High speed rail in the NE
#1
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I never understood why there is not a high speed rail system between Washington, D.C. and Boston, with stops in the important cities in between. The roads, the airspace and the airports in the NE are very congested. It could reduce significantly the number of cars and flights between those cities. I know it's very expensive, but it makes a lot of sense. It would make life easier to a lot of travelers. Other countries have it. Why not here?
#4
Because millions of people don't want to sell their homes to the government, thousands of businesses don't want to relocate, and no one wants to spends hundreds of millions moving the congested urban infrastructure that has built up over the last century in order to lay the straight track lines that high speed rail needs.
Europe had the "luck" to have most of its urban centers bombed to oblivion right as mass transit technology exploded.
Europe had the "luck" to have most of its urban centers bombed to oblivion right as mass transit technology exploded.
#5
The state of California couldn’t afford to build high speed rail on agricultural land between Bakersfield and Merced due to land cost, tunneling cost, environmental protection laws, NIMBY obstruction, and political pay to play contracting, and you expect a better result in the most densely packed and expensive areas in the US?
You dreamer you.
You dreamer you.
#7
#8
Prime Minister/Moderator

Joined: Jan 2006
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From: Engines Turn or People Swim
Because millions of people don't want to sell their homes to the government, thousands of businesses don't want to relocate, and no one wants to spends hundreds of millions moving the congested urban infrastructure that has built up over the last century in order to lay the straight track lines that high speed rail needs.
Europe had the "luck" to have most of its urban centers bombed to oblivion right as mass transit technology exploded.
Europe had the "luck" to have most of its urban centers bombed to oblivion right as mass transit technology exploded.
.........
#9
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Gets Weekends Off
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The state of California couldn’t afford to build high speed rail on agricultural land between Bakersfield and Merced due to land cost, tunneling cost, environmental protection laws, NIMBY obstruction, and political pay to play contracting, and you expect a better result in the most densely packed and expensive areas in the US?
You dreamer you.
You dreamer you.

In the NE it's a different story. It is a necessity. Sooner or later they'll have to do it.
#10
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Joined: Dec 2007
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