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Women, fish, creatures of the night, fools, all ye, gather round as I tell you the tale of the most evil man in the history of the state of New York. Robert Moses, the president of the 1964 New York World's Fair and New York City parks commissioner between 1934 and 1960

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Our tale begins in the early 1900s where after our despicable little man earned his BAs from Oxford and Yale and a PHD in Political Science from Columbia, 3 colleges known for evil graduates, he became a close friend of New York governor Al Smith by attracting his attention through his plans to simplify and consolidate the new york state government. By the late 1920s he was appointed the Secretary of State and after reforming the New York state government to remove inefficiencies, he began to work on public works projects which required the creation of new political offices which coincidentally he was put in charge of such as the Long Island State Park Commission and the State Council of Parks. Here is where is influence began to become renowned as he designed the first car centric beach with the Jones Beach State Park

This was of course before his entire career would change with the beginning of New Deal and his legacy would go from a public servant and a reformer to that of a bigoted control freak who ran highways through minority neighborhoods.

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During the New Deal Era, the federal government gave millions of dollars to states and cities to build infrastructure to get people back to work via the WPA and CCC. The issue was most cities and states did not have shovel ready projects, but guess who did have shovel ready projects. One very famous little bastard boy from New York had many shovel ready projects. A few were good like public swimming pools, but his most famous project of the New Deal would be the Triborough Bridge

Now a simple bridge may not seem it would be one of the most important parts of the legacy of such a famous man as Robert Moses, but the thing is, Robert Advocated for a system of highways and roads to feed into the bridge and that alongside the 2 facts that he was obsessed with automobiles and had previously built highways on Long Island such as the Meadowbrook State Highway, set the stage for the numerous highways he would build, something made easier by how he used the funds from the tolls on projects he ran such as the Triborough Bridge to build other projects of his.