A friend is fond of telling me a stopped clock is right twice a day.  Sometimes I find myself on the same side of an argument with a liberal.  Not always for the same reasons but for the same outcome.  This is a link from a publication called Fast Company.  The writers believe we can slake the thirst of the parched west by piping water from the east.  In this specific case, from Louisiana, where at least one of the authors once lived.  It gets more than its share of rain and has the Mississippi River.  Where we differ is how to pipe it west.

They suggest the pipelines used to move oil.  They believe traditional fuels are on the way out and the massive network can find a new use.

They suggest the pipelines used to move oil.  They believe traditional fuels are on the way out and the massive network can find a new use.

I had suggested we have a new piping system from the Great Lakes and a recent guest on my radio program offered we could divert some of the headwaters of the Missouri River.  From Montana and then pump it over the mountains westward.  My idea received a firm rebuke from a scientist warning my plan would harm the delicate habitat of the lakes, which are littered with garbage and shipwrecks.

A guy in Idaho Falls called me an idiot because he didn’t understand how we would get water over the mountains.  Heck, even the Romans solved this in some cases.  You would think engineers didn’t exist in our times!  My critic then seemed to imply we could bring the product from the coast over the Cascades.  I’m not sure his argument holds water (get it!)

Oh, and earlier this week I read where fracking technology is being applied near Reno.  For geothermal energy.  Water goes down, steam comes up.  We’re living in triumphant times for engineering.

Look, the United States had no engineering schools in the early 1800s and, yet.  Amateur engineers built locks and scaled the Niagara Escarpment to complete the Erie Canal.  We can today easily build some pumps for hills and mountains.

For one last argument in favor of pipelines, check out HBO’s Bill Maher, although.  Use caution if you don’t like strong language.

LOOK: Here are the best lake towns to live in

Many of the included towns jump out at the casual observer as popular summer-rental spots--the Ozarks' Branson, Missouri, or Arizona's Lake Havasu--it might surprise you to dive deeper into some quality-of-life offerings beyond the beach and vacation homes. You'll likely pick up some knowledge from a wide range of Americana: one of the last remaining 1950s-style drive-ins in the Midwest; a Florida town that started as a Civil War veteran retirement area; an island boasting some of the country's top public schools and wealth-earners right in the middle of a lake between Seattle and Bellevue; and even a California town containing much more than Johnny Cash's prison blues.

LOOK: Here are the 50 best beach towns in America

Every beach town has its share of pluses and minuses, which got us thinking about what makes a beach town the best one to live in. To find out, Stacker consulted data from WalletHub, released June 17, 2020, that compares U.S. beach towns. Ratings are based on six categories: affordability, weather, safety, economy, education and health, and quality of life. The cities ranged in population from 10,000 to 150,000, but they had to have at least one local beach listed on TripAdvisor. Read the full methodology here. From those rankings, we selected the top 50. Readers who live in California and Florida will be unsurprised to learn that many of towns featured here are in one of those two states.

Keep reading to see if your favorite beach town made the cut.

RANKED: Here are the most popular national parks

To determine the most popular national parks in the United States, Stacker compiled data from the National Park Service on the number of recreational visits each site had in 2020. Keep reading to discover the 50 most popular national parks in the United States, in reverse order from #50 to #1. And be sure to check with individuals parks before you visit to find out about ongoing, pandemic-related safety precautions at www.nps.gov/coronavirus.

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