The Wealth Defense Industry and the Working-Class Republic: What Equity Means Here

Henry Demarest Lloyd's 1894 Wealth Against Commonwealth made the case that liberty produces wealth, and wealth destroys liberty. The question 132 years later is whether equity against the one percent can still be won inside a system they pay to keep tilted. Equity against the one percent describes parity of political voice, of legal protection, of access to courts and schools and air and water and a livable wage, with no implication that fortunes themselves must be equal. The republic was built on that equality of standing, however imperfectly executed and however brutally suspended along racial and gender lines. The wealth concentration of the past forty years has retired the idea entirely. […]

https://bolesblogs.com/2026/05/24/the-wealth-defense-industry-and-the-working-class-republic-what-equity-means-here/

Oh, the sad irony! Mile for mile, the Lower Thames Crossing (LTC) is likely to be more expensive than HS2. The latest LTC current cost estimate is at least £11 billion for 14.3 miles of ‘smart’ motorway and tunnel. #rail #roads #infrastructure #HS2 https://transportactionnetwork.org.uk/lower-thames-crossing-repeats-hs2-mistakes-and-costs-more-per-mile/

Wear a helmet

My dad is giving me his motorcycle. Or rather, one of his motorcycles, with another going to my brother. At 79, he was riding it and tore a rotator cuff when it tipped over at a stoplight and he didn’t have the strength to hold it up. Instead, he tried to have the strength and his body betrayed him. 

About two years earlier, he’d torn his other rotator cuff when my brother’s dog fell off the pontoon boat and, loving the dog more than any of his five children, he dropped to the pontoon deck quicker than a 77 year old should move and yanked the dog back onto the boat, less one rotator cuff. 

After a certain age when you’re growing up, or at least when I was growing up, I didn’t want to learn anything from my dad. He’d taught himself to fix cars and to this day I change my own oil — once I even did the brakes — but otherwise, I’m pretty much ignorant of the mechanics of automobiles. Likewise, I’d ride on the back of the motorcycle when I was a kid, but I never learned to ride. (I did take to bicycling, some love of that two-wheeled thrill within me.) 

Now at 80, my dad has decided to hang up another thing he loves. Most of those loves involve hunting. He’s given up bow-hunting because he hasn’t the shoulder strength to pull the bowstring. He can’t drag and paddle and balance in the duck boat, and so duck hunting is over with, too. Turkeys and pheasants are relatively safe from him as well, since his vision and speed aren’t what they used to be. Animals everywhere in western South Dakota are pleased with these developments. 

And so now his motorcycling days have ended, his body betraying him in yet another indignation of age. The longer you live, the more life seems to be about letting go of the things you love, whether you want to or not. 

The truth is, I’m not sure I care about riding a motorcycle. I’ve made it a couple years shy of 50 without, and my mid-life crisis isn’t shaping up to be of the two-wheeled variety. But I want that motorcycle. 

It’s a big Yamaha, one designed for cruising in comfort and logging highway miles, a huge beast of a bike that you don’t see anyone shy of crusty old men riding these days; the youth are hunched over smaller, more streamlined bikes, looking to get wherever they believe they’re going as quickly and in as much style as possible. This bike is more of a lounge chair on wheels, for those who understand that wherever you’re going, there’s no hurry, and you might as well be comfortable getting there.

I can tell he wants me to have it. Maybe for him it’s like letting go a little more slowly, to see your sons take over the things that gave you joy, hoping that they find some of what you found in those things as well. For me, it’s an opportunity to have my dad teach me to ride a motorcycle, an opportunity that I passed on when I was younger, when I was in such a hurry to get to wherever it was I believed I was going. And so now here I am. And it might be that I’ll just ride that motorcycle directly into my garage, where it may sit for 30 years, but who can say, for certain, where any road leads.

I meant for this to be a story about how I was cleaning out my garage, selling a few things I haven’t used in years to make space for a motorcycle. Selling things is a great way to meet interesting people. 

One guy bought an RV waste tank from me. He was sick of Minnesota’s taxes, he said, “sick of this state’s shit,” and so he and his wife bought a motorhome and sold their house and were hitting the road. He was younger than me. 

Another guy bought an old 6-gallon glass beer-brewing carboy. He was buying them up all over town and filling them with natural spring water, convinced that data centers would use up all of Minnesota’s water, possibly by tomorrow. 

“Those states like California, Arizona, Nevada… they’re coming for our water when they run out.” I picture his entire basement full of glass jars, and though he may not be entirely wrong (his timeline seems off), I didn’t ask whether he’d thought to instead place a rain barrel at each gutter, bury a 1,000 gallon water tank below ground, install a cheap solar-powered pump and not have to buy so many glass jars. But for both of those guys, my overall thinking was that if the shit ever does hit the fan, not all of us can survive, and it might as well be me that does.

Many roads, many ways to travel them.

#dataCenters #humor #landscapePhotography #life #memoir #motorcycle #motorcycles #photography #roads #travel #writing

Nestlé and Danone baby food pouches under fire as microplastics found

Microplastics in baby food pouches overviewGreenpeace finds microplastics in Nestlé Gerber and Danone baby foodsTesting shows up to 99 particles per gram in pouchesPackaging likely source…
#dining #cooking #diet #food #Food #Building #cars #clouds #flags #Industrial #landscape #nestlewaters #roads #signboard #vittel
https://www.diningandcooking.com/2653528/nestle-and-danone-baby-food-pouches-under-fire-as-microplastics-found/

Nestlé and Danone baby food pouches under fire as microplastics found - Dining and Cooking

Microplastics in baby food pouches overviewGreenpeace finds microplastics in Nestlé Gerber and Danone baby foodsTesting shows up to 99 particles per gram in

Dining and Cooking

Solution arrives for crash-prone 'Russian roulette' intersection
By Charles Rushforth

After almost a decade of campaigning, residents welcome safety improvements at a notorious stretch of the Princes Highway considered the most crash-prone turn-off in New South Wales.

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-22/jervis-bay-flyover-opens/106701908

#Roads #RegionalCommunities #Transport #CommunityOrganisations #CharlesRushforth

Solution arrives for crash-prone 'Russian roulette' intersection

After almost a decade of campaigning, residents welcome safety improvements at a notorious stretch of the Princes Highway considered the most crash-prone turn-off in New South Wales.

Financial lifeline for NSW businesses, communities hit by highway closure
By Xanthe Gregory

The NSW government announces $3.5 million for communities that have lost visitors and revenue after part of the Great Western Highway was unexpected closed.

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-21/great-western-highway-financial-support/106699634

#Roads #StateandTerritoryGovernment #GovernmentFunding #SmallBusinesses #RegionalCommunities #RegionalDevelopmentandPlanning #XantheGregory

Financial lifeline for NSW businesses, communities hit by highway closure

The NSW government announces $3.5 million for communities that have lost visitors and revenue after part of the Great Western Highway was unexpected closed.

and another one - the first comment is suggesting that this is a way to make money. No fines would be charged if no-one exceeded the legal limit, this idea that motoring is free from laws is weird.

'Hampshire PCC unveils new camera vans to stop speeding'

https://www.basingstokegazette.co.uk/news/26123836.hampshire-pcc-unveils-new-camera-vans-stop-speeding/

“But it’s important to recognise that road safety is a shared responsibility." ... "everyone has the right to use the roads without fear of injury.”
#roads #transport #motorists #Hampshire #UK #RoadDanger

"Our research implies that in the second century C.E., the period when the [Roman] Empire had its maximum extent, this road network comprised some 300,000 kilometers—nearly double the previously known total length of Roman roads. […] How, after centuries of research, can we know so little about this system? And where are the lost roads of the Roman Empire?"

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/new-high-resolution-map-transforms-what-we-know-about-roman-roads-and-the-roman-empire/

#Research #History #Roads #RomanEmpire

New high‑resolution map transforms what we know about Roman roads and the Roman Empire

A massive digitization project has nearly doubled the known extent of the first continent-scale road network

Scientific American

Why do some motorists behave as though enforcement of traffic regulations is a threat to their personal freedom or a sign of public sector corruption? (see comments, but it's common)

'Reading yellow box fines increase by thousands in a year'

https://www.readingchronicle.co.uk/news/26122144.reading-yellow-box-fines-increase-thousands-year/

'According to the latest data, 5,883 fines were issued in 2024/25. That is more than three times the 1,638 issued in 2023/24, with 4,245 additional fines being issued in just a year.'

#roads #transport #motorists #Reading #UK