I believe it also has a symbolic meaning to it too, like Trump uprooting this woke radical left disease with extreme prejudice from DC which is literally a deep swamp itself.
They took the bricks out, initially, and poured concrete in the shape of the letters BLM and then painted those. The only way to remove the letters is too remove the concrete. Even if you remove the paint the letters in concrete are still there. They have to rip it all up.
because they put all those black barriers up for a walkway for pedestrians only, in the middle of the road. they need to remove all those and let cars use it. there is plenty of room on the sidewalks for pedestrians.
I read that they replaced the yellow paint a year or two ago with some stuck on plasticky/polymer letters that were more permanent...hence the more intense deconstruction seen here.
Help me understand the situation.
Why not just remove the yellow letters with a solvent or with an overpaint and leave the rest of the street untouched?
Why did the walkway bollards have to come out of there? Why does the road have to be torn up? What am I missing?
I believe it also has a symbolic meaning to it too, like Trump uprooting this woke radical left disease with extreme prejudice from DC which is literally a deep swamp itself.
They took the bricks out, initially, and poured concrete in the shape of the letters BLM and then painted those. The only way to remove the letters is too remove the concrete. Even if you remove the paint the letters in concrete are still there. They have to rip it all up.
Oh, I see. Why would the stupid people do the letters in concrete when all they had to do was overlay a heavy duty coated vinyl decal on the bricks.
Ugh. Such a waste of taxpayer dollars!
because they put all those black barriers up for a walkway for pedestrians only, in the middle of the road. they need to remove all those and let cars use it. there is plenty of room on the sidewalks for pedestrians.
I read that they replaced the yellow paint a year or two ago with some stuck on plasticky/polymer letters that were more permanent...hence the more intense deconstruction seen here.