A Commentary from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper
There was a time when we humans seemed unafraid to give ourselves very tight deadlines to accomplish what seemed, at the time, to be some very ambitious, if not almost impossible, challenges.
We placed these challenges before us, the late U.S. President John F. Kennedy once stated, “not because they are easy, but because they are hard.”
Indeed, Kennedy made that statement in the early 1960s when he announced that his country would put a man on the moon before the end of that decade and bring him back safely. And with all of the will and resources of government and the scientific community put forward, it was done.
An earlier U.S. president, Franklin D. Roosevelt, directed General Motors and other auto manufacturers in his country to retool their plants, within a matter of months, to produce tanks, bombers and other military vehicles necessary to combat the Nazi threat and attacks by a then hostile ‘Japanese Empire’ following the outbreak of the Second World War. And that too was done.
One could go on with example after example of how we seemed once capable of accomplishing some very spectacular things over a very short period of time. The Empire State building – to this day, one of the most iconic skyscrapers of all time – was built from ground to top in the late 1920s, with construction technology primitive to what we have to day – in 13 months.

A NASA photo of our earth taken from the moon in the 1960s when there still seemed some hope it would sustain us for at least a few more centuries, if not more.
These days, we can’t even rebuild a simple two-lane bridge on DeCew Road, crossing a channel of the Lake Gibson system in the Niagara community of Thorold, in that length of time – and I know that the people who were waiting and waiting and waiting, and were wondering why such a relatively small project took longer than the building of the Peace Bridge between Fort Erie and Buffalo in the 1920s.
This all leads me up to this total joke and travesty of an agreement leaders of the G7, including Canada, the U.S. Germany, Italy, Japan, Great Britain and France, signed this June 8th, 2015 to end the use of gas, oil and other fossil fuels contributing to a breakdown of our earth’s climate by the end of the 21st century. Continue reading →
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