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What happen to Milwaukee Road?
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Ken, you're set for the straight jacket. <br /> <br />The dominate manufactured good from the Upper Midwest was autos. The time period you're talking about, basically 1970's on up, PNW consumption patterns favored imported manufactures over Midwest manufactures. This is the period when Japanese goods became major market players, and the PNW was a key Japanese market. You just didn't get alot of Chicago manufactured goods bound for the PNW once the import patterns were established. More than likely, any westbound intermodals were getting what was left of the domestic goods market, and since the Milwaukee was favored by the importers via Seattle and Tacoma, what Chicago goods bound for the PNW that were left would probaby favor another routing in defiance of the import friendly Milwaukee. Perhaps also Yellow and Milwaukee just didn't have a working relationship. <br /> <br />They were scraps, Ken, just scraps. <br /> <br />But if you can explain why a "cancer" can dominate the Asian import trade through PNW ports, feel free to expound. It is amazing that you have become so addled that you cannot discern between the favorable position of Milwaukee's PCE relative to the other PNW transcons, and the real cancer on the Milwaukee's system, namely the Midwest Granger lines. <br /> <br />In the meantime, we'll arrange a rendevous between you and those nice young men in their clean white suits and they're coming to take you away, ha ha.......
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