No one is more supportive of the American highway sytem than the Republican party.
Correct! Nobody is more supportive of one of the most subsidized government projects in existence than the Republican party.
Light rail isnt just government money, it is a waste. How many misguided and wasted light rail projects do we need in America before we stop funding them?
The topic was high speed rail, but anyway.......
The Legacy Highway in UT, Illiana highway in IL/IN, new I69 in IN, Western Transportation Corridor in VA, I405 in WA, I66 in KY, Sarah Palin's Bridge to Nowhere in AK, etc, etc, etc, etc. Wanna bet we can name way more wasteful highway projects than we can rail and transit? Is it time to stop funding roads and bridges? (technically though, we've already started this and it will get much worse with the extension of the Bush tax cuts) Yes there are wasteful projects. That's what happens when corporate interests dig their claws into politicians. But you don't throw the baby out with the bath water. Waste must be handled on a case by case basis.
If conservatives like Swamp, who tow the party line no matter what it is, would take a little time out of their day to actually seek out the truth in some of these topics, they may find that they don't really disagree as much as their talking heads tell them they do. As I mentioned before, and Swamp chose to ignore, rail stations bring economic growth to their surrounding areas. Portland, Denver, San Diego, Memphis, Miami, Charlotte, Austin, Little Rock have all seen economic growth in the areas with light and heavy rail stations. A simple two mile streetcar system in Kenosha, WI has helped turned a formerly abandoned industrial complex into a a few hundred new residential units. People like to live, work, play and shop near easy transit access. When a rail station goes in, property values increase. When a highway goes in, property values decrease. Look up the suburbs west of Chicago on a Google map and find some Metra Stations. Downer's Grove, Arlington Heights, Naperville....these are all conservative leaning towns and they all have Metra stations with spurred economic growth around them.
All of this gets overlooked when conservatives start arguing against mass transit. The real cost of driving is ignored as well. Forget the actual cost of building and maintaining roads (which, by the way, takes a much large percentage of it's funding from the feds vs. local and state than transit does), There's traffic management, environmental costs, highway runoff that is costly to treat, salts and chemicals in winter conditions, accidents need cleanup crews and are taxing to our healthcare system (auto accidents are one of the top causes of death and injury in the US). All of this eventually costs the US taxpayer money. Not to mention time wasted in traffic.
Oh, and one more thing....oil. Another thing that Republicans love to support that reaps in billions in subsidies and keeps us tied up in wars across the globe. But if you're not moved by the hidden cost of oil when it comes to driving, you soon will be moved by the cost at the pump. Bloomberg just announced that they expect 105/barrel prices by the second quarter and then a continued rise. Say hello to five dollars a gallon. Sure would be nice to have the option of taking a train to work.
But don't take my word for it, these same points are made by William Lind over at the American Conservative. In fact, he teamed up with Paul Weyrich to write
Moving Minds: Conservatives and Public Transportation, something I would suggest that Cons like Swamp take a look at.
And before you come back with the bullshit hand of the free market drivel, remember that it was the railroads that were heavily taxed in order to create funds to build all the roads and bridges needed by the auto industry. Remember that the suburbs are highly subsidized and special interest groups help create zoning laws that force the construction of single family dwellings separated from industry, business, retail and entertainment. Also try to remember that these suburbs are creating a demand on our infrastructure system that I and other taxpayers who live nowhere near the 'burbs have to shoulder.
12/16/2010 7:26 PM (edited)