On 9/11 in Times Square, the giant billboards still flash, but there are no Elmos or Sponge Bobs, no Spidermen or Batmen, no Lady Liberty on stilts, no slow-moving crowds to dodge, no souvenir peddlers.
It would be wonderful if it weren’t so awful trib.al/zTfegR1
At the corner of Broadway and 42nd Street, a sign marks the beginning of the Lincoln Highway. @FSBarry once spent an hour asking passersby where the entrance was located:
“Never heard of it.”
“You mean the Lincoln Tunnel?”
“Lincoln Center?” trib.al/zTfegR1
The Lincoln Highway was dedicated in 1913 as the first road to connect the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, from Manhattan to San Francisco.
Calling it a highway was stretch — the roads were mostly dirt — but the suits had a slogan: See America First trib.al/zTfegR1
Today, airplanes and interstates render much of America invisible to travelers.
The Lincoln Highway includes a lot of “flyover country” that some might never visit (Kansas and Appalachia, for starters) trib.al/zTfegR1
On 9/11 in Times Square, Frank started a journey with his wife Laurel to see America by traveling the entirety of the Lincoln Highway.
They bought an RV — a 25-foot Winnebago –– to see a cross-section of America by using Lincoln as a lens trib.al/zTfegR1
At 12th Avenue on the Hudson River, they boarded a ferry, as the original Lincoln Highway travelers did — the Lincoln Tunnel didn’t open until 1937.
Across the river, they can see the main drag through Jersey City, one of America’s most diverse cities trib.al/zTfegR1
Jersey City is home to a statue called “Mystic Lincoln,” it portrays the president sitting on a bench, gazing downward.
It served as a backdrop for Frank’s first convo with Mayor @StevenFulop, who quit his job at Goldman after 9/11 to join the Marines trib.al/zTfegR1
Fulop had two masters degrees, but he didn’t enter the military as an officer, and he was glad for it:
“I was exposed to a lot of people that I would never have interacted with... there were some people in my boot camp that never met a Jewish guy before" trib.al/zTfegR1
Last year, two residents in Jersey City targeted a kosher grocery store, killing four people.
Nationally, violent hate crimes hit a new high last year, and Fulop worries that the undercurrents are being normalized in ways that will be hard to reverse trib.al/zTfegR1
Later in the day, Frank met with @sadafjaffer, the mayor of Montgomery Township, NJ, the first female Muslim to serve as mayor of a U.S. city.
She had just come from a 9/11 ceremony at the local firehouse trib.al/zTfegR1
Jaffer says that when she first ran for office, “my opponents also made flyers or campaign advertisements that said that I was dangerous.”
The same undercurrent that Fulop spoke of seems as likely to run through affluent neighborhoods as poor ones trib.al/zTfegR1
Jaffer said it has gotten much worse in recent years, and she attributes it to misinformation and “the Islamophobia industry. A whole bunch of people who basically their main goal is to demonize Islam and to scare the American public” trib.al/zTfegR1
Jaffer says we can have ethics without religion, but what of religious organizations that play a crucial role in supporting their communities?
By this time, the sun has long set over the solar-energy field across the street from Rockingham trib.al/zTfegR1
On the first night, Frank and Laurel try every RVer’s back-up plan: The Walmart parking lot.
But Walmart is closed. They find their way to a Lowe’s and get ready for bed, only to realize the fridge has turned off and they don't know how to get it back on trib.al/zTfegR1
$700 billion is about nine times current US customs revenue, and 2.4% of the most recent estimate of US GDP.
Tariff revenue hasn’t surpassed 2% of GDP since the early 1870s, and hasn’t surpassed it on a sustained basis since the 1820s and 1830s
Trump often cites President McKinley’s high tariffs as an inspiration, but during McKinley’s presidency (1897 to 1901) tariffs generated less than half the share of GDP that $700 billion would amount to now
We *just* learned that #SVB’s downfall was announcing it was raising equity without having buyers lined up, says @matt_levine.
So why would Credit Suisse’s biggest shareholder announce they would “absolutely not” put more money into the embattled bank? trib.al/aS9oy3I
After Saudi National Bank ruled out providing more assistance, #CreditSuisse closed down 24% at 1.697 Swiss francs per share, its lowest closing price on record trib.al/nnFD2F8