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by rswier 3909 days ago
It is frustrating that this beautiful ship is relatively unknown considering the fascination with all things Titanic. http://www.ssusc.org/ Surely Bill Gates or Jeff Bezos could free up a few million from petty cash.
1 comments

I live in South Philadelphia and have to look at this eyesore all the time.

Bill and Jeff should spend the money on helping the sick and the starving and skip the boat.

Philadelphia should invest in things that make the waterfront more accessible and encourage a recovery of the natural flora and fauna.

It's quite strange to say that private individuals should spend their personal money on social causes instead of whatever projects they prefer, while the city should spend taxpayers' money on your pet beautification and ecology projects.
You think it's contradictory to say that private individuals and cities should both fund public-benefit causes?

Come on, man. That's not even coherent. If you get mad when people tell other people how to spend their money, just say so.

Nice strawman. Let me explain like you're five:

A) Waterfront improvements are somewhat more socially important than saving the ship. But helping the sick and starving is massively more socially important than both.

B) Public bodies such as the city of Philadelphia have a much stronger obligation to focus on socially important causes than do private citizens.

C) However, frankrizzo was imposing a much stronger condition on private citizens ("no ship while the sick and starving are suffering!") than on the city ("let's make the waterfront prettier!" "but what about the sick and starving?" "sssh, don't worry about that"). This violates either A or B. Since A and B are commonly held beliefs, C is strange.

What I find incoherent is the OP's implication that saving a historic icon means neglecting the sick and starving. I suppose the Eiffel tower should also be left to rust away.