The only place I’ve seen it mentioned was in a terrible Washington Post op-ed about Warren’s wealth tax (though it was the strongest point there).
The only place I’ve seen it mentioned was in a terrible Washington Post op-ed about Warren’s wealth tax (though it was the strongest point there).
Apparently the plan is to bully Congress into authorizing military funding to replace the money he stole for his “emergency”, then using the “emergency” to steal the new funding as well. That would still be nowhere near enough for what he wants to do though.
Not hybrid, but: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Formula_E
And important reminder about the state of Parmesan in the US:
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Only person I’ve ever heard say “gro-in” was my soccer coach as a kid. Pretty sure it was just some dumb “kid’s aren’t mature enough to talk about anything crotch-related using actual terms so let’s make up something stupid instead” but instead of being an actual pronunciation.
My brother is happy not owning a car in Seattle, and is pretty pleased with Zipcar (though he’s upset that they replaced the XC60 they used to have near him). I think it’s a good arrangement for most people who live in urban areas.
Put a price on carbon, and those capitalists will happily change which fuels they use.
Then it should be easy for you to find an example. I’ve certainly never seen them say that.
What makes you think that? Certainly the Kinja posting mechanism has authors write their own headlines. And note that the follow up story today also referred to it as a late hit (in the text of the story).
That would make sense if the team was actually paying for the improvements. When they are bilking Arlington for hundreds of millions it’s less of an issue (Arlington is still presumably selling bonds, but there’s little risk they will default on them).
Living in Manhattan is great except for the costs. Much better than living out in dismal suburbia.
What world do you live in where stadiums just fall apart after 30 years. They are extremely durable buildings. Thew idea that they need to be replaced ever two or three decades is a myth inspired by owners demanding hundreds of millions of dollars from their cities.
If you can get the vast majority of places without a car, why have one. For a rare out of town trip, or even a costco run, you can just rent one (either a traditional rental or a zipcar-type thing) and it will still be vastly cheaper than paying to own, maintain, and park a car while not wasting space in cities for…
Retractable roofs aren’t that expensive. I don’t think there has ever been a retrofit (one was proposed for KC), but my understanding is that you’d be looking at $100M-$200M which is a lot less than $1B. Granted, you would need to do more if you wanted air conditioning, but just having the shade seems like it would…
So Arlington is giving a $500M subsidy, with the Rangers contributing the rest. Except they aren’t exactly, the “Rangers” portion of the tax will mostly be paid for by ticket and parking taxes (you can argue that the Rangers could charge more for tickets and parking if not for those taxes, but I can promise you people…
Always seemed nice when I was there.
Good, though I wonder how tight enforcement will actually be.
Hmm, I didn’t realize that this was already the last season for the Ballpark in Arlington. They’ve moved quickly (maybe they fear that people will actually realize that a huge public subsidy to replace a perfectly nice stadium isn’t actually a good idea, so they wanted to get that public money spent as quickly as…
I was asking because the headline calls it a late hit.