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How come building HSR can be this difficult in US?
Lol....There's that too...Because there are more lawyers working on the California High Speed Rail than Enginners.
You are so funny. US does not need HSR, it's a vehicle society. People travel by vehicles, always.
Funny you mentioned that. I showed my room mate this thread....he said the same thing "If you are in a hurry, you fly....if not, you drive"You are so funny. US does not need HSR, it's a vehicle society. People travel by vehicles, always.
In El Paso we barely have a functioning bus system. If you don't have a car....you're scr#wed...True. especially here in Texas, from what I have seen, you can hardly see people walking on the street except downtown. It's just vehicles, nothing else. Banks have drive-through ATMs, most fast restaurants have drive through window. It's too normal when you spend 30 minutes driving the highway to have a dinner. Without a car means you don't have legs.
Imagine trying to maintain a HSR line from El Paso to LA...lots of empty space....and it would have to be elevated so it didn't interfere with street traffic...and no one would use it except hippies.U.S does not have that much density in terms of population and is huge so that HSR is not profitable. But there is a mix of the personal vehicles for short distances and flying available for long distances. Last that I know of it has 30,000 flights per day carrying more than a million passengers every day domestically which is multiple times more than any other country including China. So not sure HSR has a space in the transportation in US.
Because of the way our settlement were spread....flying is preferred. You only take trains for local commutes or the "experience".