The city of Austin desperately needs to modernize its public
transportation system before it collapses beneath the weight of the city’s ever
growing population, if it hasn’t already. The system of routes ran by city buses
is unnecessarily complicated and at many points redundant with many buses
covering identical lines over short periods of time. Attempting to determine
the appropriate bus to ride by looking at the map of the systems routes has
been known to cause headaches; the colorful lines on the map look more like an
abstract painting than a functioning system of buses. The recently instituted
MetroRail system was a novel idea and the perfect place to begin an overhaul of
the public transportation system, but as it stands currently the rails do not
cover enough of the city. The population of Austin has outgrown the city’s infrastructure.
We must look to the public
transportation systems of cities like New York City and Washington, D.C. whose
extensive rails can deliver you to anywhere in the city quickly and safely. An
underground rail system is the future of public transportation in Austin and
the sooner city officials realize it, the sooner we citizens can avoid spending
an hour stuck in a traffic jam on lovely interstate I-35. Periodic updates and
adaptations are desperately needed in order to avoid a colossal and expensive complete
overhaul; the route city official seem to have chosen.
Friday, July 27, 2012
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
Critique of 'Texas Fred'
“Texas Fred’s” commentary on Mitt Romney’s accusation that
President Barack Obama leaked classified details about the U.S military raid
that killed Osama bin Laden for political gain is incredibly crass, to say the
least. This piece seems to have been written if only to generate a “hell yeah”
response from Fred’s far-right tea party audience. He makes no effort to relay
a point to the reader; comfortable simply restating the beliefs of some of our
nations more radical citizens. If one were to attempt to derive a reasonable
claim from this commentary, not an easy task, it would most likely be that Fred
believes Mr. Obama is not fit for the job of President of the United States of
America. Fred rests his credibility on being a self-proclaimed ‘redneck’ and
his ‘if you don’t like it you can get out’ attitude. He chooses to bypass the
use of structure and facts in his argument; he opts for simple, radical
accusations instead. In this piece, Fred accuses President Obama of many awful
things including “[bowing] to radical Islam” and having “NO love for this
nation.” I think any reasonable reader will easily deduce that these are all
baseless accusations regardless of whether or not Mr. Obama said more to the
press than he should have. It is as if Fred needed only to read the title of
the article he is commenting on in order to run off on this unsupported tangent
about the evils of our current president. Needless to say, anyone looking for a
reasonable political opinion should avoid texasfred.net.
Friday, July 20, 2012
Health Care Reform in Texas
The author of “For better health, pay Perry no mind” is
targeting the politically active citizens of Texas in an effort to reach the
state legislature. Although he or she seems to have done their fair share of research,
there is no mention of the authors name, occupation, or political experience in
this editorial leading to no inherent trust in this opinion written. The author bases his argument on logos; relying
on numbers to forward his case that the state of Texas should cooperate with
the national government in health insurance reform. He notes the six million uninsured Texans and
the opportunity to insure 2.3 million low-income Texans by 2023 if Medicaid is
expanded. While the numbers do not lie
and there is clearly a health care issue in the state, the author
underestimates the costs this reform would place on the government and in turn
the citizens of Texas. He supplies the
number of a $15.6 billion burden on the government of Texas; quite a large
burden considering the state government’s current budget issues and
unwillingness to further tax it’s citizens. The author is correct in suggesting
a need for change in the health care system of Texas, but I believe the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act is not the method of change this state needs
and I support Rick Perry’s decision not to expand Medicaid or set up a health
insurance exchange without first securing its financing.
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
Proposed Change to City Council
The Austin American Statesman reports that a “Petition with
33,000 signatures calls for 10-district City Council plan.” A citizen group, Austinites for Geographic
Representation, has led an effort to change the way the city of Austin elects its
city council members. Currently, six city council members are elected citywide.
The group hopes to expand the number of
council members to ten with each member representing a geographic region of the
city. Although the initiative will already be on the November ballot, the group
symbolically produced a petition with 33,000 signatures, 10,000 more than is
required to place an initiative on the ballot. The council has produced a
hybrid proposal that would increase the number of council members to eight, but
opponents argue that this would not change the current majority Central and
West Austin hold on the council. This article is worth reading because it
directly affects all students enrolled in this course, assuming those attending
Austin Community College live in the city of Austin. It is unfair to have only the interests of a
couple regions of the city represented on the council. With an ever growing
population, it is important that all areas of Austin have their voices heard. This
article provides a nice introduction to an issue voters will have to decide
upon in November.
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