Some more reflections on the big city lifestyle.
July 17, 2006
A Red Light Runner is Killed: Blaming any one besides those who violate the law is unjust.
Albany's Trailer Park: Fox Run is the forgotten victim of our consumerism.
Albany's Violence Problem: Marginialized and forgotten communities create destructive people.
Albany, 2058: What the future of the Capital City may be like after peak oil.
Bikable Buses: It's great to be able to take you bike on the bus.
Bike to Work Day: On Friday you should ride your bike to work.
Brutalism: Some thoughts on my favorite type of architecture.
Cities, A Modern Future: Poverty and a lack of incentives destroy our cities...
Demolish the Howe Library, Save Troy City Hall !: We should be fair in evaluating old buildings.
Economic Development: The fabled search for new employers can be troublesome.
Eminent Domain Can Be Good for All: Government needs the power to be able to build great things private or public.
Fires in California: We need wild fires, but when we get too close to nature we may get burned.
More Then $4.2k for Each Albany Resident: That's how much debt the city now has out.
Psychology of Previous Investment : Why Kunstler’s notion is a misnomer in our modern society.
Regionalization: There are two sides to getting governments to work together.
Speeding: It's dangerous, unneccessary, wastes fuel, and kills.
Suburban Life: Not As Evil As Seems: Andrew ponders over a couple of aspects over suburbs and wonders if they are the great evil we sometimes make them out to be.
The Roundabout Review: A look at the new Sligerlands Bypass and it's roundabouts.
The State Butterfly: Politics, Elementary Schools Students, and making the Karner Blue a state symbol.
When I went to Philadelphia for the first time in my adult life, I was throughly impressed in many ways. Cities represented all that was good in humanity, yet also all that was bad. Cities are the centers of our society, all which our society revolves around. Yet, they also mean the utter most worst poverty and horrors like crime that we must face.
Central Philadelphia was a colorful place, representing a diverse population, wealth, and color, simply not seen in Rural America. People go there for action, to leave their local communities behind. It seemed that the downtown never seemed to slow down, with friendly people all around. Everything was at a scale almost unimaginable by myself.
Yet, it also represented malice and crime. There were homeless people around begging for money in the home of brotherly love. You drove by countless miles of slum, abandoned factories, and poverty at levels that seemed so foreign for a country boy. It seemed like somehow the other side of the city had been ignored for so long, and at such a great scale compared to things in the country.
It seems that everything in big cities are super-sized. All of the evil of the small city simply were bigger, and all of the good in the small city was just a little more grandeur. Big cities aggregate both good and bad together, making for a troublesome mix of joy and sorrow, and creating emotions beyond anything I had ever experienced before in my life.
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