tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17629790.post6786514908851410328..comments2024-03-28T06:21:34.602-06:00Comments on twin city sidewalks: TCS interviews Lars Christiansen, Urban Sociologist and Civic Engagement PioneerBill Lindekehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11373780012930618768noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17629790.post-69831829965246243462020-11-20T08:38:31.358-06:002020-11-20T08:38:31.358-06:00I’m recommending Dr Godday to everyone who have he...I’m recommending Dr Godday to everyone who have herpes virus to get the cure from him. I was diagnose of genital herpes in 2015 and i have been searching and asking questions to see if i could get something to cure the disease because i did not believe what the doctors say that no cure is found yet. I came across a comment on Youtube and the person testify how she was cured from herpes and hpv after using Dr Godday herbal medicine. I quickly contact Dr email and explain my problem to him and he prepare the herbs and send it to me through courier and gave me instructions on how to use it and tell me to go for checkup after usage which i did after two weeks of taken the herbal medicine and my result was NEGATIVE. I waited another month and retested the result was still NEGATIVE and my doctor told me that am completely free from herpes. Am so happy and grateful to Dr Godday for what he has done for me and i will continue to share this for people out there to know that there is cure for herpes. You can contact Dr Godday on email and WhatsApp to get the cure from him. Email:goddayspiritualhome@gmail.com Or Call/What’s-app +1{919}4956404.gracehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00427088613753207359noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17629790.post-40089515382107859322016-05-05T10:21:32.952-06:002016-05-05T10:21:32.952-06:00There's a good Joe Soucheray quote that I thin...There's a good Joe Soucheray quote that I think captures some of the class perceptions that people have of cyclists, these days. I'm paraphrashing, but it was something about seeing a bicyclist and that used to mean some poor guy who got one too many DUIs, but now it's different.<br /><br />It's interesting the way that class contributes to the bike debate. On the one hand, it's not even questionable whether bike ownership or car ownership is more expensive, bikes (and transit and walking, for that matter) are way cheaper. Pick up and old one for like $175 vs. a used car for $2k not to mention insurance and gas expenses (and that would be on the cheap end of the spectrum). But on the other hand, it can be impractical to commute to work on a bicycle if you don't have a white collar job. The service industry is a bit different, but even then you'll probably have to work multiple jobs, sometimes at odd hours, when you feel unsafe being exposed and on a bicycle, and what are the chances that they're both within 4 miles of your residence and eachother.<br /><br />I think a lot of this has to do with the numbers of cyclists on the road, too, and I suppose the popularity of living in relatively bikeable areas. When I started biking, back in high school (graduated in 2010, so I guess it wasn't that long ago, really), it never really occured to be that biking was a way in which the wealthy were imposing upon the lifestyles of the poor. If anything it was an equity issue. You know, making the streets safe for people who couldn't afford a car. But back then it seemed like most people who could afford to were living in the 'burbs and had car oriented lifestyles. Fast forward to 2016, and there's lots of upscale new constructions in dense urban areas and lots of young professionals moving in, and lots more cyclists on the road, and they're probably not from the ranks of the working poor, for the most part.<br /><br />I guess I don't really have much of a point here, but its an interesting observation that seems mildly related to the topic at hand.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com