You'll never reply, but I find it curious/odd that people who oppose the barrier have to be so callous towards those of us who support it.
I don't think it's a matter of being callous. Instead, it's a matter of people who claim that they care demonstrating a marked unwillingness to put their money where their mouth is. As I pointed out earlier, people tend to pay for things that they value and keep their money in their pockets when confronted with something that they
don't value.
That, my friend, is how money works, and claiming otherwise is just plain silly.
If I understand correctly, a barrier has been approved using taxpayer money. IOW: money that could be used to, say, help the homeless or the unemployed (i.e. people who are struggling to
live) is instead going to be used to help those who have demonstrated that they are more interested in dying than in living.
It's not hard to guess what's wrong with this picture.
So, if you really
do care about the jumpers, you now have an opportunity to put your money where your mouth is:
The Metropolitan Transportation Commission, the agency that oversees transportation financing in the Bay Area, has approved $5 million in federal money for the final engineering and design of a steel mesh net hanging 20 feet below the span, to catch jumpers. However, officials estimate the net system will cost an additional $45 million to build and install. [emphasis mine]
When the plan was approved, district officials stipulated that the barrier could not be built using the money collected in bridge tolls, leaving the source unclear for the $45 million needed to complete the net. “We’ve found a solution that has minimal impacts visually and aesthetically,” Ms. Currie said. “Now it’s just about getting the remaining funding to build it.”
If you want to demonstrate just how much you care, doing so is simple: start up a private fund to raise the additional $45 million dollars needed to get the barrier constructed. After all, if a suicide barrier is something that is truly worth supporting, it won't be hard to get people to contribute to it, right?
My primary beef with barrier proponents is that they want to take from Peter to give to Paul, so speak. It is entirely reasonable to propose that if they feel so strongly about a barrier, (as opposed to merely paying it lip service, which costs them nothing) it's high time all the purportedly "caring" folks clubbed together and started
making things happen as opposed to asking the rest of us to empty
our pockets for something that we flat-out don't believe in and have no desire to see built.
Does that make sense? I hope so.
(Tip o' the fez to MosesHorwitz for the link to the NYT times article about the barrier.)
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