• @x00z
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    343 hours ago

    It’s funny how you see American movies about the old times and there’s always a train around, but in fact it was the people being around the train.

    • Justin
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      71 hour ago

      Actually, every American town founded before 1950 had a train line going through it. Aside from people living on homesteads, and maybe some small antebellum towns, everybody lived in close distance to a train station before they were shut down and torn up.

      Worth noting that this map is for passenger rail only. The cargo rail network is much bigger. Basically, this map shows whereever Amtrak runs, where as before the introduction of massively subsidized interstates in the US in 1956, every cargo rail company also ran profitable passenger rail traffic on a massive network that became today’s cargo lines.

      The cargo companies dumped their traffic onto the federal government in the 70s and have also ran massive cost cutting programs since, tearing up hundreds of thousands of miles of rail.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_rail_transportation_in_the_United_States

    • @AngryCommieKender
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      413 hours ago

      Who Framed Roger Rabbit was a documentary. Not the toon town stuff. The part about the judge buying the trolley so he could shut it down to build a highway. We used to have a better rail system than anywhere else. Then the car and oil companies bought the tracks and paved over them in the 1920s to 1950s

      • @[email protected]
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        41 hour ago

        A perfect example of this is the Boston T. It’s half the size it was 100 years ago and is still considered the 3rd best transportation network in the country, with a full 50% of all daily commutes to Boston happening on the T.

      • @samus12345
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        2 hours ago

        “Who needs a car in LA? We got the best public transportation system in the world!”

      • @[email protected]
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        32 hours ago

        Although honestly the feuding between the various tram/rail/bus companies contributed to their demise.