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  1. #101
    Veteran scott's Avatar
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    Portland has gone crazy with bike lanes. Seems as though they are trying harder and harder to push cars out, and force people to use public transportation if they aren't a bike rider.
    Sounds like Portland is one of the Nation's leaders in "Reducing our Dependence on Foreign Oil" then.

  2. #102
    Veteran Wild Cobra's Avatar
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    In any event, I was merely making fun of your stupid whining about being forced off the road by bikes and public transportation. You're a god damn fool.
    I'm mainly upset about it because they use gas taxes to pay for something cars can't use. I hate subsidies. Meanwhile, the potholes go unfilled as traffic lanes get narrower, or reduced in number.

  3. #103
    e^(i*pi) + 1 = 0 MannyIsGod's Avatar
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    Thats ok considering all my taxes go to subsidize protecting your gas consumption and unused roads throughout the state. Hate to tell you this, roads are subsidized with or without bike lanes.

  4. #104
    e^(i*pi) + 1 = 0 MannyIsGod's Avatar
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    Of course you ignore that because its inconvenient for you.

  5. #105
    Veteran Wild Cobra's Avatar
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    Sounds like Portland is one of the Nation's leaders in "Reducing our Dependence on Foreign Oil" then.
    Liberals run Oregon. Oregon's motto:

    Oregon. We Love Dreamers.

  6. #106
    e^(i*pi) + 1 = 0 MannyIsGod's Avatar
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    So sad for you WC

  7. #107
    Veteran Wild Cobra's Avatar
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    Thats ok considering all my taxes go to subsidize protecting your gas consumption and unused roads throughout the state. Hate to tell you this, roads are subsidized with or without bike lanes.
    Your opinion is not fact. Fact is gas taxes are used in Oregon for bike lanes.

  8. #108
    Veteran scott's Avatar
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    Liberals run Oregon. Oregon's motto:

    Oregon. We Love Dreamers.
    Seeking the relevence to my statement. Feel free to lend a hand anytime.

  9. #109
    e^(i*pi) + 1 = 0 MannyIsGod's Avatar
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    Fact is gas taxes don't pay for all of roads nor do they pay for protection of your oil assets overseas.

  10. #110
    Mr. John Wayne CosmicCowboy's Avatar
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    SA's props were 1) 1/8 cent sales tax to buy more land over the aquifer and 2) 1/8 cent sales tax to do long green belt/parks in all the creek flood plains in town...

    I voted no on #1 and yes on #2

  11. #111
    No darkness Cry Havoc's Avatar
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    I'm mainly upset about it because they use gas taxes to pay for something cars can't use. I hate subsidies. Meanwhile, the potholes go unfilled as traffic lanes get narrower, or reduced in number.
    Right. You want to subsidize things you use but other people might feel no need for.

  12. #112
    Veteran Wild Cobra's Avatar
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    Seeking the relevence to my statement. Feel free to lend a hand anytime.
    You are right. Oregon is a leader at attempting to rid the people of their right to drive.

  13. #113
    Veteran scott's Avatar
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    You are right. Oregon is a leader at attempting to rid the people of their right to drive.
    Driving is a right?

  14. #114
    e^(i*pi) + 1 = 0 MannyIsGod's Avatar
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    SA's props were 1) 1/8 cent sales tax to buy more land over the aquifer and 2) 1/8 cent sales tax to do long green belt/parks in all the creek flood plains in town...

    I voted no on #1 and yes on #2
    Prop one seems pretty important but probably too expensive too. Prop 2 is meh but its not terrible depending on how the develop the parks.

  15. #115
    Veteran Wild Cobra's Avatar
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    Right. You want to subsidize things you use but other people might feel no need for.
    What am I asking to be subsidized?

    Gas taxes go to roads. Roads are a government function anyway. Even by cons ution, "To establish Post Offices and Post Roads;" Gas taxes are established for the roads, and paid for by users of fuel. If bicyclists want to use the road with their own special lanes, then they should not be paid for from gas taxes like they are in Oregon.

  16. #116
    Veteran Wild Cobra's Avatar
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    Driving is a right?
    Spin much?

  17. #117
    No darkness Cry Havoc's Avatar
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    What am I asking to be subsidized?

    Gas taxes go to roads. Roads are a government function anyway. Even by cons ution, "To establish Post Offices and Post Roads;" Gas taxes are established for the roads, and paid for by users of fuel. If bicyclists want to use the road with their own special lanes, then they should not be paid for from gas taxes like they are in Oregon.
    Then don't complain about bikers using the road, and get used to following behind them at 15-20 mph. They have every bit as much a right to the lane as you do. Some would say more so, since they aren't subsidizing our county's dependence on foreign oil.

    You can't have it both ways. Either you relinquish your right to dominate the road and allow for cycling traffic (realizing that millions of dollars in lawsuits are going to result because of vehicular road rage/accidents when someone behind the wheel of a 2 ton slog plows over a biker), or you help bike lanes to be built so they can use the roads the same as you do at their own speed. Don't like it? Tough. Roads are not exclusively for personal motor vehicles with internal combustion engines.

  18. #118
    Mr. John Wayne CosmicCowboy's Avatar
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    Prop one seems pretty important but probably too expensive too. Prop 2 is meh but its not terrible depending on how the develop the parks.
    Actually, the creek parks would be perfect for San Antonio...they could give people a place close to home to walk/jog//bike away from traffic in a relatively "natural" setting...I know I would only be a couple minutes from one if they developed it...

  19. #119
    Veteran Wild Cobra's Avatar
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    Then don't complain about bikers using the road, and get used to following behind them at 15-20 mph. They have every bit as much a right to the lane as you do. Some would say more so, since they aren't subsidizing our county's dependence on foreign oil.

    You can't have it both ways. Either you relinquish your right to dominate the road and allow for cycling traffic, or you help bike lanes to be built so they can use the roads the same as you do. Don't like it? Tough. Roads are not exclusively for personal motor vehicles with internal combustion engines.
    Love how you conveniently IGNORE my earlier points asshole. I never said I was against them using the roads.

    . I started explaining, but it's obvious. You don't care about my points. You are going to disagree anyway.

  20. #120
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    If you find time to amplify on this, I'd sure appreciate it. Contrary to most of my instincts I voted yes on prop 1.
    I think all the neighborhood street reconstruction stuff is more than justified. The "prettying up" of the downtown streets is also good IMO.

    There's alot of preliminary engineering and mobility studies. For the most part I think those are good, they'll help prioritize projects which is a big deal considering how construction dollars are hard to come by these days. But there are some where there's no chance of the study ever leading to a construction project and that doesn't have any value to the taxpayer IMO. For example, I don't see a point in doing a mobility study for I-35 because it's F'd up, we know it, and there's nothing we can do about it. So what's the point?

    The traffic management stuff out in Oak Hill and on 183 are good.

    Not really a fan of the Guadalupe bike lanes.

    I wouldn't go so far as to say that the Boardwalk is needed, but as someone who likes to jog along the lake from time to time I don't have a problem with it.

  21. #121
    No darkness Cry Havoc's Avatar
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    Love how you conveniently IGNORE my earlier points asshole. I never said I was against them using the roads.

    . I started explaining, but it's obvious. You don't care about my points. You are going to disagree anyway.
    I'm sorry, I didn't feel like scrolling through stellar posts like this:

    I wonder how many on this unofficial Tea Party supported list will win:

    U.S. Senate

    Alaska: Joe Miller

    Arkansas: John Boozman

    Colorado: Ken Buck

    Delaware: Christine O'Donnell

    Florida: Marco Rubio

    Idaho: Mike Crapo

    Kansas: Jerry Moran

    Kentucky: Rand Paul

    Nevada: Sharron Angle

    North Dakota: John Hoeven

    Oklahoma: Tom Coburn

    South Carolina: Jim DeMint

    South Dakota: John Thune

    Utah: Mike Lee

    Washington: Dino Rossi

    U.S. House of Representatives

    Alabama

    4th District: Robert Aderholt

    5th District: Mo Brooks

    Arizona

    1st District: Paul Anthony Gosar

    4th District: Janet Contreras

    5th District: David Schweikert

    7th District: Ruth McClung

    8th District: Jesse Kelly

    Arkansas

    2nd District: Tim Griffin

    4th District: Beth Anne Rankin

    California

    1st District: Loren Hanks

    2nd District: Wall Herger

    3rd District: Dan Lungren

    4th District: Tom McClintock

    11th District: David Harmer

    18th District: Michael Clare Berryhill Sr.

    20th District: Andy Vidak

    21st District: Devin Nunes

    22nd District: Kevin McCarthy

    23rd District: Tom Watson

    24th District: Elton Gallegly

    25th District: Buck McKeon

    29th District: John Colbert

    30th District: Star Parker

    40th District: Ed Royce

    41st District: Jerry Lewis

    42nd District: Gary Miller

    44th District: Ken Calvert

    46th District: Dana Rohrbacher

    47th District: Van Tran

    48th District: John Campbell

    50th District: Brian Bilbray

    Colorado

    1st District: Mike Fallon

    2nd District: Stephen Baily

    3rd District: Scott Tipton

    4th District: Cory Gardner

    5th District: Doug Lamborn

    6th District: Mike Coffman

    7th District: Ryan Frazier

    Delaware

    1st District: Glen Urquhart

    Hawaii

    1st District: Charles Djou

    Idaho

    1st District: Raul Labrador

    2nd District: Michael Simpson

    Kansas

    1st District: Tim Huelskamp

    2nd District: Lynn Jenkins

    3rd District: Kevin Yoder

    4th District: Mike Pompeo

    Massachusetts

    3rd District: Marty Lamb

    4th District: Sean Bielat

    5th District: John Golnik

    6th District: Bill Hudak

    10th District: Jeff Perry

    Michigan

    1st District: Dan Benishek

    2nd District: Bill Huizenga

    3rd District: Justin Amash

    4th District: David Camp

    5th District: John Kupiec

    6th District: Fred Upton

    7th District: Lee Byberg

    8th District: Chip Cravaack

    Minnesota

    1st District: Rand Demmer

    2nd District: John Kline

    3rd District: Erik Paulsen

    4th District: Teresa Collett

    5th District: Joel Demos

    6th District Michele Bachmann

    7th District: Lee Byberg

    8th District: Chip Cravaack

    Montana

    At Large: Denny Rehberg

    Nebraska

    1st District: Jeff Fortenberry

    2nd District: Lee Terry

    3rd District: Adrian Smith

    Nevada

    2nd District: Dean er

    3rd District: Joe Heck

    New Mexico

    1st District: Jon Barela

    2nd District: Steve Pearce

    3rd District: Tom Mullins

    New York

    4th District: Fran Becker

    27th District: Leonard Roberto

    North Dakota

    At Large: Rick Berg

    Oklahoma

    1st District: John Sullivan

    2nd District: Charles Thompson

    4th District: Art Robinson

    5th District: Scott Bruun

    South Dakota

    At Large: Kristi Noem

    Utah

    1st District: Rob Bishop

    2nd District: Morgan Philpot

    3rd District: Jason Chaffetz

    Washington

    1st District: James Watkins

    2nd District: John Koster

    3rd District: Jamie Herrara

    4th District: Doc Hastings

    5th District: Cathy McMorris

    6th District: Doug Cloud

    9th District: Muri

    Wyoming

    At Large: Cynthia Lummis

    Governor

    Arkansas: Jim Keet

    Colorado: Tom Tancredo

    Florida: Rick Scott

    Minnesota: Tom Emmer

    New Mexico: Susana Martinez

    New York: Carl Paladino

    Oklahoma: Mary Fallin

    South Carolina: Nikki Haley

    To find out your opinion on everything in this thread. Maybe keep from posting things that are 6 pages long and I'll consider reading more of what you write.

  22. #122
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    I think all the neighborhood street reconstruction stuff is more than justified. The "prettying up" of the downtown streets is also good IMO.

    There's alot of preliminary engineering and mobility studies. For the most part I think those are good, they'll help prioritize projects which is a big deal considering how construction dollars are hard to come by these days. But there are some where there's no chance of the study ever leading to a construction project and that doesn't have any value to the taxpayer IMO. For example, I don't see a point in doing a mobility study for I-35 because it's F'd up, we know it, and there's nothing we can do about it. So what's the point?

    The traffic management stuff out in Oak Hill and on 183 are good.

    Not really a fan of the Guadalupe bike lanes.

    I wouldn't go so far as to say that the Boardwalk is needed, but as someone who likes to jog along the lake from time to time I don't have a problem with it.
    Thanks for your take on it. I feel a little better.

    Will the bonds be approved in your opinion?

  23. #123
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    Once these bike lanes are established, they become part of the reoccurring cost over time. I'm in favor of licensing bikes and using that cost to help maintain their infrastructure. Roads are supported by gas taxes and shouldn't subsidize bicyclists.

    What gets me is they seem to always put bike lanes on the busy streets. Why not the next street over?

    Portland has gone crazy with bike lanes. Seems as though they are trying harder and harder to push cars out, and force people to use public transportation if they aren't a bike rider.
    Anything you build is going to cost money over time, bike lanes are no different.

    I'm not opposed to bike lanes and don't have a problem with cities spending money on them. That being said, I agree that taking vehicle capacity away from congested streets to put in bike lanes is a bad idea.

    Not sure how it works in Oregon, but in Texas cities can't levy gas taxes. So it's not a case of gas tax money being used to fund bike lanes.

  24. #124
    Veteran scott's Avatar
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    Where's the spin?

    More aptly, where is the relevence to my original statement I was looking for?

  25. #125
    Scrumtrulescent
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    Thanks for your take on it. I feel a little better.
    You're welcome.

    Will the bonds be approved in your opinion?
    I think so.

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