tangent
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- May 11, 2012
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What's the gist of the article? (I can't and won't read the globe)
I believe the gist of the article is that we need to pick up the pace of making Boston better regardless of Amazon. And like the Olympics, Amazon provides an exercise to think about all the things we need to do but we need to get to work doing them regardless.
I disagree with the sentiment to some degree. I think the Amazon proposal(s) (and the Olympics) should be an exercise in thinking about all the things we don't need to do. Utilizing all of our current strengths and not some fanciful exercise in long term planning based on unsustainable amounts of public and private spending to fulfill everyone's bucket list of wishful thinking or promises to do better.
Amazon is looking for some prime real estate, not some public planner's cloud city of false promises... which does come across in the article to some extent.
My response is that Boston (area) has lots of great real estate projects with millions of square feet in the pipeline ready to choose from, lots of great people, lots of great universities, lots of transit and road infrastructure, some great waterfronts and great parks, great sports teams, and a history of innovation combined with a grounded sense of the possible.
Certainly in some specific examples we need more execution and less "vision" and the part about making the trains run on time is well taken... and I suppose that could be taken as one point of the article that I think we can agree on.
Overall though whenever I hear Widett Circle mentioned I cringe not because it was a lost opportunity... but that anyone thought or still thinks it is an opportunity to do anything other than waste a lot of taxpayer money on a boondoggle project. Widett Circle was a dumb idea for the Olympics and it remains a dumb idea.