After dropping out of the presidential race, Rick Perry is coming home to Texas. Welcome back. What does the future hold for the Texas governor whose presidential campaign crashed and burned so spectacularly?
After the jump, some instant wild speculation.
Friday, January 20, 2012
Newt-mentum
Headlines:
After the jump, the cold splash behind the headlines.
- After Recount, Santorum Wins Iowa
- Perry Drops Out, Endorses Gingrich
- Newt-mentum Surging in South Carolina
After the jump, the cold splash behind the headlines.
Thursday, January 19, 2012
Review: The Art of Travel
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Amazon |
From The Art of Travel, by Alain De Botton (2002):
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My motive was simple and hedonistic: I was looking for beauty. 'Delight and enliven me' was my implicit challenge to the olive trees, cypresses and skies of Provence."
After the jump, my review and excerpts.
Tuesday, January 17, 2012
Richardson Racks Up Rackspace
The one piece of real estate most responsible for starting Richardson on the way to becoming "Telecom Corridor" is the old Collins Radio site on Collins Boulevard. Collins Radio opened its Richardson office in 1951. Sadly, more recently the site sat mostly abandoned after Collins and other tenants moved to newer homes. Recently, the old site is enjoying a renaissance as a computer data center.
After the jump, the electronic age sixty years after Collins Radio.
After the jump, the electronic age sixty years after Collins Radio.
Monday, January 16, 2012
A Barn Raising in Southwest Richardson
In recent posts, I reviewed the City of Richardson's system of representation by at-large elections of its seven city council members. In one post, I pointed out how Dallas's city council (elected in single-member districts) was likely to divide on the issue of a $300 million flood control project that would be of most benefit to only a portion of the city. In another post, I pointed out how Richardson's city council (elected at-large) had pulled together on the West Spring Valley Corridor Reinvestment Strategy that will be of most benefit to only a portion of the city.
David Chenoweth responds in a long post on his own blog titled "Logic, Absurdity and Single Member Districts." I can't tell for sure, but I feel like he thinks his post supplies the "logic" and mine the "absurdity." [Update: Chenoweth clarifies that he was not referring to me or my argument as absurd. I regret the false conclusion on my part.]
After the jump, a brief look at his "logic."
David Chenoweth responds in a long post on his own blog titled "Logic, Absurdity and Single Member Districts." I can't tell for sure, but I feel like he thinks his post supplies the "logic" and mine the "absurdity." [Update: Chenoweth clarifies that he was not referring to me or my argument as absurd. I regret the false conclusion on my part.]
After the jump, a brief look at his "logic."
Friday, January 13, 2012
North Texas Tea Party Shuns Mitt
It's probably no surprise, but the North Texas Tea Party (NTTP) reports that its members don't much like the likely GOP presidential nominee, Mitt Romney. Three candidates rank higher in Tea Party preference: Rick Santorum, Newt Gingrich, and, um, I forget the third. Oops. Oh yeah, it's Rick Perry. 35% of those who responded to the NTTP survey prefer Rick Santorum, 27% Newt Gingrich, and 13% Rick Perry. Mitt Romney is the first choice of only 9.7%.
After the jump, my analysis.
After the jump, my analysis.
Thursday, January 12, 2012
Stop! Give Me Your Money!
Red-light running isn't smart. Red-light running isn't safe. Red-light running kills. But cities that wanted to do something about it faced a quandary: the cost of putting extra patrols at every intersection to catch red-light runners was prohibitively expensive. So, local government did what private industry had already done (to combat shoplifting, for example): use cameras to automate the task, reducing labor costs. Suddenly, it became practical to enforce a common sense traffic regulation that even two-year-olds know: a red light means stop. (A yellow light, on the other hand, means something else altogether.)
Then, a funny thing happened on the road to highway safety. After the jump, we follow the money.
Then, a funny thing happened on the road to highway safety. After the jump, we follow the money.
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