IH-35 Construction in Waco should be added to the other two sure things, death and taxes. I graduated from Baylor in the mid seventies and since then I really don't remember a time when we didn't have some form of construction on IH35.
Oldgrizzly said:
IH-35 Construction in Waco should be added to the other two sure things, death and taxes. I graduated from Baylor in the mid seventies and since then I really don't remember a time when we didn't have some form of construction on IH35.
Aggie engineering grads under those hardhats.Oldgrizzly said:
IH-35 Construction in Waco should be added to the other two sure things, death and taxes. I graduated from Baylor in the mid seventies and since then I really don't remember a time when we didn't have some form of construction on IH35.
Oldgrizzly said:
IH-35 Construction in Waco should be added to the other two sure things, death and taxes. I graduated from Baylor in the mid seventies and since then I really don't remember a time when we didn't have some form of construction on IH35.
I have been told that since portions of it opened in 1948 as US 75, the Gulf Freeway has been under constant construction.Quote:
Respectfully, the Gulf Freeway says "hold my beer"
and will be when we're all gone.CorsicanaBear said:I have been told that since portions of it opened in 1948 as US 75, the Gulf Freeway has been under constant construction.Quote:
Respectfully, the Gulf Freeway says "hold my beer"
CorsicanaBear said:I have been told that since portions of it opened in 1948 as US 75, the Gulf Freeway has been under constant construction.Quote:
Respectfully, the Gulf Freeway says "hold my beer"
They opened I35 to Dallas in 1972 (I think) just before I graduated from Baylor.Brian Ethridge said:and will be when we're all gone.CorsicanaBear said:I have been told that since portions of it opened in 1948 as US 75, the Gulf Freeway has been under constant construction.Quote:
Respectfully, the Gulf Freeway says "hold my beer"
Texas will turn blue very soon...remember California used to be so conservative that it elected Reagan twice.BaylorHistory said:
Texas goes from a current population of 29 million today to 40 million by 2040 which is larger than California currently is and 2040 is only 19 years away (scary thought). We better be building like mad now.
I, for one, will take traveling through the liberal white man Amarillo and Lubbock as horrible as they are over a Comancheria where I worry about being disemboweled .Redbrickbear said:BaylorHistory said:
Texas goes from a current population of 29 million today to 40 million by 2040 which is larger than California currently is and 2040 is only 19 years away (scary thought). We better be building like mad now.
As Native Texans are replaced by emigrants and immigrants it will naturally become a state filled with more liberal voters.
If it does it will be driven by white, suburban women.Quote:
Texas will turn blue very soon
Agree.CorsicanaBear said:If it does it will be driven by white, suburban women.Quote:
Texas will turn blue very soon
I know lots of working class Hispanic guys who use anglicized first names, don't speak a lick of Spanish and are very conservative.
Yep, Texas will be as blue as California within 20 years...probably much sooner.PartyBear said:
On this topic tracking the size of Texas with California's growth and size is interesting. Texas is now the size California was right before it went seemingly irreversibly blue state wide and in most local areas. Interestingly in the 1988 presidential election, California's last presidential election as a reliably red state at the Presidential level, Bush defeated Dukakis there by about the same margin Trump beat Biden here in 20.
and finding places for new/larger water reservoirs.BaylorHistory said:
Texas goes from a current population of 29 million today to 40 million by 2040 which is larger than California currently is and 2040 is only 19 years away (scary thought). We better be building like mad now.
Agreed.Redbrickbear said:Yep, Texas will be as blue as California within 20 years...probably much sooner.PartyBear said:
On this topic tracking the size of Texas with California's growth and size is interesting. Texas is now the size California was right before it went seemingly irreversibly blue state wide and in most local areas. Interestingly in the 1988 presidential election, California's last presidential election as a reliably red state at the Presidential level, Bush defeated Dukakis there by about the same margin Trump beat Biden here in 20.
The same effect that happened in California, Virginia, and Georgia is happening in Texas.
But the GOP rich donor base got the opportunity to make a lot of money while they replaced their own voters through mass immigration from the 3rd world...and mass migration of the rest of the USA.
https://www.ocregister.com/2019/12/02/the-decline-and-fall-of-californias-republican-party/
GOP even now only has a 7 seat majority in the Senate and 21 seat majority in the House...and in the 2018 U.S. Senate race Cruz (GOP) barely won by 2% of the vote.
If you want to see what real party power and control looks like then look at Democratic control of the New York and California legislature.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_State_Legislature
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_State_Legislature
Massive majorities for the liberal party.
In the 2018 Senate race in NY Kristen Gillibrand (Dem) beat her republican rival 67.00% to 33.0% in the election.