Dead development projects have a way of coming back to life and haunting their cities forevermore. Last week, it was a plan for a self-service warehouse on Arapaho Rd in Richardson that the city council dragged out of its grave and plopped down in the middle of a commercial and residential neighborhood just down the street from city hall, where it will haunt Richardson for twenty years.
But the mother of all living dead projects has to be Dallas's plan to lay a freeway down inside the levees of the Trinity River. No matter how many studies reveal that to be a disaster waiting to happen, the powers that be in Dallas keep finding a way to keep breathing life into that zombie development project.
After the jump, a dream that won't die, a dream to counter these nightmares.
Friday, April 13, 2012
Thursday, April 12, 2012
Wednesday, April 11, 2012
Clicking for Charity
Maybe I just missed the start of this trend, but it seems like a lot of charitable funding decisions are being turned over to online voting. That leads to get-out-the-vote campaigns by champions of those charities.
What better way to drum up online support than through Twitter? After the jump, three tweets with a Richardson connection that caught my attention recently.
What better way to drum up online support than through Twitter? After the jump, three tweets with a Richardson connection that caught my attention recently.
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Review: One Amazing Thing
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I screwed up my life big-time, a lot of ways. Did a lot of stupid stuff. But at least I saw one amazing thing."
One Amazing Thing is the "Richardson Reads One Book" pick for 2012. It's a disaster novel (an earthquake traps a diverse cast of characters in the visa office of the Indian consulate in an unnamed American city). It's an uplifting morality play (victims, in turn, tell stories of events that changed their lives). It's short. It's an easy read. It would make a good book to take to the beach this summer.
After the jump, my review.
Monday, April 9, 2012
Richardson is in a Back-Alley Fight
If you are not in the habit of reading Jim Schutze in the Dallas Observer, you are missing the one must-read columnist in Dallas journalism. Not that he's always right (although he's right more than he's wrong), but he avoids the false equivalence that is standard in most journalism today (in the name of "balance"). Schutze always has a point of view and he's not afraid to let you know what it is, no matter whose feathers he ruffles while making it. No, that's not quite it. Making a point seems to be only a means to an end for Schutze. It's more like ruffling feathers itself is his main purpose. No, that's not it, either. Schutze aims at more than ruffling feathers. He wants to de-feather, de-skin, and de-bone his target altogether. You get the point. It's no accident that Schutze's column in Unfair Park is accompanied by a photo of Schutze pointing the barrel of a gun at the reader. Anyway, let me allow Schutze to speak for himself, to show you what I mean.
After the jump, what Schutze thinks of Richardson (and every other suburb of Dallas).It's a simple challenge. Jefferey Muhammad, I call you a chicken-shit liar. Prove me wrong.Source: Unfair Park.
Friday, April 6, 2012
Repeat Tweets: Texas's History, Richardson's Future
Repeat tweets from March, 2012:
- 2012 03 01 - March is Texas History Month in honor of those Texans who gave us the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the New Testament.
- 2012 03 01 - Headline: "Patients often unhappy with new Texas sonogram law." News that isn't news.
- 2012 03 02 - It was 176 years ago today that immigrants declared independence from Mexico and created the Republic of Texas.
- 2012 03 02 - "Attention Young People: Move to Richardson Now!" It's an ad, but still true. http://t.co/CjJD52uP
- 2012 03 02 - Richardson's TOD can't get here soon enough. Matthew Yglesias on the nationwide shortage of apartments: https://t.co/PBeKyWyH
After the jump, more repeat tweets.
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