This is what is left after a large cargo ship from Singapore crashed into the Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore, a bridge named after Francis Scott Key, the author of the U.S. National anthem, “The Star-Spangled Banner.” NOTE: Baltimore's Francis Scott Key Bridge began construction in 1972 and opened on March 23, 1977. The bridge was constructed after the Baltimore Harbor Tunnel reached its traffic capacity and cost more than $60 million, according to the MDTA. NOTE: The 1.6-mile-long bridge spans the Patapsco River as it runs from Baltimore’s Inner Harbor out to the Chesapeake Bay. NOTE: The bridge served as a key part of Interstate 695, carrying north-south traffic around the city of Baltimore. The structure carried four lanes of traffic, two in each direction, separated by a concrete divider. NOTE: Baltimore’s Key Bridge is one of two in the D.C. metro area named after Francis Scott Key, the author of “The Star-Spangled Banner.” The other crosses the Potomac River and links Washington’s Georgetown to Rosslyn in Arlington, Va, notes @GuinnessKebab of the @washingtonpost.
@simonateba And they blamed trump?
@fred_floss @simonateba They are the problem, and Trump is another, and beyond all of them there is the biggest problem, rulers.
@fred_floss @simonateba Twrm Limits, no matter what one believes politically