this post was submitted on 19 Nov 2023
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A Boring Dystopia

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[โ€“] HakFoo@lemmy.sdf.org 51 points 1 year ago (9 children)

It feels like one of the few positive outcomes of the Cold War was the Sputnik shock.

The public and politicians suddenly got very worried about actual scientific competitiveness and winning a competitive race on something other than bombs.

I wish we'd have a similar moment when it came to China and infrastructure.

This is a country that was built by railroads. Even today, you can see the strings of towns spaced to the size of a steam locomotive's water capacity. But what do we see from that legacy now? The Acela, an effort that would barely be competitive in the 1970s, on a minimal set of routes. Meanwhile, the Chinese are laughing from the windows of their 300kph trains.

(Yes, I'm aware that American freight rail is efficient and impressive, but somehow almost every other industrialized country has figured this one out)

[โ€“] Cassus@lemm.ee 18 points 11 months ago

But what do we see from that legacy now?

It bothers me so much. I wanted to pay for a friend's ticket to visit us. By train, it was $200, a 16hr trip, of which 2/3rds was by bus thanks to Amtrack's garbage infrastructure/system.

By plane for the same trip, it was a $180, 2hr direct flight.

It's so god damn ass backwards. Trains produce a fraction of the emissions of planes, so why are we ok with trains being uncompetitive?

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