Agenda 21 / 2030
Foreshadows Convention of States, by Ileana Johnson,
5/26/17, American Policy Center
The recently installed
speed tables around the mall are too high, the asphalt around is crumbling, and
deep pools of rain water are gathering around them as there is no proper
drainage. These were totally unnecessary; on any given day traffic is backed up
and very slow, nobody is speeding. They were installed to make it more
difficult for people to use their cars to go shopping; the regional planners
want residents to use the new Metro line and the bus lines already in
existence. They want to “nudge” Americans out of their cars.
The entire area is now
extremely congested thanks to the many high-rise, mixed-use apartments
overbuilt to suffocating capacity. The construction of the Metro line
eliminated more driving roads and businesses.
The EZPass lanes from
the Beltway were reallocated without much input from the American taxpayers and
given to investors who now scalp drivers during rush hour by as much as $30 per
8-mile commute one way. Because the average commuter cannot afford such
confiscatory rates, now the interstate is even more congested. Before EZPass,
when the lanes were HOV, anybody could use the lanes for free during non-rush
hours and during rush hour if they had 2-3 occupants per car. It seemed very
equitable; these roads were built with taxpayer’s money. The investing group
claimed that they had spent a few billions in improvements.
Bicycle paths are being
built everywhere, downtowns are closed to traffic completely, streets are
narrowed to make driving more inconvenient, parking lots are eliminated,
parking garages charge exorbitant fees, and high-rises are built without any
parking spaces, all in an effort to discourage Americans to own a car and
eventually to force them into public transportation.
New York boasts 400
miles of bike paths; they have transformed Times Square into a pedestrian zone,
“equity of space” as planners said, where everyone can relax and spend quality
time with each other rather than alone in cars, driving all the time. What if
one needs to rush somewhere?
Millennials are first in
line to advocate for bike paths, but I don’t see any of them biking to work on
the dangerous Beltway to and from D.C.; they are usually alone in their
Beamers.
I am familiar with the
proletariat masses having no cars during my years of living under a communist
regime. We stayed close to home, within a 40-mile radius by bus or train, or as
far as we could bike, or our feet could carry us. But the ruling elite had
chauffeurs, elegant cars, and planes at their disposal.
Source:
American Policy Center
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