Bridges & Earmarks

More Than 70,000 Bridges Rated Deficient

More than 70,000 bridges across the country are rated structurally deficient like the span that collapsed in Minneapolis, and engineers estimate repairing them all would take at least a generation and cost more than $188 billion.

That works out to at least $9.4 billion a year over 20 years, according to the American Society of Civil Engineers.

The bridges carry an average of more than 300 million vehicles a day.

That’s a whole pile of bridges! (And I hope that never even comes close to being literally true.)

I suspect a bridge we cross 4-6 times a week is one of them. It’s across the Pudding River on Whiskey Hill Road. I wonder about that bridge especially in winter when the river is high enough to almost “rub” the bridge’s underside.

In a related story, The Hill reports that a House panel OKs $250M for Twin Cities

House Transportation Chairman Jim Oberstar (D) on Thursday called for an increase in gas taxes and more investment in roads and bridges in the wake of the Minneapolis bridge collapse in his home state Wednesday.

Mr. Oberstar, the government is already increasing (very substantially) the price of our fuel. How about the US Congress do the right thing on this one?

Eliminate Earmarks and Better Bridges

(Better there is a verb.)

Or if they simply cannot do without their earmarks, how about this idea: Any earmark in a bill that has nothing to do with the bill shall be permanently replaced with an earmark for maintaining, upgrading, and replacing US infrastructure (beginning with bridges).

An earmark thus replaced cannot appear again in any bill until ten years pass.

Warning: Killer on the Loose

In Your Office

Here’s a new and yet very odd tech threat: the particles emitted by your office printer.

According to an Australian research team associated with the Queensland University of Technology, these tiny airborne particles, which waft outwards from laser printers, can cause health problems including:

  • respiratory issues
  • cardiovascular irritation
  • various types of cancer

Do I hear three cheers for dot matrix printers?

Warning might not apply to you if you don’t have a laser printer close by.

Persecution of Christians Increasing

In Afghanistan. In Turkey. In India. In Kazakhstan. In Malaysia. In Pakistan. In Vietnam. In Iraq.

Are you among the “most”?

Christians continue to be martyred abroad, but few American believers are aware of how pervasive religious persecution is around the world. “Christians in this nation don’t realize how fortunate they are to live in the U.S.,” observes Jim Jacobson, president of Christian Freedom International.

August 1

1980 — I married Ruby Yoder. We’re still married. That’s 27 years.

1988 — Rush Limbaugh launched his national show. It’s still going. That’s 19 years.

2005EduBlogs started. And it hasn’t stopped. That’s 2 years.

2006 — Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad rejected a UN Security Council resolution that gave his nation until August 31 to suspend uranium enrichment. That’s been a whole year. What happened to the resolution? What happened to the enrichment?

2007 — A bridge collapsed into the Mississippi:

Bridge into Mississippi

WizBangBlog has quite a few updates.

Where Does This Fit in Iraq?

Mission Network News reports:

Christian Persecution in Iraq is much worse than most people think, according to a report from the Christian Post.

“The situation is more than desperate,” said White, pastor of 1,300-member St. George’s Anglican Church in Baghdad. White’s firsthand account of the plight of Christians on the ground included a report that 36 members of his own church were kidnapped. Only one has been released so far since the church found enough money to pay his ransom.

White and others also reported that Dora, Iraq has seen many incredibly violent acts against Christians in the last few months. Almost all the churches have been bombed and burned. Almost all Christians have been forced to leave their homes after receiving death threats.

Somehow, this just doesn’t seem right (or even to be expected) in a country “liberated” and “dominated” and “secured” by the United States.

Why is it so?

A Deal to Rue Later?

Rice says Mideast military aid will counter Qaeda:

U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice headed to the Middle East on Tuesday with huge military aid for allies like Egypt and Saudi Arabia, saying it would help counter al Qaeda, Hezbollah, Syria and Iran.

Maybe so.

For myself, I can’t shake the (paranoid?) notion that this weaponry will eventually be used against Israel. And perhaps the US or her interests.

Above all, love God!

since November 9, 2005