How the Koch Brothers Are Killing Public Transit Projects Around the Country
NASHVILLE, Tenn. A team of political activists huddled at a Hardees one rainy Saturday, wolfing down a breakfast of biscuits and gravy. Then they descended on Antioch, a quiet Nashville suburb, armed with iPads full of voter data and a fiery script.
The group, the local chapter for Americans for Prosperity, which is financed by the oil billionaires Charles G. and David H. Koch to advance conservative causes, fanned out and began strategically knocking on doors. Their targets: voters most likely to oppose a local plan to build light-rail trains, a traffic-easing tunnel and new bus routes.
Do you agree that raising the sales tax to the highest rate in the nation must be stopped? Samuel Nienow, one of the organizers, asked a startled man who answered the door at his ranch-style home in March. Can we count on you to vote no on the transit plan?
In cities and counties across the country including Little Rock, Ark.; Phoenix, Ariz.; southeast Michigan; central Utah; and here in Tennessee the Koch brothers are fueling a fight against public transit, an offshoot of their longstanding national crusade for lower taxes and smaller government. . .
Public transit, Americans for Prosperity says, goes against the liberties that Americans hold dear. If someone has the freedom to go where they want, do what they want, Ms. Venable said, theyre not going to choose public transit.
The Kochs opposition to transit spending stems from their longstanding free-market, libertarian philosophy. It also dovetails with their financial interests, which benefit from automobiles and highways. . .
Theres nothing more effective than actually having a human conversation with someone on events that affect them on a day-to-day basis, Akash Chougule, policy director at Americans for Prosperity, said in an interview. Its a great opportunity for us to activate people in their own backyards, and were among the first to do it in a sustained, permanent way.'>>>
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/19/climate/koch-brothers-public-transit.html?
Which came first, I wonder, free-market, libertarian philosophy. It also dovetails with their financial interests, which benefit from automobiles and highways.