Book a Demo!
CoCalc Logo Icon
StoreFeaturesDocsShareSupportNewsAboutPoliciesSign UpSign In
Download
29547 views
1
2
3
4
5
6
The Poetics of Traffic Jams
7
8
9
I loved the traffic story: for its winning characters (a "poet of
10
thermodynamics" and a "Jam professor"), its clear explication of competing
11
scientific theories, and the satisfaction of knowing that our nation's best
12
physicists are even more annoyed by traffic than are the rest of us.
13
14
I noticed that the story didn't use the word "sprawl." It didn't reference
15
Al Gore's "livability agenda" for the 2000 election or quote any politicians
16
decrying the pernicious social effect of traffic. (Sipress did call the Eastern
17
seaboard 'sprawling,' but that's it). Instead, the story was nicely focused on
18
local trouble spots such as the Capital Beltway and the Woodrow Wilson Bridge.
19
I wonder if this indicates that sprawl has ebbed back into the realm of the
20
regional, or just that Sipress was so annoyed by all the rhetoric that he left
21
it out of his piece.
22
23
Speaking of local issues, the carpetbagger issue rankles me, too, but for
24
different reasons. I keep hearing New Yorkers described as transient drifters
25
whose own roots are so ephemeral that we are willing to let any politician rent
26
a hotel room and represent us. As someone who's lived in four of the five
27
boroughs, whose family (on both sides) has lived in the city since arriving in
28
America, and who worked for the City of New York, I am offended. This is partly
29
because my local pride has been injured, but also because I think that New
30
York--with its size, diversity, abundant businesses, crumbling schools, huge
31
infrastructure, and so on--has local needs that are just as (if not more)
32
particular as any other district in the country. And even if New York City's
33
denizens are more transitory than the average American, residents of New York
34
State are not. So even if we elect an adopted Senator rather than a homegrown
35
one, it won't be because we lack a sense of place.
36
37
Yesterday you warned me not to lump you with radio hosts who chide Hillary
38
for capitalizing on her husband's fame and power. Yet today you wrote that
39
"Hillary owes her celebrity solely to her husband's political career." Yes, she
40
does--just as George W. Bush, Al Gore, and Jack Kennedy once owed theirs only
41
to their fathers. If sons can create political careers based on the successes
42
of their fathers, why can't wives do so based on those of their husbands? If
43
you're going to prevent one political dynasty from being created, you're going
44
to have to topple them all.
45
46
Walter, our correspondence is drawing to a close. Thank you so much for
47
sharing your breakfast thoughts, especially with someone with far fewer years
48
of newspaper-reading (and writing!) under her belt.
49
50
Cheers,
51
Jodi
52
53
P.S.: I never responded to the wager you made with me yesterday. If Rick
54
Lazio wins the New York Senate race, I'll buy you a Manhattan at the bar of
55
your choice.
56
57
58
59
60
61