Los Angeles Times

Overdoing it on infrastruc­ture

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Re “Biden’s upgrade plan is worth every trillion,” Opinion, April 2

The American Jobs Plan put forth by President Biden speaks of competing with China.

With a population roughly five times the size of the United States, China over the past years became the world’s biggest polluter as it has developed an infrastruc­ture for global market competitio­n. There is no need for us to try to outdo China, when in reality for the sake of the environmen­t and our collective well-being, we should all be reining in our material aspiration­s.

Without putting limits on traditiona­l infrastruc­ture capacities such as roads, energy and airports, the jobs plan is environmen­tally unsound.

Instead of building widgets, may we rather cherish the value of nature. It is healthy forests, wetlands and other natural infrastruc­ture that ultimately determine our well-being. Robert Stumm

Hampton, Va.

Biden unveiled his $2.3-trillion “infrastruc­ture” plan last week. Most Americans support and think of infrastruc­ture as roads, highways, bridges and waterways, yet it is rather incredible that this plan also includes billions for affordable housing, child-care facilities and increasing home healthcare.

This is hardly what we think of as infrastruc­ture.

It looks like Biden, the so-called moderate, is being led by the progressiv­e wing of the Democratic Party with its insatiable desire to build government bigger than it has ever been. It is the American people whose children will be saddled with this debt for generation­s to come. Janet Polak

Beverly Hills

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