The Huge Controversy Over Moving This Runway 80 Feet



Get Nebula using my link for 40% off an annual subscription: https://go.nebula.tv/wendover

Youtube: http://www.YouTube.com/WendoverProductions
Instagram: http://Instagram.com/sam.from.wendover
Twitter: http://www.Twitter.com/WendoverPro
Sponsorship Enquiries: [email protected]
Other emails: [email protected]
Reddit: http://Reddit.com/r/WendoverProductions

Writing by Sam Denby, Tristan Purdy, Christine Benedetti, and Corinne Neustadter
Editing and Videography by Alexander Williard
Animation led by Max Moser
Sound by Graham Haerther
Thumbnail by Simon Buckmaster

source

32 thoughts on “The Huge Controversy Over Moving This Runway 80 Feet”

  1. Call for Action

    Mr. Miyazaki Shinya

    Mr. Miyazaki Shinya was most impressed by the work “Preordered,” in which the internal organs of a child had been ordered, and marked with prices and dates.

    Mr. Miyazaki Shinya watched a documentary about live organ harvesting in China after seeing the poster exhibition. He commented that other countries had enacted laws against forced harvesting, but Japanese TV stations and news agencies had hardly reported it.

    “The wife of a high-ranking government official had a heart transplant in China some time ago, and people talked about it in private for a while. It is not normal in itself that the media didn’t report anything. I hope more events like this will be held, and we should vigorously publicize them so that more people can know about them,” he said.

    Mr. Teruie Kimura, councilor of Higashi-hiroshima City, wrote a comment: “I feel that each piece, especially the work ‘Blind and Unseen,’ clearly portrays our current situation. Many of us already know [about the CCP’s live organ harvesting from Falun Gong practitioners], and condemned it at the time, but after a while, this concern gradually faded away. Now that we know about it, we must consider how to act.”

    Councilor Yamada Manabu, member of the Higashi-hiroshima City Assembly, promotes the poster exhibition on Facebook.

    Reply
  2. so basically a bunch of rich leftist NIMBYS dont want the airport to attract larger jets because that means economic development and the prospect of poor ppl could tourist in their town…

    Reply
  3. ASE needs a snow shield, so they stop closing this airport when you actually want to get there! I vacation here. The difficult access is a plus. Easy access from Denver would kill it with day-trippers.

    Reply
  4. Hey Wendover. I have a question about some information in your video. You said at one point the ERJ pollutes more than the CRJ. Im trying to figure out how that would be since the ERJ175 and the CRJ700 both have the same engines and for routes going to Aspen we're not flying far enough that the speed difference would be noticeable time wise. The ERJ also holds more people than our CRJ so you'd have lower pollution per seat assuming all seats where full as well.

    Reply
  5. Aspen is a shit hole nightmare to fly into. Winds always suck and it's just hard to get in with weather in general. Yet the rich insist on pushing us into there regularly despite safety hazards. The place is a death trap and every time we land there is nothing short of a miracle and all our years of skill combined

    Reply
  6. As someone whose town (by the beach, not mountains) was utterly destroyed by over-dense tourism to the point where there is literally no school district left and few residential homes still existing, I'd tell residents to do everything they can to prevent an influx. It's spectacular if you own real estate. It's horrible if you live somewhere you like and want to stay there and see your children live there.

    Reply

Leave a Comment