The Big Dig began with activists who hated highways

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 27 ก.ย. 2024
  • The most expensive highway project ever built in America began with a man who hated highways. An activist and an engineer, Fred Salvucci helped stop a highway from being built through Boston. Then he came up with another idea: tear down an elevated highway through the city and replace it with a tunnel.
    The project became known as the Big Dig. It was one of the most notoriously troubled infrastructure projects in American history; yet it delivered on its promise to transform the city of Boston.
    This is the first in a nine-part podcast series about the history and politics of Boston's Big Dig. It was created as an audio experience; this presentation includes archival images.
    Episode 2: • How two competing tunn...
    Episode 3: • How Boston's Big Dig s...
    Episode 4: • Here's why Boston's be...
    Episode 5: • It took a feat of engi...
    Episode 6: • Here's how billions of...
    Episode 7: • How a power struggle o...
    Episode 8: • Boston's Big Dig tunne...
    Episode 9: • The Big Dig transforme...
    You can find more about The Big Dig podcast at www.wgbh.org/p...
    GBH News is a premier source for in-depth local news and original story telling based in Boston, Massachusetts.
    Subscribe to the GBH TH-cam channel: www.youtube.co....
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ความคิดเห็น • 501

  • @GBHNews
    @GBHNews  10 หลายเดือนก่อน +57

    Hey Big Dig Podcast listeners! Would you be interested in seeing extra archival source material from the time of the Big Dig? Let us know:

    • @Bostonguy222
      @Bostonguy222 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Yes please

    • @edmowrey9755
      @edmowrey9755 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Maps! Maps! Maps! Let us LOOK at the various plans and decisions.

    • @tonymasiellovids
      @tonymasiellovids 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Yes! I would be very interested in archival footage. I am particularly interested in footage about the Southwest Expressway, but it all is very interesting. Thank you!

    • @fredjr68
      @fredjr68 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Yes

  • @NuncNuncNuncNunc
    @NuncNuncNuncNunc 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +132

    Worth noting, the neighborhoods the highway would have cut through had low car ownership, i.e. these were roads for people outside the area to bypass those neighborhoods. There was a similar unfinished highway in Baltimore. Other states unabashedly demolished huge swaths of land through communities without too much thought for the people being displaced.

    • @Jorge-lh6px
      @Jorge-lh6px 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      New York City being the key example as to why such a highway plan has disastrous effects on a city.

    • @alcubierrevj
      @alcubierrevj 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      Yea, Exhibit A: Cross Bronx Expressway

    • @jasonfischer8946
      @jasonfischer8946 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      That Baltimore highway is still there and falling apart.

    • @sdeepj
      @sdeepj 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      These highways should have been built around the city, rather than through them and destroying them

    • @DTD110865
      @DTD110865 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@jasonfischer8946 If you're talking about the one in Baltimore that I'm thinking of, it should've been kept open.

  • @Xsiondu
    @Xsiondu ปีที่แล้ว +126

    Holy crap. This is so well written and presented i feel moved and like i was living through this. It's amazing.

    • @hotmetalslugs
      @hotmetalslugs 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      GBH is no joke.

    • @ryananderson2346
      @ryananderson2346 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I came to say the same thing! Excellent job

  • @gregl1927
    @gregl1927 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +286

    If only they connected North Station and South Station by rail, then the project would be considered a success. Instead we got an expensive tunnel--just for cars, mostly for people that don't even live in the city.

    • @joshualapin7015
      @joshualapin7015 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +27

      That’s true but I still think it’s way better than what was there before

    • @aldinlee8528
      @aldinlee8528 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      There is ZERO reason to connect those two stations with 'through' rail capability. ZERO! Get over it! Paris and other awesome cities, have many inter-city rail stations, and they are NOT through rail stations. Geeeeeeeesh! They know how to spend their money well . . . the U.S. does not.

    • @patsfreak
      @patsfreak 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +28

      As someone from Maine cut off from the rest of the country by rail… yup.

    • @andrew_ray
      @andrew_ray 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +45

      ​@@aldinlee8528Strange to use Paris as an example, the city that has spent decades doing exactly what you suggest we shouldn't. Haven't you heard of the RER? That's the power of through-running.

    • @Matt02341
      @Matt02341 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      North south rail connect. Connecting NH to Cape Cod think of it.

  • @arthurdent8022
    @arthurdent8022 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    Thank you for this. I worked for a few months in Boston in the mid nineties. Looked at drainage in the rail yards related to the "big dig" which i knew little about. Its wonderful to see the bigger picture 30 years later. Thank you.

  • @BEdmonson85
    @BEdmonson85 ปีที่แล้ว +62

    Wow, what an incredibly well done documentary. I have no investment in Boston, but I was sucked in. Bravo!

  • @argonunya8751
    @argonunya8751 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I'm of working class Italian decent and also a civil engineer. I heard the same argument Fred Salvucci's parents made: "be a good worker and then go to college and become a good engineer and afterwards, see which one you like". 30+ yrs later, my engineering degree has taken me around the world. oh, and BTW, my college engineering building was in an old candy factory. Great podcast series, GBH.

  • @TheHonestPeanut
    @TheHonestPeanut 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    "A highway miracle knifing through the heart of new England" nice choice of wording.

  • @cannyexplorer5357
    @cannyexplorer5357 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    I remember flying into Logan airport each summer to visit my family in Burlington. Wondering if all the construction there and in the city would ever finish. Family would not drive to or from the airport to collect me so traveled on the bus to Woburn where they met me. Sadly those days are gone, matriarch of the family no longer with us and cousins now scattered due to politics. Have wonderful memories of those six weeks school holidays stays.

  • @mcb187
    @mcb187 ปีที่แล้ว +57

    I used to be amazed at our infrastructure, how the bridges towered over cities, how tunnels crossed vast rivers, how we managed to connect every place in the US with a superhighway. And then I came to the realization that because of my vision, I cannot drive a car.
    On, I thought, how much difference could that nake? I see people take the bus on TV and in the movies all the time, can’t be that hard! Well, I live in Colorado Springs, which is statistically the worst city in terms of public transportation above 500,000 on earth. Not in colorado, not in the US, on EARTH. I need to walk 2 miles to get the bud, and even then, I can’t get everywhere I need to go conveniently or quickly. If I miss a transfer, I’m stuck for at least 15 minutes, sometimes up to an hour!
    So, I started researching other cities. Surely Denver is better, right? Barely, but they have their own problems. And then I found out how absolutely terrible our intercity transportation is. You think it’s bad in an urban area? Your in for a nasty surprise. What if I want to visit my grandpa in Grants, NM? Good luck getting between Colorado Springs and Albuquerque! And don’t even think about getting from there to Grants!
    It didn’t use to be like this, if I wanted to go visit grandpa in the 1850’s, I could have gone by rail, or bus. And it would have been trivial! But the interstates, then the airlines killed the railroads, and the bus companies got only the folks which no other option, and turned to shit.
    I am going to be a civil engineer with a focus on transportation. But instead of designing highways and huge interchanges like I thought I would do when I was younger, I’m going to try and get public transportation projects going. I’m not the only one who can’t drive. The financially disadvantaged, the elderly, the young, people with medical conditions that make operating vehicles difficult or dangerous, all can’t drive. And I plan to be in their corner, helping push through projects that will make their lives easier.
    I do hope I’m not the only one who thinks this way. I hope I will have allies in the government and private engineering sector. But if I don’t, I’m going to do my best anyway.

    • @youngchu1638
      @youngchu1638 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      It also happened in Buffalo NY in 1960s. Right now, it's happening (I-10 expansion) in Houston TX. People in this country "hates" anything new and stay with car-based solutions. If you dig deeper how highways are built, it will shake your head. It goes above and over for African-American neighborhoods (destroying their businesses like barber shops, eateries, churches), but under and below for caucasian neighborhoods (saving their small businesses). Color of the Law, anyone?

    • @Freshbott2
      @Freshbott2 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      The point you touched on about disadvantaged people is spot on and I want to add. When you’re too young or too old or too drunk or too sick or on vacation or your car’s broken or your partner’s borrowing out etc. this isn’t a pity story about the kinds of people suburbanites can never be convinced to care about. Unless you know anyone born as an adult and with money in the bank, at one time or another- multiple times, that’s 100% of people. It’s not a minority.

    • @Comm0ut
      @Comm0ut 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      There were no "buses" in the 1850s and no non-local travel was trivial. There was very little rail either. You should know better than to so imply.

    • @mcb187
      @mcb187 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      That was a typo. Should read “1950s”.

    • @TheKuptis
      @TheKuptis 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@mcb187 Well then edit it. You can edit your own comments.

  • @HeldenFurlong
    @HeldenFurlong ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Thank you and well done! I'm looking forward to the whole series.

  • @BretSilverberg
    @BretSilverberg 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    As a lifelong Massachusetts man who grew up in the 90s-00s I loved every second of this

  • @electro_sykes
    @electro_sykes ปีที่แล้ว +27

    if you hate highways so much prioritise public transit not underground highways

    • @AppalachianMountaineer1863
      @AppalachianMountaineer1863 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Public transit doesn’t translate to interstate highways. Public transit isn’t the solver of all problems

  • @aegisofhonor
    @aegisofhonor 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    the big dig, despite it's delays and huge cost to build, was a MASSIVE success for Boston, for Massachusetts, for New England, for America as a whole. It brought wealth and prosperity to Boston and the North East more then even it's most passionate advocates could ever imagine. It might have been expensive and with long delays, but it has already paid for itself and will continue to pay dividends for the North East for many many years to come.

  • @ConvincedIdiot
    @ConvincedIdiot 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    I am 1000% here for the next episode, and any following.
    I moved to Boston in 2011, and have always wanted to hear more about the origin of the project, the causes and effects, etc....
    Very well made, loved it...

  • @pookatim
    @pookatim 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    The Interstate highway system was built as part of the Defense System of America. Eisenhower, who was the Supreme Allied Commander of World War II brought his experience with logistics to the office of President. When he took office it was clear that there was no way to quickly and efficiently move military equipment around America in the event of an invasion. The Interstate Highway addressed that. With this system and its wide, sturdy roadways things like tanks and supply trucks could move swiftly and efficiently from anywhere to anywhere in the US. This is also why there are long straight, unobstructed sections that could serve as runways for aircraft. It is why all the highways were numbered with odd numbers running North and South and even numbers running East and West. Any driver would immediately know the direction of his travel from border to border and from coast to coast. Before the interstate there were only "routes" which were a series of local roads and highways drivers could follow to follow long distances such as Route 66 or Route 27 the Lincoln Highway. These route often ran right through populated towns with narrow roads and lightly built bridges. Not at all what the military would require in an emergency.

    • @NewBunny-vc2pm
      @NewBunny-vc2pm 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      And Eisenhower was wrong. Today, a tank would have no chance getting into Boston, it would be stuck in bumpah to bumpah traffic with every officer worker in a single car in front of it.

  • @FishtownRec
    @FishtownRec ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Americans are able to build, construct, design, and manufacture whatever he puts his mind too. However, that dream is fading away, faster and faster everyday.

  • @Anon21486
    @Anon21486 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    It is always interesting to see something of the past and how it shaped the present day. However, I think it must be stated that you could only imagine what would have been if the highway progress wasn't stopped when it did. Luckily, remnants of the time is still completely visible on Google Maps so here is a little guide, starting from the south working northward....
    Canton, MA: Where I-95 makes a sharp turn and I-93 ends, you can actually see the clove-leaf intersection with 2 pigtails heading north. This was where I-95 was suppose to continue into Boston. If you continue northward from there, you will get past the woods to the Providence/Stoughton Commuter Rail line. You can continue on that rail line (eventually connecting to the MBTA Orange Line) into Boston to see where the I-95 was suppose to go.
    Boston, MA: On the Boston side, you can see the bottom portion of the Inner City Beltway and in fact, people drive along it every day. However, it goes by a different name, Melnea Cass Blvd/Mass Ave Connector.
    Somerville, MA: Although there was great discussion of the highway being proposed to go through Cambridge, MA, it should be noted of where the northern section of the Inner City Beltway was to be connected to present day I-93. Looking at Somerville where the I-93 Northbound exit towards Sullivan Square and where Storrow Drive connects to I-93, you can still see the little offshoot where the northern portion was suppose to begin.

    • @pappaslivery
      @pappaslivery ปีที่แล้ว +1

      There's a number of other places around greater Boston of unbuilt highways.
      The highway that carries rt1 up the hill from the rotary at Revere was supposed to veer right over the marsh.
      Rt 3 was supposed to carry through Lexington to meet rt 2. That's why rt 2 grows to 8 lanes unnecessarily.

    • @Anon21486
      @Anon21486 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@pappaslivery I didn't mention the Rt-1 to I-95 tail in Revere because that happened after the inner belt was canceled.

    • @edwardmiessner6502
      @edwardmiessner6502 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@Anon21486 No, that section of I-95 through the Rumney Marsh was supposed to go through the Lynn Woods Reservation, destroying the sanctity of that park and polluting Lynn's water supply. That road also was cancelled by Governor Sargent.
      And Route 2 was supposed to continue through North Cambridge and Somerville from the Alewife Rotary (now a stoplight) by veering over to and following along the Fitchburg Branch of the Commuter Rail and it was supposed to hook up to the Inner Beltway in a 5-storey interchange right over Union Square Somerville.

    • @pappaslivery
      @pappaslivery ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Anon21486 yeah, it's just fascinating where stuff was intended to go.

    • @pappaslivery
      @pappaslivery ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@edwardmiessner6502 I wish there was a better connection for alewife to be an interchange between cars and subway at the end of rt 2. My point is more that rt 3 ends at 128 creating a massive bottleneck. The roads were designed to have all these connections but some of them don't exist. It would have been better to be a more cohesive setup.
      In retrospect, if the inner belt was built first and it's disdain from locals stopped the central artery being built, would Boston have been better or worse off?
      And to me there was no need to go through the lynn woods, but a connector spur into Lynn similar to lowell would have helped that city connect far better than it does today, and that part of the mess was already made. Now we have a bad rotary at bell circle, and a bad rotary leading up the hill into saugus

  • @RPSchonherr
    @RPSchonherr 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +31

    We need to stop widening roads because of congestion. Instead, we should be building mass transit on those same routes.

    • @DTD110865
      @DTD110865 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      No, we need to resume widening and building roads. And that doesn't mean I'm against mass transit either.

    • @RPSchonherr
      @RPSchonherr 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      @@DTD110865 The more roads get widened the more traffic uses it. The jams never end because people just build around it. If instead they used the space for mass transit more people can travel in less space making road traffic lighter.

    • @DTD110865
      @DTD110865 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      @@RPSchonherr Even in places that need mass transit, we also need better roads. Stopping highway improvements causes more traffic jams, and air pollution.

    • @maroon9273
      @maroon9273 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Only widening should happened is new bus and for local roads seperated bike lanes.

  • @thastayapongsak4422
    @thastayapongsak4422 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    This felt like watching a documentary made in the 2000s, in a good way.

  • @AutumnBosco
    @AutumnBosco 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Can’t wait to watch/listen to the rest! This was an amazing overview of this story. This gave me more perspective of what the highway building atmosphere was like back then, a clearer view than anything else I’ve seen.

  • @robertbauer3676
    @robertbauer3676 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    The Big Dig was costly for Boston, for Massachusetts for the US. It has had longstanding ramifications for public works projects going forward. However, it did make Boston immensely better. Getting rid of that awful raised highway improved downtown boston by orders of magnitude. Its cleaner.

    • @eliasadam2345
      @eliasadam2345 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Agree, I remember how noisy the whole area was as a kid. It was the most ridiculous highway system too. I remember the sharp left you took right as you got to the north end.
      The parks they built in place of the old overpasses look very nice. City needed more green and plazas.

  • @edwardmiessner6502
    @edwardmiessner6502 ปีที่แล้ว +19

    It's unconscionable what the highway builders did to that stretch of Jamaica Plain and Roxbury --- turn thriving neighborhoods into a forerunner of the 1970s South Bronx and 2000s Detroit. But people were able to stop the roads that would have choked the city with even worse traffic!
    I worked at the Mass. Highway Department 1985 to 1999 and there were plenty of discussions about the Big Dig when I was in the South Boston highway district office. One of my coworkers worked on I-95 South through the Neponset River marshes and there was this enormous turtle 🐢 that had to keep moving downstream. And he said one fine day the turtle settled in behind Governor Francis W. Sargent's sister's house and that when she heard where the highway would go, she was livid. And my coworker said that was the real reason why Governor Sargent stopped the highways! I don't think it was the only reason.

    • @alanstevens1296
      @alanstevens1296 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      So would they rather that the old Central Artery viaduct was still in operation?

    • @NuncNuncNuncNunc
      @NuncNuncNuncNunc 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@alanstevens1296 The Inner Belt and Central Artery were different routes. This episode covered the Inner Belt, so not sure what you are getting at.

    • @alanstevens1296
      @alanstevens1296 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@NuncNuncNuncNunc
      I replied to a poster who objected to the impacts of the highway that was built in the 1950s.

    • @4149stonepony
      @4149stonepony 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Sounds like a great exaggeration, they built highways in every city and they did not turn into Detroit or the Bronx. Why the clunky comparison but yeah we should all be happy because elitist groups got their way.

    • @timregan1005
      @timregan1005 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      what stretch of jp and roxbury? what are you talking about? the forest hills overpass? there's no highway in jp/rox

  • @ronaldsmith6829
    @ronaldsmith6829 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Another thing (sorry about the previously long post) about the cost overruns: some of this has to do with harassment lawsuits that delay these projects and inflate the cost of it as well. In California it doubles and triples the cost of doing just about anything. In fact, often in determining the cost of a project, the people involved in planning projects will also take into account how much it will cost for the Court fights involved too. It's often more than the cost of the project itself.

  • @GeoMeridium
    @GeoMeridium 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    As a Mainer, I think if Boston builds a north-south tunnel, Portland, ME should build a double tracked tunnel of its own under the promenade so that there can be an Acela/commuter rail station under Monument Square.
    While Portland is small, the downtown has a walkable traditional urban core that goes on for a couple miles, and many of the small surrounding towns are the same way. There are also a couple abandoned railway lines with very convenient alignments that could be used for transit if there was a central tunnel/station to tie everything together.
    A tunnel is also needed because the current Portland Amtrak station is held back by not being in a walkable or attractive location near tourist areas. Although there is a push for a station by the Medical Center, it's still over a mile away from the Old Port and Commercial Districts, where the density and tourist areas are.
    It's also worth mentioning that a fair number of European cities with similar populations/settlement patterns have pulled similar networks off (Luzern and Innsbruck come to mind), and I think proper planning, we could fully utilize the tunnel (and have a de-facto 5 stop downtown subway line), by funneling a few low frequency commuter rail lines into it (accumulating into semi-decent headway for inner-city journeys).
    If the tunnel existed, we wouldn't really need any new railway tracks to get regional rail service going as the freight companies have essentially abandoned the corridor between the East End bridge and Yarmouth. The Midcoast Downeaster route going north also already has walkable, underutilized station sites in Freeport, Brunswick, and Bath (currently not in use), and it has the potential to offer a Park & Ride at Exit 15 on I295 for commuters. Looking south, the same goes for Biddeford/Saco, Old Orchard Beach, and Wells.
    There's another convenient/unused corridor starting at Westbrook Mills that goes by the soon-to-be-finished mixed use Rock Row development and Jetport that could function more like an LRT.
    These lines might serve small towns with less demand, but even half-hourly service on 2-car trains could accumulate into 7-minute headway for downtown trips.

  • @Matty002
    @Matty002 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    i didnt know boston accents could sound nice, but hearing fred salvucci talk was actually pleasant 👀

    • @stephenlight647
      @stephenlight647 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      That’s because, uncharacteristically, he wasn’t yelling at you! 😂

    • @cisium1184
      @cisium1184 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      When mild, New England accents can be very pleasant. This is true of most accents, really.

  • @baja1988_Texas
    @baja1988_Texas ปีที่แล้ว +22

    The interstates should never have been routed through the cities, but around them instead. Then let state and local government figure out how best to connect the inner city with the interstate outside of town.

    • @makeitpay8241
      @makeitpay8241 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      there was a lot less traffic back when they were built.

    • @TheRandCrews
      @TheRandCrews ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Exactly autobahn in Germany, which they tried to replicate it, is designed that way. Lol my city in Canada is one of the only cities to not have a freeway or highway near to downtown, it had former routes marked for highways but it got bypassed anyways

    • @perfectallycromulent
      @perfectallycromulent ปีที่แล้ว +4

      you should look at a map of New York and tell me how 8 million people on Long Island are supposed to get to the rest of the country without interstate type highways going thru part of New York City.

    • @jacobe9790
      @jacobe9790 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@perfectallycromulentThere’s a more effective and less space intensive form of transport that can move people outside of dense areas to places where they can be connected to other methods of transport or take them all the way to where they need to go: rail

    • @blessedbow720
      @blessedbow720 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@jacobe9790 not to mention a more efficient way that can travel both day and night across the country: also rail

  • @interstellarphred
    @interstellarphred ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Waited longer for rapid transit to North Shore in lieu of the cancelled highway; Central Artery/ Tunnel sucked out the oxygen for fifty years out, now the mass transit railways are falling apart faster than they can be maintained.

    • @eriklakeland3857
      @eriklakeland3857 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      The Boston Metro Area desperately needs the North-South Rail Link

    • @interstellarphred
      @interstellarphred 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@eriklakeland3857 Did a lot of advocacy in which the link was promoted, but discovered functional problems that created a lot of deal breakers.
      Not the least being this tunnel would be some 80 to 100 feet below sea level, with lots of holes in it at the deepest parts, next to a rising ocean. They lost me when the promoters proposed shoving inflatable corks into all the pedestrian passages and porter Square depth escalators when a storm was coming.
      Got to hobnob with a lot of pro transit engineer types, and started to grow a consensus that the link should be to the West of the downtown, on higher ground,
      essentially doing the envisioned ring corridor as a FRA spec. heavy railway. ( if it cannot run on the national system, it is light)
      There is already a link in mothballs out in Worcester, along with an underutilized airport.

    • @eliasadam2345
      @eliasadam2345 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@eriklakeland3857As someone living in NH, no thanks. It'll just encourage more budget minded tourists from NYC coming here in the summer. Let those people go to Cape Cod instead where it's been ruined by them.

    • @interstellarphred
      @interstellarphred 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@eliasadam2345 The sheer volume of cars ruins a place long before the people do. Note how "scenic" was dropped from the auto tags? the widened roads with the noise walls saw to that. The massholes subsidize the NH economy on so many aspects, yet they will deny that.

    • @eliasadam2345
      @eliasadam2345 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@interstellarphred Great points. But no thanks to connecting the rail system between South Station and North Station. Nobody complains about the massholes who come up here to make big purchases for no sales tax on the weekends. What people in NH and Maine can't stand right now are tourists who never leave.

  • @de-fault_de-fault
    @de-fault_de-fault 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +23

    Sargent's courage in telling it like it was is almost impossible to imagine now. Just a few years later there began a targeted effort by certain members of the political class to undermine the public's fundamental belief that the public sector-at the end of the day, the public itself-can accomplish big things, or should even try. And so 50 years later our landscape is still scarred by ever larger highways, our time still stolen by the false promise that we can get there faster if we work against each other instead of together, our planet still inching closer to being uninhabitable, our communities still ever more fragmented by the isolation that comes with each person moving about in a bubble equating freedom with the hope of free parking. But we can do big things, and we have to. Simply turning to the profiteers of the status quo and saying "please take our public funding and then fix the problem as you see fit, because we've been told you do it more efficiently by skimming profit off the top and then choosing from a range of options limited to what keeps you in business than we could do it by actually addressing what we need" has brought us here. The only way out is to save our public institutions from the people trying to drown them, and then use them to do the hard work of putting our house in order. That's what they are for, after all.

    • @tackywhale5664
      @tackywhale5664 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      You really don't seem interested in engaging about practical problems in good faith, unlike Salvuci.

  • @francoistombe
    @francoistombe 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Structures like this have to be regarded in the long term. The Boston subway system was started 140 years ago. Every bit of tunnel was expensive at its time of construction but once built it is forever and today is regarded as an excellent investment. Same said for water systems. This dig may be a white elephant today but ridding the city of the SE Distressway will be a big positive in the long term. My only caution is that if one is from outside, familiarize yourself with the route before driving it. As one is only looking at concrete walls one has to know where you are from knowledge and memory. There are no visual clues. Take a wrong turn and you could end up anywhere but not where you intended. Speaking from experience.

  • @himbourbanist
    @himbourbanist ปีที่แล้ว +80

    Can't help but think that fully removing the highway instead of just covering it up would have been a much better solution

    • @de-fault_de-fault
      @de-fault_de-fault 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +45

      In the long run, absolutely. But any time you suggest getting rid of car infrastructure, people lose their minds, so the political calculus is difficult. The first thing people say is "but then all those cars will go into the streets" rather than "Oh yeah then I guess if I want to get to that spot I just won't drive." And unfortunately, the (100% reasonable) backlash against building highways in populated areas also brought a sort of (100% absurd) generic NIMBYism to the surface, where people also oppose building the transit projects that would help people not even miss having a highway to drive on.

    • @popcorn8153
      @popcorn8153 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

      @@de-fault_de-fault Milwaukee is having the same debate with a strip of highway called I-794 right now. They want to tear it down because it cuts right through downtown, but the opposition says it's too late and we just need to accept the "reality". The reality is, their commutes might be 5 minutes longer.

    • @crayonburry
      @crayonburry 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      That conversation is currently going on in Austin with I-35, tho the TxDOT is pretty set to expand the highway and have private companies cap it.

    • @4149stonepony
      @4149stonepony 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yeah highways were built to "cut right through downtown" save the banal rhetoric for what is really happening. The city and you believe taxpayers should sit in extra traffic, spend lots of money to destroy their commute, create extra traffic for social engineering purposes, so the city can develop and gentrify downtown to the benefit of whom? City residents? No you are destroying their highway for real estate interests, social transition, and gentrification. Sounds like a real fucked up idea and people would be right to hate it.

    • @JoeyLovesTrains
      @JoeyLovesTrains 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@popcorn8153yeah, that highway isn’t utilized that much to begin with, I think next time that needs to be rebuilt it might get torn down. Although that whole interchange with I-94 was revuilt somewhat recently

  • @lesleyheller2271
    @lesleyheller2271 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    In Manhattan we were wrong to oppose "Westway", the proposed underground replacement for the West Side Highway. As a result, all our beautifully developed parks along the Hudson River are compromised by street level traffic.

    • @theontologist
      @theontologist 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Nothing is stopping Westway construction today… Except, people *choose* not to build it because it would bankrupt all other transportation in the region.

  • @TheLochs
    @TheLochs 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    We called it the big pig. I remember the construction. It was a pain in the ass for me living in Eastie.

  • @cocoacrispy7802
    @cocoacrispy7802 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    'knifing through the heart of Massachusetts'
    Couldn't have said it better...

  • @matiasdonoso4425
    @matiasdonoso4425 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Great start to the series! :)

  • @heatheryoung3808
    @heatheryoung3808 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This old footage of Boston areas makes me miss my grandparents and parents and ponder things they lived through that we might have never fully gotten to talk about 😢😢

  • @SigandGibbs
    @SigandGibbs ปีที่แล้ว +27

    I can't believe what they got away with - doing that to peoples homes

    • @youngchu1638
      @youngchu1638 ปีที่แล้ว

      Happening right now in Houston TX and it happened back in 1960s in Buffalo NY. It's because they treat non-whites as savages, disposables, and evil. If they don't, they won't be able to conquer.

    • @NuncNuncNuncNunc
      @NuncNuncNuncNunc 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      If you've driven down a highway in the US, there's a good chance you've gone through where someone's home or farm used to be, maybe even a cemetery or two.

    • @AppalachianMountaineer1863
      @AppalachianMountaineer1863 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@NuncNuncNuncNuncI-81 North through West Virginia, Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania you cut through nearly 10 civil war battlefields. You basically replicate the Confederate army’s march north to Gettysburg in a way it’s very cool historically but also it’s equally tragic that the history has been disturbed by highway.

  • @pas42hfd
    @pas42hfd 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Massachusetts has some of the worst most outdated, dilapidated highways in the country. Haven’t improved them in over 50 years. The clover leaves at RT 93/95 and 93/495 need to go and they all need to be widened.

  • @timothyjewett625
    @timothyjewett625 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    This is such a well done video, I love this so much as someone who grew up in Medford for 24 years from 96 onward. I only vaguely remember the big dig as a child. This project was definitely over budget, but has breathed life into the cities downtown, I am forever grateful for all those who protested the inner belt highway. Somerville and Cambridge’s now very expensive real estate and some of the coolest areas would have been destroyed. Boston is so highly sought after now for its density and urbanism and that is kept alive thanks to the brave folks who took time out of their day to protest.
    I for one love seeing this small tree that is growing on the dead inner belt loop off-shoot on the upper deck of 93 north. It is so symbolic of growth being better than destruction. I am not sure if I am the only one who notices it, but I always point it out to my wife and family.
    I am saddened that highways have blown through such beautiful places like the middlesex fells reservation and down the mystic through my hometown and I hope that we can someday at least guide it back to being more harmonious and stop expanding the highways with “one more lane bro” it never solves any congestion and we can’t even keep up with the cost of road and highway construction as it is.

    • @jimcasey1975
      @jimcasey1975 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I grew up in Medford too. 120 year old two family homes that were purchased for 20k in the 1960’s now being sold for close to one million. Not sure if you still live there but you can have it. The only time I visit Medford now is on Sunday afternoons when I go to pay my respect to my parents at Oak Grove cemetery and to thank them for all that they did for me.

  • @marios3202
    @marios3202 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    As a lifelong MA resident, and someone who came of age while the big dig was being completed, it was a failure for many, many reasons. Firstly, every single man in Massachusetts that was of working age was participating in some kind of scam that involved the big dig. People were signing up to do "no show" and "no work" jobs for construction companies involved in the project. Basically you would allow your information to be used to pay wages like you were working on the big dig when you never were. You would split the money with the construction company. I know at least ten people that did it. It also didn't help that the big dig was ramping up at the very start of the opioid epidemic in MA. People were scamming the big dig to get money for OC. It was an absolute mess.

    • @weevie833
      @weevie833 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      I would not call that a failure. The project fulfilled its charter. What you describe was a collateral effect of all projects that are too big to monitor down to the minute details - as unfortunate as it was. It was a failure of oversight, auditing, or management, if you like, but not a failure of a project.

    • @backbay2242
      @backbay2242 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Baloney. The project was a tremendous success and would have been worth it at twice the cost.

    • @skipd9164
      @skipd9164 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I don't believe that. I do know some companies were ripping off the project and they got exposed. If you were to see one big company doing the project then maybe. There were a lot of different companies and unions involved. There were probably some no shows but on your scale I don't think so. I do know there were a lot of new types of construction parts. There were also inspection process and I got screwed by a concrete supplier. They would take trucks that got rejected and send them to private construction construction. I never was notified about getting the delivery. I had a pour that was supposed to be my bragging project. I started having problems with it setting immediately and was never told it was hours older than usual. I never had this issue and never thought I would find out because of a news article on state getting settlement from supplier. It actually ruined me

    • @JohnDoe-ou4lo
      @JohnDoe-ou4lo หลายเดือนก่อน

      😂😂 thanks Mario for this ridiculous and laughable comment 😂😂. Life long mass resident?? I think your watching too much sopranos nephew 😂😂. I worked union construction DURING the big dig!! Didn't see empty job sites filled with "no shows", instead I worked my a$$ off and made great money with incredible overtime. Boston is a great city 👏 and great for hard working 💪🏽 tax payers. But your probably living in mommies basement playing video games complaining how 🤔 you can't find a good job. Seriously your comment made my laugh 😂, take care Junior 😂😂

  • @campkohler9131
    @campkohler9131 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    A great work! I am looking forward to the rest of the story.

  • @Ransomed77
    @Ransomed77 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I've heard that China is constructing 6 miles of new roads every hour. Not that I want to hold China up as an example of how everything should be done, but it raises the question: why do simple public works projects in the US take decades to complete? Your desire for a new era of infrastructure is commendable. The way forward involves betting on ourselves rather than relying on a government with its bloated bureaucracies. Wind and solar may indeed play a viable role in the future, but if left in the hands of politicians, these endeavors will, like 'The Big Dig' itself, enrich only a few at the expense of the many.
    Thanks for your video, very interesting.

  • @alaeriia01
    @alaeriia01 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    23:34 I love that mural! I see it every time I go to Microcenter.

  • @bobgardin2347
    @bobgardin2347 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Great content. However, it could use better graphics, consistent with the narrative.

  • @davidgriffin9412
    @davidgriffin9412 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The biggest reason that government projects go over budget is by the time you get all the environmental work and studies done the costs have risen also government tends to keep changing what The requirements of what they are making the longer it takes.

  • @Wall2000x
    @Wall2000x หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you. Really interesting.

  • @RichardM-o9v
    @RichardM-o9v 29 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I grew up in Boston and it's not a highway that is preventing me from going home, it's the exorbitant cost of living there. There are hardly any native Bostonians left on the City Council, not even the mayor or Governor are from the city or state.

  • @DonIzNice1804
    @DonIzNice1804 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Wow! Look at Chuck Turner. He was so young back then but just as fiery.

  • @scotcoon1186
    @scotcoon1186 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    My last trip to Boston, I picked up off the last exit when the ceiling fell in on the big dig.
    It's pretty scary not sitting in traffic in Boston, really.

  • @bjarnenilsson80
    @bjarnenilsson80 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    So he didn't "hate highways " he hated the way people where treated during the building of a particular stretch if a highway. That makes way more sense, if you ask me it's odd to hate/live highways in general ( which is what the intro made it sound like he did) they're just peaces of infrastructure, it woukd be lije gating all retail space

  • @user-Jamie218
    @user-Jamie218 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    cap and stitch deck parks to create land bridges connecting neighborhoods over trench highways at least around downtowns are the next big thing to reverse some of the damage of the Robert Moses era

  • @markfomenko8873
    @markfomenko8873 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Robert Moses ruined many urban areas in New York using eminent domain laws and building highways. Unfortunately his methods and ideas became very popular with urban planners nationwide.

    • @maroon9273
      @maroon9273 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Not only highways but public housings aka project buildings all over NYC.

  • @chickmcgee1000
    @chickmcgee1000 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This is a fascinating piece. In the end, I can only come to the conclusion that Thomas Sowell reminds us of one fact, there are no solutions to life’s problems, only compromises. That’s a realism not welcome and certainly not allowed in a political world.

  • @BarryMckockinner
    @BarryMckockinner 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Looking forward to the next episode

  • @joaodorjmanolo
    @joaodorjmanolo 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Controversial take: I like the big dig. I'm glad it was made.

  • @alexm8071
    @alexm8071 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This should also be a book. Feels like I'm listening to a different version of The Great Bridge

  • @patsfreak
    @patsfreak 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    When I was growing up I was just a kid and knew the Big Dig as a place I saw once on a field trip and the place where all the welders went when they went on strike at BIW.

  • @Wickedpissah138
    @Wickedpissah138 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I had two family members, one from each of my parents sides, they had to relocate or move their house in Chelsea for construction of Route 1/Tobin Bridge… however they were offered pretty good deals and payouts

  • @toddmarshall7573
    @toddmarshall7573 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The Interstate Highway System was proposed by Eisenhower after seeing the German Autobahn. Eisenhower was disgusted to find the designers ran the highway through the cities rather than around them. My neighborhood was also destroyed by the highway going right through the middle of my town. In retrospect, make a case for cities in this day and age. They're no longer necessary... not desirable.

    • @iknklst
      @iknklst 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Not true at all.
      Eisenhower was part of a prewar military exercise as a young officer long consisting of moving men and military equipment as rapidly as possible across the nation.
      He realized this nation needed a national network of roads as a matter of national defense decades before the autobahn was ever even thought of.
      www.eisenhowerlibrary.gov/research/online-documents/1919-transcontinental-motor-convoy

  • @xcrockery8080
    @xcrockery8080 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    That was great, thanks, I've never been anywhere near Boston.

  • @romanmarcus14
    @romanmarcus14 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I live in JP now less than 100 yards from where the south west corridor would have been. Thank god. They did not build it. The use of land now as the orange line is great. The public tranist is fantastic. Thank god they did not build some highway monstrosity.

  • @Guokas0422
    @Guokas0422 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    So I grew up in Massachusetts born in Salem. I've asked all my Massachusetts friends this question and no one ever has an answer: So why hasn't I-84 ever been extended North into northern Massachusetts in New Hampshire? In other words Why was I forced to drive all the way East to Worcester and Lowell to get NH? Most people I ask agree so you have to pay the mass Pike tolls; But couldn't you just make the I-84 extension into Southern New Hampshire a toll road also?

  • @stephenlight647
    @stephenlight647 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Who the hell would prefer the Central Artery to the current buried highway? The old highway cut Boston off from the harbor. I don’t get the entirely negative portrayal.

  • @20chocsaday
    @20chocsaday 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Did I hear "turnpike" where you pay to use the road?
    If any money is flowing it should go to the landowners, if they want to use their land that way. Else it is theft.

  • @tim1398
    @tim1398 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What about the Rt 3 ending at 128/95 in Burlington? The layout at the end there has always made me assume it was meant to continue on to Boston.

    • @tim1398
      @tim1398 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      To answer my own question, the "Northwest Expressway" was meant to connect with Rt 2, first at the Lexington/Arlington line, then in later plans at Alewife.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._Route_3#Burlington_to_Tyngsborough_(Northwest_Expressway)

  • @JimAllen-Persona
    @JimAllen-Persona 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    You guys think the “Big Dig” was expensive? Imagine the BQE replacement in NYC.

    • @maroon9273
      @maroon9273 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      And covering the Cross bronx expressway.

  • @gregs9555
    @gregs9555 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Cars come with a major flaw. Human error, may be intentional or by mistake. Drive in any city freeway like I do with Philly 76 every day and it is clear drivers are the problem. A long shot solution would be computerised cars that follow proper distances, lane changes, mergers, speed limits. This solution would be so much better then building more lanes and paving whole cities.

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Once cars are fully computerized and communicating, they won't need to follow proper distances for human drivers. At least in principle.

  • @lot2196
    @lot2196 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I love highways

  • @ChrisGrande
    @ChrisGrande 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Govt usually sucks. But we keep voting for more of it.

  • @skipd9164
    @skipd9164 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I don't know why my city is not involved in your program or it might be because I have just started. Route 95 was supposed to go through my city but we stopped it because it would go through our woods. City of Lynn MASS stopped the federal government from building it. R 95 stopped at Peabody where it was supposed to connect to 128 but also continue to Revere at the rotary by drive in. This is where R 1becomes R 95 to Tobin bridge. If you drive thru Lynn on R 107 or western Av. South bound you come to the Revere marsh road. Driving down marsh rd look to your right and you will see what would of been R 95. Lynn successfully stop the federal and state governments from destroying our Municipal Lynn Woods wich is the largest city owned property. It was to go thru undeveloped section including the Breed Jr high and Clasical High school. I believe we were the first municipal government to stop the federal highway from being built. I also followed the big dig closely and it was the first major highway to be rebuilt under the existing one still being used. Some technical issues were developed and helped other future projects

  • @gfutube1
    @gfutube1 หลายเดือนก่อน

    How about a Canada Service building. They don’t do anything anyway and usually are empty because the staff are ‘working’ from home

  • @ricktasker8248
    @ricktasker8248 ปีที่แล้ว

    Interesting and well done. Thank you.

  • @Herr2Cents
    @Herr2Cents 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I remember my college roommate telling me that the Big Dig was going to be free money. He was in construction at the time as an estimator.

  • @davehogan1716
    @davehogan1716 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Not for nothing, in my opinion you aren’t old enough to narrate a video on this subject.
    You were way too young to even know what the rest of us Bostonians were thinking.
    We drove through, around and over it all those years and not once did I ever hear anyone refer to it as “the big pig” “the big hole” “the big mess” “the big lie”
    You probably grew up 30 miles outside Boston and heard it out there or when you went to Fenway once a year maybe your father came up with these names.
    But certainly no one I knew ever said it and I was actually around it every day
    I can already tell this is the view from a far left millennial that grew up a rich kid far from Boston

  • @johnconnolly6011
    @johnconnolly6011 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Philadelphia wasnt finished in the early 80's. They ran into Independence Hall area than south philly. The mayor at that time was frank rizzo. He was from south philly and didnt want that highway going thru his neighborhood.

  • @woonjake
    @woonjake 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Not one mention of the land taken for the North east expressway. It still sits barren to this day.

  • @lucmarchand617
    @lucmarchand617 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    We have same problems montreal,quebec good integration,bad planning.good video😮

  • @dr.kraemer
    @dr.kraemer 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The Somerville house I'm watching this in is on a block that was going to be bulldozed.

  • @GOLDVIOLINbowofdeath
    @GOLDVIOLINbowofdeath 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The largest Mosque in NE is good?

  • @seventscott3945
    @seventscott3945 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Does anyone know the location in 42:57 to 43:20 ?

  • @bobl6139
    @bobl6139 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Don’t even tell me that the delayed cape cod bridge renovations aren’t related to this debacle. And the reason for the cost overruns was letting firms that were originally bidding bersus each other on the project form co ventures in order to provide “cost savings “

  • @toddmarshall7573
    @toddmarshall7573 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    49:10 Look at all those all tall buildings. What do those people do? What is it about what they do that couldn't be done from their home? Are there factories in those buildings?

  • @galeparker1067
    @galeparker1067 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Something obscene about this, obviously!!! 😩

  • @thepaintingbanjo8894
    @thepaintingbanjo8894 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Every job interview for city planners and engineers anywhere should ALWAYS and ONLY start with this: *_"Highways and interstates? Yes or no."_*
    You get answered "Yes" then the candidate doesn't deserve to work anywhere in this field. Would save so much time.

  • @gosnooky
    @gosnooky 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Well, one cannot drive from Seattle to Boston without making a turn or hitting any traffic lights - unless one has an infinite gas tank or infinite battery.

  • @johnmaxwell4072
    @johnmaxwell4072 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank God for the preservationists that fought and blocked a proposed riverfront expressway along the Mississippi River in New Orleans. Had it gone through, it would have cut off not only the French Quarter, but nearly the entire city from the river that gave the city its reason to exist to begin with.

  • @aiditam9790
    @aiditam9790 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great documentary!

    • @GBHNews
      @GBHNews  11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Glad you enjoyed it!

  • @MATTADAN02126
    @MATTADAN02126 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    They entirely left out Hyde park and Roslindale would have also been affected by 95.

    • @maroon9273
      @maroon9273 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Plus, we will have a city exodus similar to Detroit.

  • @jonathandorr2234
    @jonathandorr2234 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    You are triggering a reaction, because we have a SOUTHEAST EXPRESSWAY, not a south west expressway. 🤔

  • @singlesideman
    @singlesideman 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What do you mean "when [you were] growing up"? It just got finished, like, a few years ago.

  • @chrisnewman7281
    @chrisnewman7281 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    A lot of these big digs featured in films like lethal weapon

  • @DeeRuss
    @DeeRuss 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    They really messed up in 1958

  • @scotcoon1186
    @scotcoon1186 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I'm of the opinon the interstates were built bassackswards.
    They should have bypassed cities and had a spur or loop into the cities with all the exits for the cities.

  • @mike89128
    @mike89128 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Came in billions over budget. Where did Ed Kennedy get the funds? By raiding the Corps of Engineers budgets for years, taking monies away from the needed levee construction and repairs of New Orleans. And we all know how that turned out. The dirty little secret of two cities.

  • @ROYALPRIX
    @ROYALPRIX 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Dang it, didn't know this was video too. Might relisten

  • @markhendrickson2610
    @markhendrickson2610 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Playing at 1.5 times and it’s still too slow. Is there any data here? This is all fluff. 1/4 the way through and nothing. Don’t have the patience for this.

  • @lukehorning3404
    @lukehorning3404 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    It doesn’t seem that long ago the Big Dig was still going on

  • @ronaldsmith6829
    @ronaldsmith6829 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Some of this redirects facts to a narrative that isn't accurate nor is it the truth... entirely. For instance, "this doesn't take into consideration the displacement caused by the down wind effects, such as the perpetual recession that's consumed small town America." Using this issue to support your premise is specious, to say the least. The subject is far more complicated than this rather simplistic explanation. Small Town America was impacted in a variety of ways, which admittedly included the National Highway System. However the N.H.S. was really just a minor player in the degradation of "Small Town America" in this respect. In fact, it may have made life much safer for those who once had long and difficult travel on the old roads the N.H.S. replaced. There WERE innumerable benefits to the Freeways, Expressways, and Tollways that the N.H.S. created. I won't even address the narrative of 'Climate Change'.
    I am old enough to remember the old roads here in rural California and to have seen the benefit of the new Freeways that replaced them. Yeah, there were a tremendous amount of businesses that were along the old route that died when the new freeway was put in. I'll miss that wonderful chicken restaurant south of Sacramento on old Hwy 99. We would beg our parents to stop there every time we approached it. One could see the giant chicken out front for a mile before arriving there. However, at that time, 99 was a four lane highway with what Dad called a 'Suicide Lane' in the middle. Small roads intersected the highway with only stop signs and no safe way to cross the highway without playing Russian Roulette with the oncoming traffic. People drove fast on that old highway even back in the fifties and early sixties. Then suddenly, there was a meridian with landscaping, bridges for cross traffic and safe on/off ramps. Sadly, that wonderful chicken restaurant was isolated without an offramp. This is but one example of how the benefit of a safer highway led to losses as whole towns withered and faded away. Yet how many lives were saved by that improvement of the old highway running up the center of our state? The death toll on hwy 99 dropped considerably after the 'closing up' of the road.
    Yes, I understand that running a freeway through a heavily developed area can cost thousands of homes. We had to deal with that in the Los Angeles and Orange County areas too. However, all the same, just about everyone recognized that those closed highways made life safer and allowed faster movement from one town to another. The problem (in our case anyway) was unplanned development and lack of urban planning in general. The people in California recognized this issue and were glad to see the new Freeway system. However, that same lack of planning led to freeways that were insufficient to the needs of the public from the the day they opened. Yes, had we done the light rail projects that the Eastern Cities are justly proud of, or even kept the ones we already had going, it would have made life better and perhaps reduced the congestion on the highways. But that's a whole 'nother subject all by itself.

  • @lengould9262
    @lengould9262 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    The more complex society gets, the easier it is for political scammers to lie to people. Eg this "documentary".1😂

  • @spmull06
    @spmull06 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Is ‘Kenneth Galbraith’ actually John Kenneth Galbraith? Height basically matches.