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Kim W5TIT wrote:
"JJ" wrote in message ... Larry Roll K3LT wrote: Jim: Most EU countries are much better suited for mass transit (meaning light rail systems) than is the U.S. as a whole. Sure, they're good in big cities, but the USA has too many wide open spaces and too much suburban sprawl -- making long commutes necessary for the majority of the workforce. This means we're going to be dependent on personal, self-driven vehicles for a long time to come. Moreover, I don't think that adapting our public transit systems to be as accessible and accommodating to the majority of commuters as those in the EU would cost far more than they are spending. Remember, they had a headstart on their transit systems, dating back to the pre-war era. They also have a higher level of cultural acceptence of mass transit -- many EU families have never owned an automobile, simply because there was no need (not to mention the prohibitive cost). The long distances which must be travelled by most Americans to get to work and go about their daily duties would make EU-style gasoline prices impossible for the average person to afford. Our economy depends on cheap, abundant energy, available at present-day market rates (or lower) basically in perpetuity. The liberal, socialist Democrats think we need to change that and have EU-type energy prices, but they hate this country anyway, and want us to be subjugated to the EU. These treasonous wackos won't be happy until we revert to a totally agrarian society. They are the enemies of the freedom that America stands for, and must be treated as such. Europe will always be different from the U.S., and considering their geopolitical realities, it is just the way it should be. However, since most of the EU nations would fit inside a couple of our states, America must be different. We must consume a larger share of the world's energy simply because we have a lot further to go in order to make our own individual social and economic contributions. I agree that mass transit should be exploited to the greatest extent possible, but it will never replace the need for individual, personal mobility -- meaning the private automobile, in all of it's forms. 73 de Larry, K3LT The U.S. does need to develope better mass transit in large metropolitian areas. When I lived in the Dallas/Ft. Worth, Texas area, the two cities were always complaining about the heavy commute traffic and how they were not using the available mass transit system. The would encourage people to car pool or use what mass transit was available, all the while they were expanding the freeway system to accomodate more vehicles. If you want people to use mass transit you have to 1) build a good mass transit system, and 2) don't build massive freeway systems that make it easier for people to drive their vehicles to work than ride mass transit. I tired mass transit when I first started working downtown. Nothing convenient, friendly, safe, or good about it at all. It was scarey because of the drivers, inconvenient because I had to work my schedule around theirs, unfriendly people getting on and off knocking others with their asses or briefcases, and I'll never do it again. Along similar lines, I tried the local version of mass transit. I had to wait 30 minutes for the bus, then undergo a very circuitous route, and still had to walk a quarter mile. Leaving work at 5:00, I got home a couple minutes after 7:00 p.m. 2 hours to go the 2.5 miles from work to home!!!!! - Mike KB3EIA - |