Shireling
A Servant of King and Country
For many years I have been fascinated with the transportation systems of the United States. The nation is littered with highways, byways, expressways, and all manner of routes built at great taxpayer expense to allow us to zip between Nashville and Louisville in a few hours, or leave work in New York and sit pitifully in traffic on the way home to Hartford. With the explosion in population came an explosion in automobiles, traffic jams and griddlock followed. Our roads became beholden to the automobile, and so did our communities. How many of you can go to the grocery store for a gallon of milk without stepping into a motor vehicle?
Alas, the car is an inseparable part of the American DNA. So much so that the solution to our automobile emissions problems seems to be strip-mining the earth for lithium to make electric cars, and our solution for the literal stadium-full of people killed every year in automobile accidents is to restrict the autonomy and freedom of the driver with self-driving apparatus (not to mention put taxi drivers and truck operators out of a job forever).
I propose a better solution, a freer solution, and a more practical solution. The construction of a national railway system to rival Eisenhower's interstates. The advantages of a national railway system I see are these:
1. Emissions & Efficiency
Trains release less carbon emissions than the comparable number of trucks or cars that would be needed to haul the freight or passengers respectively. With advances in cleaner diesel technologies, diesel trains might be as environmentally friendly as a modern top-of-the-line electric car, given the environmental impact of lithium mining.
2. Shift to Walkability
A shift to mass transit would represent a shift to pedestrian reconquest of the American cityscape. If I have traveled fifty miles on a train to New York, I obviously don't have an automobile that I can access when I leave the train station. This would prompt cities to take pedestrian-friendly measures, and would reduce the total number of automobiles operating in a city because of the lack of motorist commuters. Smart city policies such as an investment in city bus services and metros could help curtail automobile usage even more.
3. Safety.
Trains are much safer that automobiles. It is a proven fact. While derailments are often horrific, they are exceedingly rare---especially with computer-assisted navigation. You are much more likely to die in an automobile accident than in a train derailment, merely due to the forces at work on the vehicles involved. My guess is that the number of individuals killed in car crashes will decline as less vehicles are out on the roads.
4. Repurposement of the Interstates
With mass transit mostly accomplished by locomotives, the interstate can once again fulfill it's first primary function: the movement of military personnel and equipment. With less vehicles on the road, such movement will be easier and the roads will deteriorate more slowly, necessitating less upkeep.
5. Generation of Jobs
A huge railway network requires a great labor investment. While we won't have men swinging hammer like John Henry, there is certainly work to be done, especially in maintaining the railway. Railroad crossties are replaced every few years, generating untold jobs in sustainable forestry and logging.
6. Trains Afford Leisure
How many of us have ever wanted to sleep, send a text, or read a book on a two hour commute? I'll allow that question to sit.
7. It Retains the Freedoms of the Automobile
For those who love cars, and I am one of those, the automobile is an expression of freedom and autonomy. Allowing self-driving systems to take hold, and lets face it the Fed will mandate them, will destroy the autonomy of the driver forever. This infrastructure plan is as much about keeping freedoms we hold dear as it is about safety and efficiency.
8. Trains are Cool
I think we can all agree that trains are just cool. My case rests.
Alas, the car is an inseparable part of the American DNA. So much so that the solution to our automobile emissions problems seems to be strip-mining the earth for lithium to make electric cars, and our solution for the literal stadium-full of people killed every year in automobile accidents is to restrict the autonomy and freedom of the driver with self-driving apparatus (not to mention put taxi drivers and truck operators out of a job forever).
I propose a better solution, a freer solution, and a more practical solution. The construction of a national railway system to rival Eisenhower's interstates. The advantages of a national railway system I see are these:
1. Emissions & Efficiency
Trains release less carbon emissions than the comparable number of trucks or cars that would be needed to haul the freight or passengers respectively. With advances in cleaner diesel technologies, diesel trains might be as environmentally friendly as a modern top-of-the-line electric car, given the environmental impact of lithium mining.
2. Shift to Walkability
A shift to mass transit would represent a shift to pedestrian reconquest of the American cityscape. If I have traveled fifty miles on a train to New York, I obviously don't have an automobile that I can access when I leave the train station. This would prompt cities to take pedestrian-friendly measures, and would reduce the total number of automobiles operating in a city because of the lack of motorist commuters. Smart city policies such as an investment in city bus services and metros could help curtail automobile usage even more.
3. Safety.
Trains are much safer that automobiles. It is a proven fact. While derailments are often horrific, they are exceedingly rare---especially with computer-assisted navigation. You are much more likely to die in an automobile accident than in a train derailment, merely due to the forces at work on the vehicles involved. My guess is that the number of individuals killed in car crashes will decline as less vehicles are out on the roads.
4. Repurposement of the Interstates
With mass transit mostly accomplished by locomotives, the interstate can once again fulfill it's first primary function: the movement of military personnel and equipment. With less vehicles on the road, such movement will be easier and the roads will deteriorate more slowly, necessitating less upkeep.
5. Generation of Jobs
A huge railway network requires a great labor investment. While we won't have men swinging hammer like John Henry, there is certainly work to be done, especially in maintaining the railway. Railroad crossties are replaced every few years, generating untold jobs in sustainable forestry and logging.
6. Trains Afford Leisure
How many of us have ever wanted to sleep, send a text, or read a book on a two hour commute? I'll allow that question to sit.
7. It Retains the Freedoms of the Automobile
For those who love cars, and I am one of those, the automobile is an expression of freedom and autonomy. Allowing self-driving systems to take hold, and lets face it the Fed will mandate them, will destroy the autonomy of the driver forever. This infrastructure plan is as much about keeping freedoms we hold dear as it is about safety and efficiency.
8. Trains are Cool
I think we can all agree that trains are just cool. My case rests.