by emersonbiggins » Mon 05 Feb 2007, 14:12:29
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gampy', '
')#1 People like their cars. Way more than Europeans and Japanese. The cities in North America were built around private auto use. We don't have the history of having large cities built before the advent of the auto.
Actually, people "like their cars" because they don't have to pay the whole cost of owning and using them. Automobiles are a fantastic way to privatize benefits and externalize costs like pollution, sprawl, etc. Also, the government has long incentivized suburban home construction and ownership, which negates any benefit mass transit might have on society.
Take a look at any American city from the early 1850s-1920s. Large cities like Chicago, New York, but also small cities like Dallas had some form of electric traction (streetcar) service, in addition to passenger rail, and it was used often. American cities (even sunbelt cities like Dallas) were not so unlike their European counterparts, though now it seems that way.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gampy', '
')#2 Geography. US and Canada and Mexico are big countries. Japan is the size of California or smaller. Population density is a factor.
I don't really buy the density argument. We aren't talking about running trains coast-to-coast (at least I'm not, anyway). We're talking about running them between city pairs like Dallas-Houston, SD-SF, etc. etc., with population centers of 10-15 million just a few hundred miles apart. This is not fundamentally different than having 20 daily flights between such cities, so I could see airlines taking up rail franchises when their current business model [eventually] crumbles.