Sunday, August 21, 2016

Carmelo Anthony Preaches Unity Following Gold Medal Victory



Carmelo Anthony started to tear up as he reflected on his Olympic career on Sunday. The U.S. men's basketball team had just beaten Serbia, 96-66, to win Anthony his third gold medal, an unmatched achievement in men's Olympic basketball, and the weight of the moment started to overwhelm him. 



“I know this is the end,” Anthony said. “This is it for me.” 











There had been vast interest in how Anthony would responds to winning gold after he authored a July op-ed in the The Guardian in which he said he hoped to use the Olympic stage to make a statement following the shooting deaths of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile. “This is a chance to do something meaningful before an audience of billions,” he wrote at the time, leading many to wonder aloud what he might do.



But on Sunday, Anthony's message was one of unity. 



“Despite everything that is going right now in our country, we've got to be united,” he said. “America will be great again, I believe that. We got a lot of work to do, but it's one step at a time.”



After Anthony's comment, the U.S. men's basketball team approached the podium with their arms interlocked, a clear extension of Anthony's call for unity. 





Anthony has become one of the most politically outspoken American athletes in recent years. In July, the same day Anthony published his Guardian op-ed, the New York Knicks star stood alongside NBA superstars LeBron James, Chris Paul and Dwyane Wade at the 2016 ESPY Awards, who, together, asked for the country to take a committed stance against gun violence and unnecessary force on the part of police officers.  



“The problems are not new. The violence is not new. And the racial divide definitely is not new,” Anthony said. “But the urgency to create change is at an all-time high.”



Olympians John Carlos and Tommie Smith, whose decision to raise their fists at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics remains one of the most iconic moments in Olympics history, have supported Anthony in his recent activism. “He is direct, very direct. And there is truth in [being] direct because there is purpose,” Carlos has said. 



Questions will remain about whether the International Olympic Committee's rules scared the team away from a more overtly political statement. The IOC explicitly states in its Olympic Charter that political statements of any sort are not allowed at the games and may result in disqualification. Soon after Carlos and Smith raised their fists, the International Olympic Committee booted the pair from the games and Team USA suspended them. 



I know about that rule,” Anthony told The Undefeated before the Rio Olympics. “We had a rule talk about the do's and the don'ts. What you can do and what you can't do. I know the basics of what I want to do and what I don't want to do.”

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Thursday, August 4, 2016

Chris Christie's Transportation Record Is a Bigger Disaster Than Bridgegate

What a fiasco. Six years after New Jersey Governor Chris Christie killed the ARC transit tunnel under the Hudson so he could avoid raising the gas tax, the jig is up. The state has run out of transportation funding anyway.



NJ's Transportation Trust Fund dried up a month ago, bringing a halt to basic infrastructure projects all over the state. Raiding major transit projects, it turns out, is not a sustainable way to fund a transportation system.


But even now, with their backs against the wall, state legislative leaders and reputed Donald Trump manservant Christie are coming up empty, reports Janna Chernetz at Network blog Mobilizing the Region:


It's been one month since the TTF dried up, and the Garden State is still without transportation funding - or even a foreseeable solution. The past six weeks have been rather rocky for the governor and the state's legislative leaders:



  • June 23 – The Senate and Assembly TTF reauthorization bills are considered and passed out of committees.

  • June 28 – Assembly Speaker Vincent Prieto changes the Assembly's gas tax proposal in a secret midnight meeting with the governor. That version later passes the full Assembly.

  • June 30 – Senate President Stephen Sweeney refuses to advance the Assembly proposal, and the fiscal year ends without a resolution to TTF crisis. The TTF officially goes bankrupt, and Christie signs an executive order halting all TTF-funded projects.






  • July 22 – Sweeney and Prieto announce a joint plan to renew the TTF.

  • July 29 – The Senate Budget Committee considers and passes the Sweeney-Prieto revised plan.

  • August 1 – The Senate once again delays a vote on the TTF bill after failing to garner enough votes to guarantee a veto override.


Governor Christie has been - and remains - the biggest obstruction to a solution with his unmerited opposition to a gas tax increase that isn't coupled with unrelated tax cuts. (Where was the call for tax cuts when NJ Transit voted to raise fares last summer?) And this irrational insistence on “tax fairness” has resulted in a complete stalemate in Trenton. It's ironic really, because the purpose of the Transportation Trust Fund, when it was established in 1984, was to remove transportation from the political process.


Elsewhere on the Network today: Denver Urbanism makes the case for “transportation variety” in cities. Streets.mn reports that the departure of a suburban county from a regional transit organization puts plans for bus rapid transit in jeopardy. And Mobility Lab explains how Arlington County transportation engineers were treated to a tour of local bike infrastructure - an exercise everyone hopes will improve road design for cyclists.