May 3rd, 2007

You are currently browsing the articles from Jay Currie written on May 3rd, 2007.

Burbs end

The end of the suburban build-out will be a stupendous trauma for the United States because, unfortunately, we have made it the basis of our economy for a generation, as well as our living arrangement. Not only will incomes and livelihoods be lost on the grand scale, and never come back, but, as the global oil predicament deepens, the existing fabric of our vast suburbs will become increasingly useless and worthless. The people stuck in them will lose whatever wealth they have accumulated and our arrangements for daily life will become increasingly nightmarish.
This is the part of the story that the mainstream media still can’t put together. Peak oil and the housing bust are a mutually-reinforcing clusterfuck. jim kunstler

I like to stop by Kunstler’s blog once in a while. I think he is pretty much wrong about almost everything he writes but he writes so very well and has a gift for sustained outrage.

I think he is right about the end of the build out of suburbia. Housing starts are way down. The need for yet another strip mall is next to zero. The price of gas is going up - though not, I suspect, because of peak oil but rather because of an increased global demand and a reluctance in the West to construct more refineries in the face of the greenie onslaught - and the virtues of suburban living are coming under increased scrutiny.

In Canada this is likely to mean that people will be moving back downtown. But this is less of an option in many large US cities which have become donuts with a rather nasty black or Hispanic underclass inhabiting the hole. Canada has been pretty good at keeping the centers of our major cities alive. We need to keep doing that and recognizing that density is the only way that can happen.

Written by jay on May 3rd, 2007 with 2 comments.
Read more articles on Canadian Politics and US Politics and culture and tech.

Lord Stanley would be proud

Rick Hiller, Stanley Cup

General Hiller is pretty much the best thing that’s happened to the Canadian Forces since WWII. He understands morale and he understands Canadians.

Rosie Dimanno catches it:

The ever-effusive Hillier wrapped his arms around the Cup after it was un-crated, still on the tarmac, a greeting party of delighted Canadian troops as wide-eyed as children, the trophy sparkling under a blistering Afghan sun. Immediately, cameras came out and posing commenced.

“Every boy — and girl — grows up with a vision of playing in the NHL,” the suddenly politically correct Hillier told the gathering, as he thanked the league, commissioner Gary Bettman and the NHL Players’ Association for allowing the Cup to come halfway ’round the world, in the middle of the playoffs no less.

“We appreciate the opportunity to see it and touch it … before it comes home to Canada this year with one of our two teams.” the star

Lord how the Zerb must hate the fact Rosie works at The Star. I mean the woman wrote a news story which actually made a Canadian General and a bunch of old timer hockey player look good.

It will come as a surprise to the NDP and the pathetic Libs but there are a lot of Canadians who both understand and support the Canadian mission in Afghanistan. And with that support comes a great deal of gratitude that, somehow, we have a General who is a warrior and not a Deputy Minister. I suspect the troops are rather pleased as well.

Written by jay on May 3rd, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on Canadian Politics and International and Terror.