Wow.
It's been awhile since we've had a good deckscrap. Things were starting to get boring around here.
While there are some who ideologically argue that ALL government benefit programs should be reduced or even scrapped, there are in fact, many programs that help level the playing field for people who otherwise might not have the opportunity to participate fully in society.
There's a difference between giving someone a hand-out as opposed to a leg-up, as the old saying goes...
...and we sometimes forget that doing for the least of our brethren truly helps all of us in a common decency that transcends political points of view.
As a person born having significant leg "differences", (I'm not a big fan of the word "disabilities", due to the obvious implication that someone having "disabilities" somehow might not be productive) I for one, appreciate having a place to sit down in public once in awhile. If we can at least agree that a government should pave our streets, look after our sewers, and manage other essentials of life like water, then what's so all-fired politically bad about giving people a place to sit down once in awhile? We ALL get tired feet, especially in a so-called "walkable" community...
...its not only the so-called "poor", needful, or elderly among us who get sore feet, y'know.
You see benches everywhere in modern communities that really care about "walk-ability". Ivor is so right. There are so many other communities out there that do as much and more for their population. Lakewood needs to take a good look around. We have to remain a competitively attractive place to visit and live.
The thing is, town benches and even town public tables encourage ALL people to get outside and walk. They would permit ever-greater mobility for the population requiring them, and indeed, for everyone else too. They would allow a greater range of motion for pedestrians, providing ever greater access to area businesses, with corresponding increased potential financial and shopping benefits for all concerned.
Great cities like Paris even provide ample public facilities for the call of nature.
People, after all, have to do more than walk, once in awhile.
We could also sing...
There still time for that community camp-fire sing-a-long. Conservatuffys can bring the marshmallows and those liberallovin' tree-huggers can bring the chocolate bars... Would someone neutral here please provide some soft and non-confrontational sticks to roast with?
Back to the banjo...
