by duke3522 » Thu 16 Mar 2006, 14:05:39
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ab0di', 'F')or an insane road building plan check out
this.
Your tax dollars at work.
"The NAFTA corridors system currently under construction will irreversibly divide the U.S. geographically, economically, and socially for the sake of profit. The cumulative consequences of this "biggest engineering and construction project in the history of the U.S." promise to be more damaging than any natural disaster in modern times.
"The largest of these massive transportation corridors, designed primarily to accommodate NAFTA traffic from Mexico across the U.S., will be 1,200 feet wide and consume 146 acres (almost 1/4 of a square mile) per mile. Because the corridors will contain high-speed passenger and freight rails and underground water, gas, and petroleum pipelines, as well as multiple high-speed truck and passenger vehicle lanes, they will be constructed at grade level and permanently divide the areas through which they pass. To make matters worse, the extensive grading and construction of barriers to protect the high-speed traffic will alter air currents and watersheds and prevent the movement of wildlife.
"The two priority NAFTA corridors under construction, I-35 and I-69, will divide the nation in half from south to north. The I-35 corridor, beginning at the international border at Laredo, will split the states of Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, and Iowa in half, and lop off the southeast corner and the eastern edge of Minnesota. The I-69 corridor will sever the Gulf Coast from the state of Texas and cut diagonally across Arkansas. It will then slice off the western margins of Tennessee and Kentucky before bisecting Indiana and cutting a big chunk out of southeastern Michigan."
And guess where a big chunk of the Indiana Toll Road money is going. To build I-69 from Indianapolis to Evansville. The first step in the Mexico to Canada I-69 project.
It also happens that I-69 passes through my county. And I do not doubt that the NAFTA highway plan is in the works because there are distribution centers popping up all along I-69 in this part of the state. Heck, we have 2 going up in this county alone.
And you know, we are also seeing many ethanol and bio-diesel projects right on or very near I-69. Maybe the thought is that over the road transport will switch over to alternative fuels and keep right on trucking.
This sounds more and more like were all on a train running at full throttle headed toward a cliff. Maybe TPTB think if they just keep stoking the fire the train will just jump off the cliff and land safely on the other side.
Duke of Indiana
<b>I'd rather get my brains blown out in the wild than wait in terror at the slaughterhouse</b>.
Craig Volk, Northern Exposure, A-Hunting We Will Go, 1991