Archive for the 'transportation' Category

Google Maps recommends illegal turn

Thursday, August 14th, 2008

Google Maps is an excellent service, one I use often, but you should never follow it blindly. Case in point: It recommended directions to me this morning that include an illegal turn onto I-65 South leaving downtown. Traffic entering I-40/I-65 from the 4th Avenue entrance ramp is prohibited from switching lanes to follow I-65 South to Brentwood because there isn’t much distance between the entrance ramp and the access point to I-65. Ahem, to be fair, I’ve made this turn anyway on a few occasions knowing I was risking a ticket, but drivers unfamiliar with the area might put themselves in an officer’s path unknowingly.

The moral of the story: Use online directions, but use them wisely. Be prepared to take an alternate route if what you find on the road doesn’t match what you saw on the net.

Bullet trains on the brain: We need to think regionally

Tuesday, August 12th, 2008

The possibility of a bullet train someday transporting passengers between Nashville and Atlanta in under two hours is another good example of our need to think regionally.

“We’ve got to think ahead,” said Joe Ferguson, special project manager at The Enterprise Center in Chattanooga.”We’ve got to ask questions about what we can do to maintain the kind of mobility we are used to.”

Nashville is no longer just Davidson County, and there are a lot of questions awaiting us about how we’re all going to get from place to place–and to places elsewhere–conveniently and responsibly. A bullet train may make sense for Nashville and Atlanta, for Middle Tennessee it needs to be part of a comprenhensive, long-term approach to meeting our transportation needs.

True words

Tuesday, December 26th, 2006

My last post reminded me of words I read earlier today on Nashville Is Talking. Thanks, Brittney, for an abridged version of what I just wrote. A similar idea communicated much more simply, succinctly and successfully:

If you want others to be happy, practice compassion. If you want to be happy, practice compassion.

What the Dalai Lama said with these words, the Amish and Immaculée Ilibagiza have said with their lives.

Radical forgiveness

Tuesday, December 26th, 2006

Forgiveness and humility can change the world, if we let them. I’m grateful today to Tennessean reporter Anita Wadhwani, who pointed me to this Beliefnet article about radical forgiveness in a blog post. I am astonished by two acts of forgiveness listed there:

The Amish of Nickel Mines, Pa. — a pacifist religious community in rural Lancaster County who practice a simple farming life without modern conveniences much the same as their 17th century Swiss-German forbears — suffered a shocking intrusion into their world when a local milkman, Charles Roberts, invaded a one-room schoolhouse, shooting 10 young girls, leaving five of them dead. During the ordeal, one of the girls, 13-year-old Marian Fisher, offered to be killed first in hopes that the others would be spared. A Beliefnet member wrote of this event: “I cannot ignore this unbelievable act of love by a girl this young. In my mind, this little girl did no more or no less than Jesus did for us on the cross.” Within hours of the shooting, the families of the children not only expressed their forgiveness of the killer but reached out to his family, giving food and raising money for his wife and children.

In a Beliefnet video interview, Herman Bontrager, a spokesman for the Amish of Nickel Mines, explained, “The Amish believe that we must forgive because we ourselves need to be forgiven. [They're] trying to live the way Jesus lived. He turned the other cheek, he told us to love everybody, to love our enemies.” A Beliefnet member noted, “The message of forgiveness, rather than vengeance, goes to the heart of how we should behave toward each other. This is an extreme example of how true faith and true forgiveness can be awe-inspiring. If the Amish can forgive the man who killed their children, how much more should the rest of us be able to forgive the petty hurts and perceived insults we receive each day?”

I think this is an extraordinary act of compassion, and I am challenged by it. As I look back at an argument I had with my wife yesterday and a months-long disagreement with another friend earlier this year, I am awestruck by this act of kindness.

Considering recent events on the global stage, I wonder what life might look like if we as Americans had responded this way after 9-11 or if either the Israelis or Palestinians had the courage and the humility to respond this way. I wonder how Congress would look.

I cannot help but think that this is how God hopes that we will act toward each other. I believe that he knows that we will struggle–and frequently fail–in this effort, but to our own misfortune. I think maybe God wants us to act this way because of how it will make us feel, liberated by compassion, and because of how this kind of action transforms lives. I would love to know how the Amish and the Roberts family are doing months after this horrible crime, and I can only believe that both parties must be better off for the mercy and generosity extended by this small community of people. This is the path we are meant to follow.

The story of Rwandan holocaust survivor Immaculée Ilibagiza is equally astounding. I hope that all of us can learn to model even a fraction of this level of humility and humanity.