Golf4food
Male pirate last time I checked. Yep. Still male.
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2005
- Messages
- 8,175
But you can't compare the US to Europe when it comes to mass transit. Outside of the congested northeast corridor between DC and New York, maybe to Boston, the rest of the US is infinitely more spread out than anywhere in Europe. European cities are more compact, have fewer cars, many have areas cars are not allowed at all/pedestrian only zones (and maybe authorized city busses/trains). US cities go out, not up, so any major US city spreads for miles and miles and miles and the people are likewise spread. Walk to work? Forget about it. Walk to the grocery store or a restaurant? Not very likely for most people. The nearest grocery store to our house is over 2.5 miles away - one way. Work is a little over 10 miles away. Is there a city bus I could take? Nope. I'd have to walk quite a ways to get to a bus stop and then transfer multiple times only to be let off about a mile away from my office and then have to walk and cross conjested roads to get to it. It would also take the better part of close to two hours to do so from start to finish. Or I can drive and not be rained on, not be run over, and only take 20 minutes. The US is just not built for mass transit and it will take a lot of work and a lot of money to get it anywhere near the level of Europe. One short, inevitably underused stretch of track - at great cost - is probably not the best way to get that whole process started.