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I'm really on the fence about the Olympics. As a property owner and news reader, I tend to be suspicious of Daley's big ambitious plans. I especially object to his use of over 100 TIF districts to skim away tax revenues from schools and parks into unregulated slush funds to dispense as he sees fit to developers and large corporations while simultaneously crying about massive budget shortfalls for the city, schools, and CTA.
That said, I know folks involved with the bid, and if Chicago were chosen I would not miss the opportunity to take our family to an Olympic Games here in the city. Just sayin.
The fix is in kids... Protest all ya want... The hookers and envelopes of cash has already been delivered to the I.O.C... All they are waiting for is the hand job from Oprah...
LMAO! I really hope that isn't actually true. I don't want to have to be under 'northside arrest' for 3 months. And what it will do to the lakefront path, actually, fuck the lakefront path now until at least 2012.
I tend to be on board with Homebuilt. Chicago's infrastructure is in shambles. If getting the Olympics means a much improved public transportation system, I'm for it.
Homebuilt said:Michael Reese closing had nothing to do w/the Olympics, it's been in the works for years now. Out of state owner of facility has been closing it down for years.
Last I had heard, they were going to use the Kenosha velodrome, but that may have been changed.
Frankly, I think the Olympics could bring a lot of good to the city. Massive development on that scale only happens a few times a century, and the opportunity to potentially have significant infrastructure improvements, and a new housing campus in a "difficult" area, is significant, building over the railroad tracks will not happen as a commercial development, but could as part of this, stitching the near-south side to the lakefront (no private developer is going to bother with the issues involved).
Of course there's lots of chance for fraud, etc., but that's why concerned citizens need to be involved in the process rather than just pissing and moaning about it.
"Make no small plans..."
M.A.R.K. said:One of the sicker things that I think about as far as the Olympics is the closing of the struggling Michael Reese Hospital as the site of the Olympic village. And how the city would rather choose to purchase it to the tune of 1 Billion or so vs. invest money in the local people who depend on that hospital for their health and well being.
Here's a Sun-Times editorial that address the transportation plan:
http://www.suntimes.com/news/commentary/1793622,CST-EDT-edit28.article
Ethan, with Active Trans
Chicago Bicycle Advocate said:I tend to be on board with Homebuilt. Chicago's infrastructure is in shambles. If getting the Olympics means a much improved public transportation system, I'm for it.
Homebuilt said:Michael Reese closing had nothing to do w/the Olympics, it's been in the works for years now. Out of state owner of facility has been closing it down for years.
Last I had heard, they were going to use the Kenosha velodrome, but that may have been changed.
Frankly, I think the Olympics could bring a lot of good to the city. Massive development on that scale only happens a few times a century, and the opportunity to potentially have significant infrastructure improvements, and a new housing campus in a "difficult" area, is significant, building over the railroad tracks will not happen as a commercial development, but could as part of this, stitching the near-south side to the lakefront (no private developer is going to bother with the issues involved).
Of course there's lots of chance for fraud, etc., but that's why concerned citizens need to be involved in the process rather than just pissing and moaning about it.
"Make no small plans..."
M.A.R.K. said:One of the sicker things that I think about as far as the Olympics is the closing of the struggling Michael Reese Hospital as the site of the Olympic village. And how the city would rather choose to purchase it to the tune of 1 Billion or so vs. invest money in the local people who depend on that hospital for their health and well being.
Haha, bringing "magic".
One of the comments on the article:
jotb wrote:
Ben Johnson roiding it up in 1988...
USSR rigging the outcome of the basketball game in 1972...
The tragedy in Munich in 1972...
Judges cheating Roy Jones out of a gold medal in 1988...
The bribing of judges in the Winter games in Utah...
The bombing in Atlanta in 96...
Ahh yes, the "Magic" of the Olympics.
Cheating, bribing, corruption, crime.
That more I think of it, Chicago should be the permanent home of the Olympics.
Active Transportation Alliance said:Here's a Sun-Times editorial that address the transportation plan:
http://www.suntimes.com/news/commentary/1793622,CST-EDT-edit28.article Ethan, with Active Trans
Chicago Bicycle Advocate said:I tend to be on board with Homebuilt. Chicago's infrastructure is in shambles. If getting the Olympics means a much improved public transportation system, I'm for it.
Homebuilt said:Michael Reese closing had nothing to do w/the Olympics, it's been in the works for years now. Out of state owner of facility has been closing it down for years.
Last I had heard, they were going to use the Kenosha velodrome, but that may have been changed.
Frankly, I think the Olympics could bring a lot of good to the city. Massive development on that scale only happens a few times a century, and the opportunity to potentially have significant infrastructure improvements, and a new housing campus in a "difficult" area, is significant, building over the railroad tracks will not happen as a commercial development, but could as part of this, stitching the near-south side to the lakefront (no private developer is going to bother with the issues involved). Of course there's lots of chance for fraud, etc., but that's why concerned citizens need to be involved in the process rather than just pissing and moaning about it.
"Make no small plans..."
M.A.R.K. said:One of the sicker things that I think about as far as the Olympics is the closing of the struggling Michael Reese Hospital as the site of the Olympic village. And how the city would rather choose to purchase it to the tune of 1 Billion or so vs. invest money in the local people who depend on that hospital for their health and well being.
Tank, baby-
Sixth: I don't meet a lot of Brazilian women beach volleyball players in local bars right now.
Tank-Ridin' Ryan said:Haha, bringing "magic".
One of the comments on the article:
jotb wrote:
Ben Johnson roiding it up in 1988...
USSR rigging the outcome of the basketball game in 1972...
The tragedy in Munich in 1972...
Judges cheating Roy Jones out of a gold medal in 1988...
The bribing of judges in the Winter games in Utah...
The bombing in Atlanta in 96...
Ahh yes, the "Magic" of the Olympics.
Cheating, bribing, corruption, crime.
That more I think of it, Chicago should be the permanent home of the Olympics.
Active Transportation Alliance said:Here's a Sun-Times editorial that address the transportation plan:
http://www.suntimes.com/news/commentary/1793622,CST-EDT-edit28.article Ethan, with Active Trans
Chicago Bicycle Advocate said:I tend to be on board with Homebuilt. Chicago's infrastructure is in shambles. If getting the Olympics means a much improved public transportation system, I'm for it.
Homebuilt said:Michael Reese closing had nothing to do w/the Olympics, it's been in the works for years now. Out of state owner of facility has been closing it down for years.
Last I had heard, they were going to use the Kenosha velodrome, but that may have been changed.
Frankly, I think the Olympics could bring a lot of good to the city. Massive development on that scale only happens a few times a century, and the opportunity to potentially have significant infrastructure improvements, and a new housing campus in a "difficult" area, is significant, building over the railroad tracks will not happen as a commercial development, but could as part of this, stitching the near-south side to the lakefront (no private developer is going to bother with the issues involved). Of course there's lots of chance for fraud, etc., but that's why concerned citizens need to be involved in the process rather than just pissing and moaning about it.
"Make no small plans..."
M.A.R.K. said:One of the sicker things that I think about as far as the Olympics is the closing of the struggling Michael Reese Hospital as the site of the Olympic village. And how the city would rather choose to purchase it to the tune of 1 Billion or so vs. invest money in the local people who depend on that hospital for their health and well being.
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