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Why the U.S. has no HSR

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Posted by diningcar on Monday, May 13, 2019 1:29 PM

Are we learning anything from the California fiasco?

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Posted by diningcar on Monday, May 13, 2019 1:30 PM

sorry for the duplication

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Posted by York1 on Monday, May 13, 2019 1:52 PM

charlie hebdo
York1
We are not Europe.  I, for one, don't want us to be like Europe, or China, or Japan.  The video asks why those other places have HSR and we don't. We don't because we don't want it.  We have something we like better.

 Says the guy in sparsely populated Nebraska, where there are probably more livestock than humans.  However, most Americans live in urban areas and many would benefit from and want HSR, if they ever knew what it could be like, as Overmod quietly stated.  Fortunately, many Americans are not so parochial, as more and more get a sampling of everyday travel on modern passenger rail systems (not just HSR) in Europe, Japan, China, etc.  

 

Why, yes, there are more cattle than people in Nebraska.  Next time you eat a steak, you can thank us.  However, we pay our taxes just like everyone else.

"many Americans are not so parochial".  Really?  How many?  Where is the huge groundswell to raise taxes to pay for a European-style system?  Where are the people who would support drastically altering the American landscape to build the system?

If people in urban areas who "would benefit from and want HSR" want it so badly, then more power to them.  Let them pay for it.  I'll wish you good luck with that one.

By the way, I moved to sparsely populated Nebraska from a large city.  I don't think there are as many people as you think willing to pay for and live next to more rail lines.

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Posted by York1 on Monday, May 13, 2019 1:58 PM

zugmann
  York1
We don't because we don't want it. We have something we like better.

 

Who is "we"?  Nebraska?  

 

"We"?  In our country, if enough people wanted HSR, there would be congressmen willing to work on this, there would be companies begging to build it, and there would be people demanding that their taxes be raised to pay for it.

I moved to Nebraska from a big city.   I didn't hear of a great groundswell of support for any more mass transit than was already in place.

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Posted by diningcar on Monday, May 13, 2019 2:03 PM

Are we learning anything from the current California fiasco?

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Posted by zugmann on Monday, May 13, 2019 2:07 PM

York1
If people in urban areas who "would benefit from and want HSR" want it so badly, then more power to them. Let them pay for it. I'll wish you good luck with that one.

Willing to have your state give up its farming subsidies as well?

It's been fun.  But it isn't much fun anymore.   Signing off for now. 


  

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Posted by York1 on Monday, May 13, 2019 2:27 PM

zugmann

 

 
York1
If people in urban areas who "would benefit from and want HSR" want it so badly, then more power to them. Let them pay for it. I'll wish you good luck with that one.

 

Willing to have your state give up its farming subsidies as well?

 

 

You bet, as soon as you drop the environmental regulations that increase farming costs.

Besides, we're not asking for hundreds of billions of dollars so someone can ride a train instead of flying or driving.

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Posted by BaltACD on Monday, May 13, 2019 2:37 PM

York1
 
zugmann 
York1
If people in urban areas who "would benefit from and want HSR" want it so badly, then more power to them. Let them pay for it. I'll wish you good luck with that one. 

Willing to have your state give up its farming subsidies as well? 

You bet, as soon as you drop the environmental regulations that increase farming costs.

Besides, we're not asking for hundreds of billions of dollars so someone can ride a train instead of flying or driving.

Ah!  the current story of the USA.  If I don't directly and personally benefit from it - RIGHT NOW - I'm not going to pay for it.

Enviornmental regulations - imagine wanting to breathe unpolluted air and drink unpoisioned water how totally archaic a thought.  Will farmers turned their fields into super fund sites by their aniti-enviornment actions?  Will farmers recreate the Dust Bowl conditions of the 1930's?  

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Posted by zugmann on Monday, May 13, 2019 2:46 PM

York1
You bet, as soon as you drop the environmental regulations that increase farming costs.

Somehow I doubt everyone is on board with that one.

Although considering the importance of aquifiers to your state, your scoffing at environmental regs is intriguing.

It's been fun.  But it isn't much fun anymore.   Signing off for now. 


  

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Posted by charlie hebdo on Monday, May 13, 2019 3:09 PM

York1
as soon as you drop the environmental regulations that increase farming costs.

Ever wonder why people consume less and less beef (and chicken) here?  Why more people have turned to grass-fed beef minus growth hormones and antibiotics?  Non-GMO products?  Obviously the market is there for healthy foods. In this day and age, people are willing to spend more for healthier foods but more and more folks are fed up with subsidizing corporate farming. It might have made sense in the depression, when we mostly had small family farms of ~100 acres.  Times change.

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Posted by BOB WITHORN on Monday, May 13, 2019 3:11 PM
If the Gov't stopped paying the farmers, all we would hear is the yelling about the high food prices in the stores and restaurants. Another "catch 22".
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Posted by BOB WITHORN on Monday, May 13, 2019 3:16 PM

Boy is that 'non- GMO' blown out of proportion!  I especially like the signs that proclaim 'organic'.  If it grew it's organic!!!  The world will starve without GMO products and the railroads won't much corn to haul.

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Posted by York1 on Monday, May 13, 2019 3:19 PM

BaltACD
Ah!  the current story of the USA.  If I don't directly and personally benefit from it - RIGHT NOW - I'm not going to pay for it. Enviornmental regulations - imagine wanting to breathe unpolluted air and drink unpoisioned water how totally archaic a thought.  Will farmers turned their fields into super fund sites by their aniti-enviornment actions?  Will farmers recreate the Dust Bowl conditions of the 1930's?  

1.  I have no problem paying for something that would really benefit the country.  However, the payoff on this one is ridiculous.  California HSR continues to hurt your cause.  $77 Billion (probably $90 Billion) estimate right now, for 200 miles.  And for what benefit?  So that we can be more like Europe?

2.  Farmers don't spit out here without filing a 42-page form for the EPA.  Do you really think today's farmers would pollute their own land?  They know more about pollution control than anyone else.  They know more about soil conservation and preserving the land than you give them credit for.

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Posted by York1 on Monday, May 13, 2019 3:32 PM

charlie hebdo
York1
as soon as you drop the environmental regulations that increase farming costs.

 Ever wonder why people consume less and less beef (and chicken) here?  Why more people have turned to grass-fed beef minus growth hormones and antibiotics?  Non-GMO products?  Obviously the market is there for healthy foods. In this day and age, people are willing to spend more for healthier foods but more and more folks are fed up with subsidizing corporate farming. It might have made sense in the depression, when we mostly had small family farms of ~100 acres.  Times change 

 

1.  Non-GMO?  There's no such thing.  Humans have been crossbreeding and genetically modifying plants since ancient times.

2.  Corporate farming is a non-issue.  When you read that over 90% of farmland is corporate-farmed, you instantly get the idea that some large nefarious company somewhere is plowing the landscape.  The vast majority of farms are still family farms.  The family has formed a corporation for tax and liability reasons.   Nearly every farm in my area is corporately owned, and those corporations are completely owned by the farming family.

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Posted by charlie hebdo on Monday, May 13, 2019 3:33 PM

Per capita beef consumption reached its peak in 1976 - 94.1 lbs.  2018?  57 lbs. A real growth industry, down 39.4%.

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Posted by York1 on Monday, May 13, 2019 3:40 PM

charlie hebdo

Per capita beef consumption reached its peak in 1976 - 94.1 lbs.  2018?  57 lbs. A real growth industry, down 39.4%.  

 

And what does per capita beef consumption have to do with HSR?  You were the one that brought up the whole livestock issue:  "Says the guy in sparsely populated Nebraska, where there are probably more livestock than humans. 

So if we lower beef consumption, we can then have our HSR system?

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Posted by charlie hebdo on Monday, May 13, 2019 3:43 PM

Instead of posting non-scientific erroneous statements, try telling the public what is in non-organic, GMO foods.

A few choice substances: 1. the use of the neurotoxin extraction agent, hexane. 2. glyphosate, linked to kidney disease, birth defects and breast cancer 3. use of growth-promoting ractopamine, which is linked to cardiovascular disease. 

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Posted by charlie hebdo on Monday, May 13, 2019 3:53 PM

York1

 

 
charlie hebdo
York1
as soon as you drop the environmental regulations that increase farming costs.

 Ever wonder why people consume less and less beef (and chicken) here?  Why more people have turned to grass-fed beef minus growth hormones and antibiotics?  Non-GMO products?  Obviously the market is there for healthy foods. In this day and age, people are willing to spend more for healthier foods but more and more folks are fed up with subsidizing corporate farming. It might have made sense in the depression, when we mostly had small family farms of ~100 acres.  Times change 

 

 

1.  Non-GMO?  There's no such thing.  Humans have been crossbreeding and genetically modifying plants since ancient times.

2.  Corporate farming is a non-issue.  When you read that over 90% of farmland is corporate-farmed, you instantly get the idea that some large nefarious company somewhere is plowing the landscape.  The vast majority of farms are still family farms.  The family has formed a corporation for tax and liability reasons.   Nearly every farm in my area is corporately owned, and those corporations are completely owned by the farming family.

 

1935 average farm size 154.8 acres; 2016, 442 acres, almost triple, 41% of farms have sales over $500K, with average size ~2300 acres.  So much for the little family farm.

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Posted by York1 on Monday, May 13, 2019 3:57 PM

charlie hebdo
1935 average farm size 154.8 acres; 2016, 442 acres, almost triple, 41% of farms have sales over $500K, with average size ~2300 acres.  So much for the little family farm.

If you reread my post, you'll notice I didn't say anything about the farm's size.  I talked about corporate farming.  Yes, farm size has increased.  

And before you make too much of that sales figure, try figuring in the cost of the equipment, seed, fuel, and taxes.  That's why farms have grown.  It would be impossible to survive on a small farm.

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Posted by York1 on Monday, May 13, 2019 4:01 PM

charlie hebdo

Instead of posting non-scientific erroneous statements, try telling the public what is in non-organic, GMO foods.

A few choice substances: 1. the use of the neurotoxin extraction agent, hexane. 2. glyphosate, linked to kidney disease, birth defects and breast cancer 3. use of growth-promoting ractopamine, which is linked to cardiovascular disease. 

 

 

I assume this comment is not aimed at me.  I don't recall posting any "non-scientific erroneous statements" about organic or GMO foods.

Again ... how does any of this have anything to do with the discussion of American HSR?

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Posted by York1 on Monday, May 13, 2019 4:06 PM

This discussion has really gone off the deep end, and for that I'm sorry.  I posted my comments about why I thought HSR in our country was not something to be pursued.  You guys obviously disagree.  That's fine.

And GMO foods, farm size, and hick farmers poisoning the air, land, and water really have nothing to do with it.

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Posted by charlie hebdo on Monday, May 13, 2019 4:34 PM

I apologize also.  The thread subjects were connected, if barely.  One fact directly related to HSR is this: In 2012 the federal government spent over $20 billion on subsidies to farm businesses, 39% of the 2.1 million farms receiving them. That $20 billion is an unnecessary pork barrel of the worst sort.  If it were used for passenger train improvements, that would be an investment in the future.

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Posted by diningcar on Monday, May 13, 2019 5:45 PM

with all of the diverse discussion I notice no one wishes to talk about California's  very current, complex and expensive situation

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Posted by Convicted One on Monday, May 13, 2019 7:03 PM

diningcar

with all of the diverse discussion I notice no one wishes to talk about California's  very current, complex and expensive situation

 

We kinda did that already a few months ago over in the "Passenger" section.

Nobody could come up with a reasonable answer to the question "if somebody wishes to earn $15/hr working at McDonalds in San Fran,  while living on the cheap in a quonset hut out in the middle of the high desert,  why do they deserve a subsidized commute to boot?"Cowboy

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Posted by Gramp on Monday, May 13, 2019 9:52 PM

I think this whole discussion can really be sourced in the watershed year 1913. The 16th amendment was ratified then, allowing the federal government to tax people’s income without paying attention  to the population of each state. With a couple other events that year, what was set into motion was policy that supports the federal government in our time as the “great provider”.

To me, the great provider ethic yields the California HSR mess. In contrast I look to the Pennsy’s building of the Hudson River tunnels plus Penn Station.

This is one reason I am so interested in and a supporter of what Texas Central is trying to do.  Our country needs “generators”, not “providers”.

As an aside, I don’t like when word meanings are hijacked.  “organic” is muddled to mean “bad pesticide-free“ now.  Dumb and dummer.

My 2 cents. One for the postcard, one to mail it.

 

 

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Posted by Falcon48 on Monday, May 13, 2019 10:15 PM

I'm late to this party.  But let me make an observation, for what (if anything) it may be worth.

If a given corridor has no or minimal passenger rail service today, it's not going to be a good candidate for HSR.  My understanding is that most of the European HSR corridors were important passenger corridors with multiple trains per day long before they were upgraded to HSR (notice I say "corridors" not lines - I recognize that an HSR line may not precisely follow the non-HSR line, but the major markets will be the same). 

Now look at the California fiasco. For many decades, the only rail passenger service between Los Angeles and San Francisco has been one train per day in each direction.  So, we are expected to believe that there is, nonetheless, a huge unfulfilled demand for rail transport that would miraculously materialize if a zillion dollars were spent on an HSR line?  Something like this could only be conceived in a state that has legalized pot.    

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Posted by BaltACD on Monday, May 13, 2019 10:22 PM

Gramp
I think this whole discussion can really be sourced in the watershed year 1913. The 16th amendment was ratified then, allowing the federal government to tax people’s income without paying attention  to the population of each state. With a couple other events that year, what was set into motion was policy that supports the federal government in our time as the “great provider”.

To me, the great provider ethic yields the California HSR mess. In contrast I look to the Pennsy’s building of the Hudson River tunnels plus Penn Station.

This is one reason I am so interested in and a supporter of what Texas Central is trying to do.  Our country needs “generators”, not “providers”.

As an aside, I don’t like when word meanings are hijacked.  “organic” is muddled to mean “bad pesticide-free“ now.  Dumb and dummer.

My 2 cents. One for the postcard, one to mail it.

While the Income Tax is one thing.  The real defining moment was when Eisenhower signed the Interstate Highway legislation in 1956 with 90/10 federal/state funding to create the Interstate system.  At that same relative point in time Japan was begining to undertake the Shinkasen high speed rail system as they were starting to reach economic 'normalization' after the war, the European countries were also starting the reach economic normalization and making plans for their futures, not just recovering from the destruction of the past.

The USA made one choice, other countries made a different choice. The 'land grab' that was required for the Interstate system, in relative terms precludes a second land grab that would be required to build and implement real HSR.

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Posted by Gramp on Monday, May 13, 2019 11:46 PM

Baltacd, your observation is well taken. 

I should add one of those other 1913 events - the 17th amendment. Allowed senators to be elected by popular vote rather than be selected by state legislatures.   A natural check on spending disappeared because up until then, state legislatures had to foot the bill of increased spending. The states lost their control over the senate. Both the houses could pander directly to the electorate. The federal government slowly took over many state powers, and gained the upper hand.

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Posted by CSSHEGEWISCH on Tuesday, May 14, 2019 7:04 AM

Much of the push for direct election of United States Senators (the Seventeenth Amendment) was the result of the corruption involved in the selection of Senators by the various state legislatures.  Mark Hanna (and many others) were pretty free with "campaign contributions" and less thinly veiled incentives to gain and hold their Senate seats.

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Posted by Convicted One on Tuesday, May 14, 2019 7:26 AM

BaltACD
The USA made one choice, other countries made a different choice. The 'land grab' that was required for the Interstate system, in relative terms precludes a second land grab that would be required to build and implement real HSR.

Balt, maybe that is the best answer.

For all it's flaws and short comings, the highway system is, (for the most part) "open access", so taxpayers have less objection to supporting it than they would paying a king's ransom to build a system that somebody else is going to control via a farebox. America loves it's "freedom",  rah! rah! and all that.

Perhaps if the expanded toll road system concept gains momentum, that might change some minds? 

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