Huh. Covid-19 has even infected Al's " Ï quit " thread.
...and just when we were beginning to turn it into a cosy little leftist chatroom
Anyways this little comment from DD got me thinking:
Reminds me of traveling in Canada and being amazed at how clean the trains were and feeling shame for my own county and how so many mistreat treasures like state funded transportation.
I mean, for a moment that made me wonder if America was actually enviable in this respect
. But, no, I looked it up, and it's just the same shoddy deal we have in the UK, since privatisation . In our case, public transport absorbs an awful lot of taxplayers money in the form of subsidies (about the same as in the US) but that doesn't stop it becoming increasingly run down and inefficient as well as increasingly costly for the user . Outside London, almost nobody uses it unless they really don't have any other choice; and the dwindling passenger numbers only make matters worse. And that inevitably mean a lower grade of traveller on average, because aside from pensioners (whose local travel is entirely subsidised, in the form of free passes), schoolchildren (ditto) and low-paid workers, you've still got all the drunks, crackheads, rowdy youths etc using public transport, and becoming ever more conspicuous by dint of the absence of other groups Plus, now that we no longer have bus conductors (it's cheaper to get the driver to do both jobs) the antisocial behaviour on buses is almost totally out-of-control, and bus journeys are grindingly slow It's a grim situation, created not by bad people so much as bad political choices. .
Found an article online that neatly explains the difference between US and Canada:
https://www.vox.com/2015/8/10/9118199/public-transportation-subway-busesIt seems you
can improve things considerably without opting for State ownership. Japan has also done a pretty good with subsidised private transport (but structured very differently than ours) .
Still, most UK travellers are thoroughly disillusioned with privatisation, and want to go back to a fully nationalised system . And that very much includes myself. Now that private transport is such a huge threat to the environment, I don't think we can afford to mess about. Investing enough in in public transport to create a really attractive and affordable alternative to travelling by car ought to be a priority. Once people have got themselves a taxed, insured, roadworthy car, then it's a damned sight cheaper, as well as as a damned sight more convenient, a damned sight less time-consuming and a damned sight more pleasant to just use the thing for every trip (at least here in Britain). Public transport has to up its game considerably to stand a chance of competing with that.