Just a note to those of you expecting Elaine J. Hanford's Bulletin Boards which I started posting each Monday since 2013. She has put these on hold for an unspecified length of time. I will keep you posted. I will post relevant V.B. Price columns in the BB slot.
Crumbling Infrastructure: Penny-Pinching Ideological Neglect
Summer break this year was spent bumping and slamming along on the nation’s decrepit highways and getting stymied by the closing of one of the country’s thousands of “structurally deficient,” life-threatening bridges. We drove 3,800 miles through eleven states, rich and poor. In every state, stretches of interstates were calamitously neglected. Many roads were so pocked and torn up in places that one time my sunglasses were literally jarred off my face on an interstate in Georgia when we whacked into a pothole we couldn’t steer around. Passing a massive 18-wheeler on a little bridge in Oklahoma, I was startled to see the concrete on the edges of the span crumbling and chipping with rebar exposed. And the more I looked the more I saw.
This is what happens when a major political party — the Republican party that’s owned the White House off and on recently for almost two decades and acts as an immovable obstruction while it’s out of presidential power — refuses to raise taxes to fix the bottom-line necessities of doing business and living life in relative safety.
The Republican anti-tax fixation has directly resulted in 43%, almost half, of the nation’s four million miles of public roadways falling into “poor or mediocre condition,” to use the words of the American Society of Civil Engineers.
This is what happens when the financial elite, and their ideological flunkies in Congress, deprive the country of vital services on the grounds that taxation for public works is somehow a form of income confiscation from the rich — as if only the very rich pay taxes while the rest of us are welfare frauds, lower-class tax evaders and liberal freeloaders. Everybody pays taxes, of course, or at least those of us who don’t have money to burn do, feeling honorably duty bound to support the public good, and can’t snake through arcane tax loopholes created by the rich to force the modestly well-to-do and working poor to pay more than their fair share.
The modern neo-Confederate Republican Party has let America become a down-at-the heel country, outwardly powerful and aggressive but inwardly shabby, its vital arterials and public works allowed to decay and weaken the nation’s ability to compete economically with more sensible countries and even undermine our defense capabilities. America’s interstate highways, started in the mid 1950s by President Eisenhower, have always served a triple purpose — financial, military, and emergency.
A classic case in point is the Hernando de Soto I-40 bridge over the Mississippi River near Memphis, Tennessee. It’s one of the 46,000 bridges in America that are “structurally deficient.” I-40 is the aorta of cross-country American commerce. Like other interstates it is an indispensable conduit for emergency medical care and first responders to rural America, and a vital part of the country’s national defense.
Built in 1949, and carrying some 65,000 vehicles a day, the de Soto bridge was closed down a few weeks ago because of a huge crack in one of its main, underlying girders. This crack was first noticed six years ago and ignored by Mitch McConnell’s Obama-hating, stonewalling U.S. Senate and by four years of ideologically crazed Trumpian legislators and bureaucrats. A smaller bridge south of Memphis on I-55 has taken the rerouted traffic, but can be backed up sometimes for as long two or three hours. Driving home a few weeks ago, it took a 90 minute drive north to find another bridge, in Missouri, that crosses the Mississippi. There was no traffic there. Major trucking companies had apparently not yet decided on the cost benefits of taking that detour themselves.
The Memphis bridge experience gave me a visceral understanding of the problems that President Biden’s $2 trillion plus infrastructure plan will help to solve — including repairing 20,000 miles of the most seriously damaged highways, rebuilding bridges, renovating airports and transit systems, fortifying the nation’s energy grid and providing high-speed broad band service across the country. It will provide funds to upgrade schools, childcare facilities, veteran’s hospitals and modernize federal buildings. It will help repair some of the country’s 2300 “deficient high-hazard-potential” dams as well.
President Biden proposes to pay for all this by upping corporate taxes, using a 15% minimum tax to make a dent in the chronic and scandalous practice of corporate “underpayment” of taxes. Last year, 55 of America’s largest corporations, including FedEx and Nike, paid no taxes at all and a I bet most of them used public roadways and bridges to help make their profits. FedEx certainly did.
Republican’s, of course, are working to undermine Biden’s proposed infrastructure budget, bellyaching about “tax and spend” Democrats penalizing the wealthy for being successful. They’ll try to strip Biden’s plan of a $1 trillion or more. Such is the corrosive power of ideological propaganda and the Republican equations of wealth with virtue and modest means with shiftless ineptitude, when the exact opposite is probably true. How much physical effort does it actually take to let capital gains and dividends grow compared to holding down two to three part-time jobs just to make ends meet, all the while driving on roads that wreck your car and make your commute a daily nightmare?
Driving along those highways, squeezed among breakneck truck drivers, watching load after load of someone’s profits speeding and tailgating behind us, much of those loads destined to clog up at the broken and neglected de Soto bridge near Memphis, I could feel in my bones the reality of how vast personal and corporate wealth is made, much of it through Big Money’s endless war against its own laboring employees, piling up fortunes historically on the backs of slaves and non-unionized workers forced by circumstances to toil for crumbs while proud genteel folk slap themselves on the back for their own virtuous ingenuity.
Those wretched roads and bridges said so much. Truckers — most all of them in shiny new rigs and deep in debt — driving long, numbing hours, crashing and rattling on highways and across bridges that could derail them and kill off those around them. That’s how our world works until it doesn’t, and people get hurt by a hit-and-run ideology that cheapskates public safety to expand private gain. It’s the malign source of everything from climate change to the working poor and a nation of credit card debtors. Of the seven deadly sins, only hubris can hold its own against greed.*Nullius in verba": take nobody’s word for it
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"She who knows others is wise. She who knows herself is enlightened." -Anonymous
The author dumped a truck load of loud anti-Republican Party and voter hatred. He ignores the Democrat Party's consistent pounce onto US Treasury moneybags--filled by us taxpayers--for flashy mega-projects (Solyndra PV factory in CA and so many elsewhere). Essentially, the author is currying favor with the US Treasury's currant masters and not much else.
Posted by: Richard Cathcart | Tuesday, 08 June 2021 at 07:03 AM