Friday, August 03, 2007

"Conservatism" and our infrastructure

I want to share with you an article called "Are the Dead From the Minneapolis Bridge Collapse Victims of Conservative Ideology?" Here's how it gets started:

The tragic collapse this week of a stretch of I-35 spanning the Mississippi river in Minnesota was shocking but should come as no surprise. America's core infrastrucure has been falling apart in very visible ways during the past few years. It's a predictable outcome of the rise of "backlash" conservatism; we've swallowed 30 years of small-government rhetoric, and it's led us to a point in which our infrastructure, once the pride of the developed world, is falling apart around us. We're reaping what we've sown.

Minnesota's Republican governor, Tim Pawlenty, reacted to the disaster by calling a press conference and, with a steely determination worthy of Rudy Guiliani, lying to the American people. Pawlenty insisted that inspections in 2005 and 2006 had found no structural problems with the bridge. But the Minneapolis Star-Tribune
reported that the bridge "was rated as 'structurally deficient' two years ago and possibly in need of replacement." The bridge was borderline -- with a 50 sufficiency rating; if a bridge scores less than 50, it needs to be replaced.

According to
the Pioneer Press, the bridge's suspension system was supposed to receive extra attention with inspections every two years, but the last one had been performed in 2003.

The governor had every reason to obfuscate; in 2005, he
vetoed a bipartisan transportation package that would have "put more than $8 billion into highways, city and county roads, and transit over the next decade." At the time, he was applauded by many Republicans for his staunch fiscal "conservatism."

Oh my. Karma's a bitch, right? The sad thing is that, in this case, it's the innocent who reap the consequences. (On the other hand, wonder how many of those who died or were injured actually voted the Republicans in? Were those tax cuts for the rich really worth it?)

1 comment:

  1. Anonymous7:23 AM

    It may be the government's fault but that doesn't necessarily mean the democrats would have been any different. Whether it's idiocy or spinelessness, this outsider sees a deep core of anti-intellectual, unrealistic, ill thought-out, antisocial conservatism running through most of the US, not just the particular party in power.

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