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Brent Billock's Tumblr

I'm Brent. I do Internet marketing and run a stock picking community website. My job and heart are still in Chicago, but I'm telecommuting from Cincinnati. I do a little longform blogging at billock.net and I tweet as @BrentBillock.
I really like motorcycles, guitars, and good design.

Posts tagged ohio:

YES!

YES!

(via penthaus-pussy)

Maybe I haven’t lived here long enough to repost this, but it was too funny to pass up.
via redcloud: rbateson

Maybe I haven’t lived here long enough to repost this, but it was too funny to pass up.

via redcloudrbateson

(via redcloud)

3C Rail May Not Be Dead.
Despite the election of a conservative, backward-thinking new governor, Ohio still has some chance of building passenger rail service between Cleveland, Cincinnati and Columbus.
In well-publicized statements, John Kasich has declared passenger rail dead. In so doing, he thwarts the thousands of jobs that would be created, and ignores the fact that Ohio is the country’s most densely populated state without passenger rail.
All Aboard Ohio has put forward a plan to form a Joint Powers Authority, a coalition of county and municipal government organizations that could accept federal funding for passenger rail development without the blessing or participation of state government. The group claims precedent in California and Minnesota, where similar groups have moved rail travel forward. 
via urbancincy.com

3C Rail May Not Be Dead.

Despite the election of a conservative, backward-thinking new governor, Ohio still has some chance of building passenger rail service between Cleveland, Cincinnati and Columbus.

In well-publicized statements, John Kasich has declared passenger rail dead. In so doing, he thwarts the thousands of jobs that would be created, and ignores the fact that Ohio is the country’s most densely populated state without passenger rail.

All Aboard Ohio has put forward a plan to form a Joint Powers Authority, a coalition of county and municipal government organizations that could accept federal funding for passenger rail development without the blessing or participation of state government. The group claims precedent in California and Minnesota, where similar groups have moved rail travel forward. 

via urbancincy.com