Its too expensive is more than just an excuse. Good luck convincing a city council to go way into debt upgrading every single road all at once. The people building the road want to be paid, council needs the dollars to pay them and they only have so much. Short of redesigning the entire economy and function of the country, we can’t redesign or fix the roads without money.
What we can do is slowly improve one road at a time with more reasonable spending, for example making significant redesigns when the road is due for rehabilitation instead of just hiring a company to copy and paste new asphalt and paint. It will inflate rehab costs but the improvements will be worth it and save more money over time.
If I understand correctly, you’re misunderstanding his frustration. He doesn’t need an explanation of how the situation plays out in the current economic system. He’s frustrated that the resources are available to fix the problem but the current economic system is flawed and doesn’t efficiently apply these resources.
Not only does it fail to be efficient, it’s being exploited.
Short of redesigning the entire economy and function of the country,
Yea, that’s kinda the entire point I’m getting at.
If “duh economy” is preventing us from progressing, then we need to change how the economy works. I don’t care about the flimsy excuses that are predicated by the false assumption that we can’t change the system.
Its too expensive is more than just an excuse. Good luck convincing a city council to go way into debt upgrading every single road all at once. The people building the road want to be paid, council needs the dollars to pay them and they only have so much. Short of redesigning the entire economy and function of the country, we can’t redesign or fix the roads without money.
What we can do is slowly improve one road at a time with more reasonable spending, for example making significant redesigns when the road is due for rehabilitation instead of just hiring a company to copy and paste new asphalt and paint. It will inflate rehab costs but the improvements will be worth it and save more money over time.
If I understand correctly, you’re misunderstanding his frustration. He doesn’t need an explanation of how the situation plays out in the current economic system. He’s frustrated that the resources are available to fix the problem but the current economic system is flawed and doesn’t efficiently apply these resources.
Not only does it fail to be efficient, it’s being exploited.
Yea, that’s kinda the entire point I’m getting at.
If “duh economy” is preventing us from progressing, then we need to change how the economy works. I don’t care about the flimsy excuses that are predicated by the false assumption that we can’t change the system.