QUOTE: Originally posted by CSSHEGEWISCH One issue that has barely been addressed in this whole thread is the issue of labor relations. Open access would almost certainly be viewed as a union-busting tactic by both the operating and non-operating unions, and not without some justification.
Larry Resident Microferroequinologist (at least at my house) Everyone goes home; Safety begins with you My Opinion. Standard Disclaimers Apply. No Expiration Date Come ride the rails with me! There's one thing about humility - the moment you think you've got it, you've lost it...
QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding I would suggest you go back and read some of those 20 pages.
Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.
QUOTE: Originally posted by CSSHEGEWISCH 13. Why would any trucking company want to run its own trains? The capital investment in locomotives, cars and Z-van trailers would be steep. They would also have to hire train crews. Other labor contract issues would also need to be addressed and could be quite expensive in their own right.
QUOTE: Originally posted by CrazyDiamond While acknowledging that the telecommunications industry is very different than the RR industry, I see no reason why the RR industry would not expereince the same growing pains and then long term benefits like other industries have.
QUOTE: [Why would you equate historic inevitability with Marx? Look at the stock market - it is historically inevitable that the stock market will continue to rise in the long run, and
QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding So ..... When do I get my Jetson car?......(pretend there's a smilie icon here that looks like an "intelligent donkey") Click you heels three times and repeat "there's not place like home, there's no place like home......"
QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding So ..... When do I get my Jetson car?......(pretend there's a smilie icon here that looks like an "intelligent donkey")
QUOTE: Originally posted by CSSHEGEWISCH It is most interesting to note that most of the "optimists" who believe that OA (it seems to mean different things to different people) is the wave of the future are also subscribing to the Marxian concept (and fallacy) of historic inevitability. A review of past predictions often shows that flows of events are often turned on seemingly unrelated or minor occurences.
QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding Dave: Read "Broken Rails" by Christien Wolmar. It's about the privatisation of the British system, and the pitfalls of seperating infrastructur from operations. If and when I have time, I might peruse it, but it is a safe bet to say that the book was written by a socialist pessimist. Whenever there is change for the positive on the whole, there is always a minority group that loses out. I expect Mr. Wolmar is one of that loser group. "Broken Rails" sounds like a British railroad version of Ralph Nader's "Unsafe At Any Speed", a total hack job on the fine Chevy Corvair back in the early 60's. Here's a metaphoric equivelance - Writing a nasty critique of something that is having the predictable startup snafus in it's infancy aka Network Rail is like someone back in the 1790's writing a nasty critique of representative democracy based on the early problems experienced by the newly formed United States of America. Time has proven the superiority of representative democracy, and time will prove the superiority of open access.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding Dave: Read "Broken Rails" by Christien Wolmar. It's about the privatisation of the British system, and the pitfalls of seperating infrastructur from operations.
QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal Well, it comes down to whose predictions you put faith in. If you believed in the theories of the population bomb, if you believed back in the late 70's that if Ronald Reagan got elected there would be a nuclear war before his first term was up, if you believed that disco was here to stay and that rock and roll was dead, well you'd have been wrong. If however, you believed those who saw a brighter future for the U.S., if you believed those who said Soviet communism would be defeated, if you believed those who said that the Berlin wall would come down and the Germany's would be reunited, well then you would have been right. It all depends on the moral, spiritual, intellectual, and relative optimism of the predicter in question. Those who always see the glass half empty are usually less vindicated than those who see the glass half full. So........You can put faith in whomever's predictions you feel fit *your* prediction of the future? That doesn't work! My car still has wheels.[;)] ...........Meet George Jetson.......... No, you misunderstand. What I am trying to point out is that those whose predictions tend toward optimism are right more often than those whose predictions tend toward pessimism.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal Well, it comes down to whose predictions you put faith in. If you believed in the theories of the population bomb, if you believed back in the late 70's that if Ronald Reagan got elected there would be a nuclear war before his first term was up, if you believed that disco was here to stay and that rock and roll was dead, well you'd have been wrong. If however, you believed those who saw a brighter future for the U.S., if you believed those who said Soviet communism would be defeated, if you believed those who said that the Berlin wall would come down and the Germany's would be reunited, well then you would have been right. It all depends on the moral, spiritual, intellectual, and relative optimism of the predicter in question. Those who always see the glass half empty are usually less vindicated than those who see the glass half full. So........You can put faith in whomever's predictions you feel fit *your* prediction of the future? That doesn't work! My car still has wheels.[;)] ...........Meet George Jetson..........
QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal Well, it comes down to whose predictions you put faith in. If you believed in the theories of the population bomb, if you believed back in the late 70's that if Ronald Reagan got elected there would be a nuclear war before his first term was up, if you believed that disco was here to stay and that rock and roll was dead, well you'd have been wrong. If however, you believed those who saw a brighter future for the U.S., if you believed those who said Soviet communism would be defeated, if you believed those who said that the Berlin wall would come down and the Germany's would be reunited, well then you would have been right. It all depends on the moral, spiritual, intellectual, and relative optimism of the predicter in question. Those who always see the glass half empty are usually less vindicated than those who see the glass half full.
QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding How ironic! Since the writer in question has predictions that tend toward pessimism,he has a less than 50% chance of being right.[;)]. The Jetson prediction was quite optimistic.[:)] ..........His boy Elroy....... Yes, and if we parse his statements, we can see that his prediction of open access is an optimistic view of the future, so it will probably come to pass. His predictions of hydrocarbon fuel shortages are pessimistic, so they will probably be proved wrong. Speaking of the Jetson's, did you ever wonder why they never showed the surface of the planet, only the skybuildings, or why they never explained why everything was up in the sky? What was so terrible down there that they couldn't show it on Saturday morning kiddie friendly time slots[?]
QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding How ironic! Since the writer in question has predictions that tend toward pessimism,he has a less than 50% chance of being right.[;)]. The Jetson prediction was quite optimistic.[:)] ..........His boy Elroy.......
QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal Nonsense! We all know that life keeps getting better as we all get older. "The older the violin, the sweeter the music". Back in the 70's, the "experts" were predicting another Ice Age, it looked as if socialism was the end game for the U.S., communism was dominant and growing, and the population bomb was about to explode (as it was "two minutes to midnight" according to Erleichmann, et al.) What Fritz Kahn is predicting is what anyone who has studied transportation theory and history would conclude, namely that the idea of the proprietary closed access transportation system is an anachronism that dates back to the days of feudalism and slavery. All other transportation modes have now evolved into open access systems to one degree or another, and most rail systems in the world are now open access in some form. If history is any indication, our NA rail system will either evolve or go extinct.
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