Debunking Anti Public Transportation Myths

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  • čas přidán 24. 07. 2024
  • mm:ss - title
    0:00 -intro
    0:45 second
    6:52 final

Komentáře • 32

  • @starventure
    @starventure Před měsícem +8

    The biggest problem for American mass transit is that it has been stigmatized. This is an unknown phenomenon in the rest of the world and is impossible to solve without draconian measures.

    • @user-dj7wv5ok2x
      @user-dj7wv5ok2x Před 27 dny

      Read "Moving Millions" by Stanley I. Fischler; this book will explain what went wrong with public transportation in the USA....

  • @Nico_M.
    @Nico_M. Před měsícem +4

    Those "neighborhoods" of one mile by one mile with avenues surrounding them are the perfect locations for better development for everyone: more density along the avenues, with three or four floors of residences with commercial and social spaces on the ground floors, leaving the current detached houses in the middle (maybe a transition between them with row houses?).
    More density means more commercial activity, more housing means housing prices are not as high, and people can still live in their detached houses with ammenities and destinations near them, without having to rely on their cars.

    • @mindstalk
      @mindstalk Před 18 dny +1

      OTOH, forcing density along the avenues means putting more people (and poorer people who can't afford houses) closest to the noise and pollution of all the cars on the avenues, while rich people live in their quiet interior blocks.
      If we're going to have height caps at all, I'd prefer Japanese style ones based on the width of the street. I don't know Japan's exact rules, but let's say that you can build as tall as the width of the right of way, plus any front setback you use. So if the right of way (not just curb to curb) is 60 feet, and you're 6 feet back from the sidewalk, you can build up to 66 feet. This provide a 1:1 height:width ratio, which Jeff Speck proposed was close to 'ideal' to most human sensibilities.

  • @darksidegryphon5393
    @darksidegryphon5393 Před měsícem +7

    I think the USA are good for high speed rail: large stretches of flat, mostly empty land.

    • @Trainton235
      @Trainton235  Před měsícem

      Yep, except they shouldn’t be high speed rail it should be Maglev because Maglev is faster a lot faster

    • @LouisChang-le7xo
      @LouisChang-le7xo Před měsícem

      @@Trainton235 ? but theres no one to ride it. The US population is basically in five clusters: West Coast, Gulf Coast, Midwest, Northeast. BUild bullet trains there. Theres not much in between but there are cities scattered veryyyyyyyy widely (think salt lake city to denver to kansas city) so night trains will do. Random towns with population 200 can get thruway buses

    • @Trainton235
      @Trainton235  Před měsícem

      @@LouisChang-le7xo parrot 🦜 do you have an original thought or just gonna repeat what you hear?

    • @user-dj7wv5ok2x
      @user-dj7wv5ok2x Před 27 dny

      @@Trainton235 Conventional twin-rail systems work better, since the technology is not only well proven, but other technical issues allow for the use of conventional rail than maglev; for example, maglev trains cannot easily be switched from one track to another, and there'll always be the possibility of the dreaded LOLA (Loss Of Levity Accident).

  • @cc-running
    @cc-running Před měsícem +3

    As someone who moved to Japan, I already know im gonna love this channel

    • @Trainton235
      @Trainton235  Před měsícem

      Thank you thank you, also I hope you love Japan !

  • @astro3666
    @astro3666 Před měsícem +13

    If china did it, USA can. They re roughly the same size

    • @Kanadabalsam
      @Kanadabalsam Před měsícem +3

      Russia also has passenger rail lines across its territory and good public transport infrastructure on their cities literally the largest country on earth, never understood that argument seems like such a dumb excuse, specially for Americans given rail was the way the entire country was built lol

    • @astro3666
      @astro3666 Před měsícem +1

      @@Kanadabalsam Russia does have good transportation system inside the city but i doubt its decent to use railway accross siberia. Though i get what you mean by that USA has every good reason to revitalise its railways

    • @Demopans5990
      @Demopans5990 Před měsícem +2

      If you look at the population distribution, you end up with 3 Japans. One on the East Coast, another on the West Coast, and one on the Gulf Coast

    • @LouisChang-le7xo
      @LouisChang-le7xo Před měsícem +1

      @@Demopans5990 thats all we need, nothing much in between. sleeper trainz and thruway buses would be good for middle america

    • @user-dj7wv5ok2x
      @user-dj7wv5ok2x Před 27 dny +1

      @@astro3666 "....but I doubt its decent to use railway across Siberia."
      At this moment, literally THOUSANDS of people are using the Trans-Siberian Railroad to travel from Moscow to Vladivostok.

  • @durece100
    @durece100 Před měsícem +10

    Too big? Americans build interstate highways, but they can't build railways. Stop this Car dependency nonsense. This ain't your own silent generation no more.

    • @Trainton235
      @Trainton235  Před měsícem +2

      Damn right!

    • @user-dj7wv5ok2x
      @user-dj7wv5ok2x Před 27 dny

      I mention this EXACT SAME THING on a chatsite known as "Quora"; the amount of rebuttals to my responses are quite "surprising "....

  • @mindstalk
    @mindstalk Před 18 dny

    The first part of your video was pretty solid but I have to quibble with later parts. While I'm all for land value tax, we don't need land tax and height minimums so much as we need to _allow_ taller buildings with less parking. Under current zoning: you talk about filling in empty parking lots; that's illegal. Various mixed use along the transit line? Possibly also illegal, at least for parts of it.
    And the problem isn't car company lobbies so much as NIMBY homeowners. The same communities that blocked freeways also fight to block apartments and businesses (especially in San Francisco). The relevant "car lobby" is people worried about 'traffic', especially but not just people who are car owners themselves.

  • @tstcikhthys
    @tstcikhthys Před měsícem

    It's not "America" that is too big (though that might be true in isolation, not specifically relating to the context of public transport), but it's _the US._

    • @user-dj7wv5ok2x
      @user-dj7wv5ok2x Před 27 dny

      And even THEN, the USA STILL isn't too large; that mantra is just used as an excuse for inaction.

  • @QueenEllouise
    @QueenEllouise Před měsícem +3

    Yoooo, i follow you on insta, i didn't know you had a yt. You just showed up in my feed lmao

    • @Trainton235
      @Trainton235  Před měsícem +1

      Thank you for following and enjoying the content! Spreading the word of the rails!