Not altruism. Creating demand. The highest priority action in business.
Electroliner 1935 As to regulating train length, what should be the limit. Taking the case to the extreme. Could railroads act like a conveyer belt inserting cars at one end of a train and taking them off at the other end thus blocking crossing for a day. When trains get to be three mile long strings and slow down to under 20 mph, they can tie up towns for in my view excessive amounts of time. There will be cases where first responders are delayed. When I was about three years old (1940), I lived in Glen Ellyn IL on the South side of the tracks (C&NW + CA&E) and a house burned down because there was only one fire dept and it was on the North side of the tracks. And a slow moving C&NW freight had the crossings blocked. A couple of years ago, a CN train on the former EJ&E had the Barrington area tied up and an ambulance had to take a long detour to get the patient to the hospital. Who will be the DECIDER on what is acceptable.
As to regulating train length, what should be the limit. Taking the case to the extreme. Could railroads act like a conveyer belt inserting cars at one end of a train and taking them off at the other end thus blocking crossing for a day. When trains get to be three mile long strings and slow down to under 20 mph, they can tie up towns for in my view excessive amounts of time. There will be cases where first responders are delayed. When I was about three years old (1940), I lived in Glen Ellyn IL on the South side of the tracks (C&NW + CA&E) and a house burned down because there was only one fire dept and it was on the North side of the tracks. And a slow moving C&NW freight had the crossings blocked. A couple of years ago, a CN train on the former EJ&E had the Barrington area tied up and an ambulance had to take a long detour to get the patient to the hospital. Who will be the DECIDER on what is acceptable.
Train blocks access to house fire near Valley (ketv.com) The train was tied down because of a derailment in Illinois. The crew thought they had cut the proper crossing. One that they didn't cut had an occupied house that no one on the railroad knew was there.
Jeff
CSSHEGEWISCHRockefeller's decisions were based on enriching himself, not some altruistic goal of making petroleum products affordable. Consider rebates paid to his firm on freight rates paid by his firm and his competitors.
Yes, that's why he had such a hard time understanding the vitriol he encountered.
GrampYes, that's why he had such a hard time understanding the vitriol he encountered.
greyhoundsThis was in addition to allowing an average person to have affordable light at night.
Indeed. Consider the graph on this page: https://ourworldindata.org/light
(Yes, the chart is in British Pounds, but you get the idea)
There is a description of the various technologies that allowed the cost of light to steadily drop as the industrial age progressed. Almost all of the innovations that allowed that price drop were due to new technologies created by individuals persuing profit in a free market economy. They made money and consumers paid less and less, to everyone's benefit.
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