Cerb
Elite Member
- Aug 26, 2000
- 17,484
- 33
- 86
That defeats the purpose. It would be like hitting the Chinese buffet every day for three meals to lose weight.What is the lefts obsession with trains? I'll never understand it.
If you want to modernize our transportation why don't we build more interstates and airports that can take more volume.
Traditional slow trains, running on diesel/electric, are exceptionally energy efficient, compared to trucks and airplanes, and are getting more-so. As oil prices get too high, electrical power lines can replace diesel (it would make sense to start electric, if building a new city/suburb passenger system). It would do a great deal of economic good to reduce transportation costs by making them better (including more use of them where big trucks are more commonly used). In many areas, they could also augment buses for transporting people beyond those poor city routes (better yet, build neighborhoods around train stations, where possible, over the long term). Unless you are a trucker, you could stand to benefit from expansion and maintenance of traditional rail systems.
A government like our current one, though, would certainly half-ass it, given the chance.
HSR, OTOH, is something that really should have gotten under way during good times, if it even should be done in the US at all. It makes a great deal of sense for moving people between two densely populated places, that can be both be quickly and easily traveled across by foot. We have only a handful of such places in the US, and HSR is quite costly. Looking at a population density map, I can see all of three good HSR routes for the whole country.
