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    Let Me Sum Up

    Why it's okay Bush Presidential Center is an homage to mediocrity. (Because, clarity!)

    Eric Celeste
    Apr 23, 2013 | 11:14 am

    Dallas is all atwitter about Thursday’s opening of the $250 million George W. Bush Presidential Center. Five living presidents will be on hand. Luncheons will be had, money will be raised and roads will be closed. Heck, we may even see a terrorist attack, if Channel 8 and its air-quote source are to be believed. Big week!

    So big, a Dallas Morning News reporter wrote an entire blog post just pointing to all the George W. Bush coverage from the past few days. And why not? Ol’ George hasn’t been this popular in seven years. History has spoken, and history has found him a good man, because he writes kind notes. So let’s praise him and his new library/think tank/archive/bowling center. What’s the harm?

    Let’s revel in the moment with Dubya himself. Let’s backslap and make up nicknames for each other. Let’s celebrate the man’s clarity. Let’s visit the Decision Points Theater, the “interactive exhibit that allows visitors to explore key decisions of the Bush presidency.” Exciting!

    Perhaps we’ll get to see him leading a meeting in a Tupac-like hologram, just as former Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill remembers him: telling Colin Powell the Arab-Israeli conflict, “Looked real bad down there. I don't see much we can do over there at this point.” That way, Bush noted, we could focus on Iraq and its weapons of mass destruction. West Wing-ish!

    Oh, but let’s not get hung up on the past. This is about the now, the present. Creating a torture state, leading the world into war because of a cartoonish worldview that an “axis of evil” exists, creating more terrorists with indiscriminate bombing of anyone brown who moves — rear-window dressing for namby-pamby whiners! (Although, don’t think Bush won’t share a chuckle with Obama over drones. Lucky dog!)

    Let’s talk about the center itself. That’s the real focus this week.

    Well, I think it is. Going back through that blog post, I see a link to interviews with 43 and Laura Bush and a story about how the former president paints puppies. I see a link to an entire section about the GWBPC. But nowhere do I see a notice about Sunday’s front-page review of the center by the paper’s new architecture critic, Mark Lamster.

    Oh! There’s a video on the page that talks about it. And I can find the story online if I search for it.

    I wonder why it’s so hard to find. It’s a spectacular review: confident, authoritative, insightful, layered, beautifully written. Here’s a sample:

    Designed by New York architect Robert A.M. Stern, it seems decidedly undecided about its place in the world, trading in the language of architectures past while claiming, without much conviction, the mantle of the present. Everywhere competent, it nowhere rises to a level of inspiration.

    Hey! Wait a just a minute. I just noticed something. This guy sounds like a Negative Nellie. Like a New Yorker. [Googles furiously.] Well. Of course he is.

    Thank goodness we have a true Texan like Bill McKenzie to set that Yankee straight:

    Another reason the building was never going to be a modernist, lofty facility is that Bush himself is not that way. He is plain-spoken and unpretentious. A George W. Bush presidential center that is otherwise would not really reflect the core of his personality or that of Laura Bush. They are more West Texas than Manhattan.

    Suck it, intellectual and cultural capital of the country! Yeehah!

    God, I love it when people misunderestimate George W. Bush. He wanted the center that bears his name to be just Oklahoma. (That’s “OK” to you and me.)

    Why? Let me quote the man: "I'm the commander — see, I don't need to explain — I do not need to explain why I say things. That's the interesting thing about being president."

    Retweets

    I highly recommend this follow.

    And now, the top 5 responses to my debut review of the bush center...

    — mark lamster (@marklamster) April 23, 2013

    What? Hypocrisy? But he went to Harvard.

    Ted Cruz's Votes huff.to/ZlfK2q via @huffingtonpost

    — Martina Navratilova (@Martina) April 23, 2013

    The $250 million George W. Bush Presidential Center opens this week.

      
    Photo courtesy of George W. Bush Presidential Center
    The $250 million George W. Bush Presidential Center opens this week.
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    This is how much money you need to live comfortably in Dallas in 2025

    Amber Heckler
    Apr 4, 2025 | 4:47 pm
    Money
    Photo by Igal Ness on Unsplash
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    As the cost of living in Dallas fluctuates, a financially secure future is getting harder to attain, it seems. A new report has determined that Dallas residents need to make $4,000 more than they did last year to make living comfortable in 2025.

    Residents in Dallas have the 31st most affordable salary requirements nationwide to maintain financial stability in 2025, according to SmartAsset's annual study. Their experts collected data from MIT’s Living Wage Calculator to determine the cost of living for a childless individual in the 100 largest American metro areas.

    Single adults in Dallas would need to make $95,930 a year to live a comfortable life in 2025, or $4,160 more than last year's salary requirements.

    That's a huge jump from SmartAsset's 2023 report, when single Dallasites only needed to make $64,742 post-tax to live a financially stable life.

    For a family of two working adults and two children, the combined income necessary to live comfortably in the Dallas area is $213,741 a year. For additional context, the median household income in the city was $70,121 in 2023.

    Financially stable incomes in other Dallas-Fort Worth cities
    Dallas tied with Irving and Garland for the No. 31 spot in the report, while Fort Worth and Arlington tied for No. 34. North Texans living on the west side of the Metroplex would need to make $96,429 a year to maintain a comfortable living, only $499 more than Dallas dwellers.

    Three additional DFW cities – Plano, Frisco, and McKinney – tied for No. 69 nationally with single individuals needing to make nearly $108,000 a year to be financially comfortable in those suburbs. Families of four would need to bring in $229,715 a year.

    Breaking down the cost of living in Dallas
    SmartAsset also used the 50/30/20 budgeting strategy to figure out what a “comfortable lifestyle” meant for the purpose of their study: 50 percent of their income goes to a person’s needs/living expenses, 30 percent to a person’s wants, and 20 percent for their savings or paying down debt.

    That means a childless Dallas individual would need to spend $47,965 of their salary on their living expenses, $28,779 for discretionary expenses, and put about $19,186 toward their savings or debt payments.

    Families of four would have to spend about $106,871 on living expenses, $64,122 on entertainment or hobbies, and $42,748 toward savings or paying down debt in order to live comfortably in Dallas, based on the study's findings.

    "Most households aim to maintain a cushion between the necessary spending for day-to-day necessities – like housing, food, utilities and childcare – while also enjoying life in the moment and saving for the future," the report's author wrote. "This means keeping room in the budget for the occasional vacation or splurge, as well as savings for long-term goals like retirement or a child’s college education."

    Elsewhere in Texas
    Dallas-Fort Worth cities sat comfortably among the top 35 U.S. cities with most affordable salary requirements to be financially stable. But two other Texas cities were more budget-friendly: San Antonio (No. 6) and Houston (No. 15).

    Single San Antonio residents need to make $86,694 in order to live comfortably in their city, while Houstonians would have to make $90,064.

    The top 10 U.S. cities with the most affordable salaries needed to live comfortably in 2025 are:

    • No. 1 – Indianapolis, Indiana ($85,197)
    • No. 2 – Oklahoma City, Oklahoma ($85,446)
    • No. 3 – Tulsa, Oklahoma ($85,571)
    • No. 4 – New Orleans, Louisiana ($86,445)
    • No. 5 – Albuquerque, New Mexico ($86,611)
    • No. 6 – San Antonio, Texas ($86,694)
    • No. 7 – Winston-Salem, North Carolina and Tuscon, Arizona (tied, $86,736)
    • No. 9 – Spokane, Washington ($87,818)
    • No. 10 – Baltimore, Maryland ($87,984)
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