more traveled" book)

The Seven myths about dealing with Congestion on our highways.
FROM: Recomended book: The Road More Traveled: Why the Congestion Crisis matters more than you think, and what you can do about it. Ted Balaker & Sam Staley Rowman and Littlefield 2006. $24.95. (Available at Madison Pub Library.)
NOTE: I have contacted the authors and they have given me permission to do the summaries and to quote them freely with proper attribution. If anyone does quote from their book or this site, please do the same. Please see below:
From: Sam Staley
Date: Thu, 19 Jul 2007 16:28:54 EDT
Subject: Re: Thank you for your book-'The Road more traveled'
To: Mr. Bill,
Feel free to quote liberally and cite the Road More Traveled as much as you want. I don't think distributing summaries violates copyright protections. In fact, I see it simply as a way to market the book!
Also, anything on the reason.org web site (or reason.com) is effectively public domain as long as the source is properly attributed.
Here is my summary of seven of their "myths about traffic congestion." Any errors are mine. Go to the link above-below title - for reviews of the book. This is a book the Transport 2020 group SHOULD have read before recommending a billion dollar trolley/train boondoggle to Dane County.
Seven Myths about Car-Crazy Suburbia p.43-75 of "The road more traveled" book.
1. MYTH one: Americans are addicted to driving. Not ADDICTION, just smart. The car is a better tool than public transportation. Office workers avoid typewriters for computers.
Reasons: to accomplish tasks faster and more efficiently. NY Met area it takes twice as long to get to work on transit than driving. www.demographia.com/db-msajtwtime2000pdf (Us census bureau)
80 % of poor households own at least one car. Even those w/o cars are twice as likely to travel by car as by transit by borrowing a car or riding with someone.
B. Related Myth 1: Europeans ride the rails. Nope. America = 88% of travel. Europe 78% and car driving is increasing twice as fast as America. (Gas is over $5/gal there and rail transit is well established.)
C. Related Myth 2: Key factors in choosing to drive are population density, transit availability, gas taxes or attitudes about commuting.
WRONG!
Key factor is Wealth. Wealthier people around the world choose the comfort, convenience, efficiency, flexibility, freedom, state of the art technology, safety and privacy of driving themselves. More wealth means people will drive and drive more often. Anti Car policies merely make driving experience more miserable, make cities less vital, exacerbate all the ill effects of congestion and lower the standard and quality of living.
2. Myth two: public transit can reduce congestion. (Kathleen Falk (Dane County Exec.) made this statement at press conference with Mayor Dave of Madison in a recent (late June 07) press conference.
A. Use of Public transit has been decreasing, not increasing. 1960-2000 added 63 million workers. Total using transit declined by 2 million. Percentage of workers using transit has fallen 63% since 1960 and now is at 5%* 5% is inflated due to NY numbers being included. Nationwide transit ridership is closer to 1.5%. 25% of NYC workers use transit, 11% in Chicago, no other city breaks 10%.
B. The reason people use transit is they do not have access to cars. Telecommuters outnumber transit commuters in 27 of 50 of the most populous met areas.
C. Transit ridership has dropped wherever wealth has increased. From 80-1995 ridership fell 14% in London, 24% in Paris, 19% in Stockholm, 60% in Frankfurt
D. 52% of American Commuters do not go straight to or from work. Drop kids, dry cleaning, grocery shopping, errands is incompatible with transit.
E. Locally, adding 6-13 stops per hour to auto traffic from commuter train crossings/stops to major/minor roads would paralyze auto traffic, not relieve congestion.
3. Myth three: We can only cut air pollution if we stop driving.
A. April 2004. EPA Admin Mike Levitt. Air standards are getting tougher to meet and are higher than they were. “This isn’t about the air getting dirtier. The air is getting cleaner” Since 1970 driving has increased 155% and the aggregate emissions of the six principal pollutants gave been cut 48%. Ozone levels are lower now than in 1980 and expected to continue to drop.
B. Driving increased about 1-3 % /year but average vehicle emissions are dropping about 7-9% a year.
REASON: Better cars. Today’s cars are 98% cleaner than in 1960’s. 50% of on road carbon monoxide and hydrocarbons comes from 5% of cars. Remove the bad 5% using infrared beams. Clean running new cars driven by wealthier commuters are not the problem, the old jalopies are. Target the polluting vehicles, not ALL vehicles.
4. Myth Four: We are paving over America! (95% of US is open space)
A. There are as many trees in America now as there was 100 years ago. We plant more trees than we cut by a wide margin. Trees take up 1/3rd of America’s space. ... six times as much as development.
B. HOMES: Lot sizes between 1970-2000 shrunk from 14,000 SQ ft to 10,000 Sq.ft (nearly 30% reduction) even though house size increased dramatically (1500 to 2260 Sq. ft. between 1970-2000) If we gave our population into 4 person households each with one acre, we could all fit into area one half the size of Texas. ( by 2050 we would need two thirds of Texas)
5. Myth five: We are running out of Oil! (The OPEC countries started with 412 Billion barrels produced 307 Billion and now has about 819 billion left.)
A. 1874 John Newbury predicted world oil supply would soon run out. 1979 Pres. Carter, “the oil wells are drying up all over the world” M.I.T. economist M.A. Adelman,”The doomsday predictions have all proved false” reason: Ignorance and Ingenuity. Not knowing how much was left and using new technologies to find new reserves-off shore, 10,000 feet deep. When asked when we will run out of oil Adelman answered, “Never”. Coal was predicted to run out, wood never run out, we have never exhausted a major source of energy.
Gas prices adjusted for inflation are cheaper today than in 70’s we spend 6% of income gassing up now and 8 or 9% in the 80’s. An increase from 2.50 to 3.00 a gallon = 300 dollars a year more cost. When prices get too high, new energy sources will replace gas.
B. Myth 6. We are supporting terrorist in the Middle East by burning their oil. 13 % of our oil comes from the Middle East. The majority is from Canada and Mexico. If we lifted restrictions on Alaska and off shore drilling off American coasts we could greatly increase the oil supply domestically.
6. Myth 7. We cannot build our way out of congestion. False. Of the ten largest urban areas, L.A. has the least amount of pavement per person. Dallas has twice as much pavement per person and half the congestion.
A. EXAMPLES of Building out of congestion: Interstate Highways.
Madison's South Beltline. Interstates were Completed in 1980 and congestion not severe as it is today.
In the last 20 years driving doubled but roadways increased by only 4%. Urban travel (vehicle miles traveled) increased by 168% while urban highways increased by 51%.
Portland built transit, Phoenix built roads. Portland has four times as much congestion as Phoenix, even though Phoenix has had a much larger population growth.
B. If you build it, they will come. TRUE. Triple convergence happens when a road is built. People change their commuting behavior.
1-time of travel
2-route,
3-mode.
Example: Madison's South Beltline. 20 years late in being built but today carries massive local and through traffic. Those cities that build ahead of usage control congestion those that ignore congestion increase congestion all around- local, City County, state and US highways. An empty bus or empty train car is evidence of the lack of usage same for a highway. Unlike transit, nearly all highways are used day in, day out, year after year. The congestion in rush hour illustrates the need for more capacity, more roads.
If you build a new school and it fills up few concede we should not have built the school. If gets overcrowded, we build another school, we do not say, “what a waste of money”. Same with highways.
7. We cannot deal with Global Warming unless we stop driving.
FALSE!
A. If you build more highways and have less congestion, you will have less pollution as cars burn less fuel when they are free flowing and not in stop and start congested conditions.
B. Are there problems that are more important, more urgent than global warming?
Yes. Terrorism, the aids epidemic, (2.5-3.5 million killed) malaria 1-3 million killed, world malnutrition……
C. Deal with the increase in problems a slight warming will cause. Clean water world wide to drink, using air conditioners more, improved building codes, more public health training programs, more effective surveillance and emergency response systems.
Wednesday, May 16, 2007
Was Osama Right?

Terrific article in today's (051607) Wall St. Journal. by Bernard Lewis expert on Muslim culture and retired Prof. from Princeton. U.
He points out how Osama bin Laden and his followers had written years ago that the two obstacles to a world Muslim state were the Soviet Union- who they feared for their quick retribution if attacked by Muslims - and the weaker of the two, the U.S.
They viewed the fall of the USSR as their victory - not the free world's-Stage one removal of the infidels - the first and hardest Jihad work for their plan for world domination.
The U.S. was viewed as Stage two - taking it to the enemy- as the easy part based upon the non retaliation, angry threats w/o effective action, hand wringing or offers of aid to those that hit or threatened the U.S. (1979 Tehran hostage crisis, 83 bomb attack on Marines in Lebanon, NY trade center and Mogadishu attacks in 93, Riyadh 95, Kenya & Tanzania embassies in 98, U.S.S. Cole in Yemen in 2000).
I have been using this quote that I have discovered was attributed to Abraham Lincoln during the Civil War that to me perfectly sums up the Finegold/Murtha/Kennedy/Pelosi/Reid anti-American, anti-freedom blather and their "defeat at any cost" utterances:
"Congressmen who willfully take actions during wartime that damage morale and undermine the military are saboteurs and should be arrested, exiled, or hanged." - Though Lincoln did not say it, it still fits.... as J. Michael Waller, "Democrats Usher in An Age of Treason." Insight magazine, 23 Dec. 2003 used it as an introductory quote.