• OOFshoot
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      761 year ago

      We’ve been warning about dangerous infrastructure for years now. It’ll only get worse until we start building for the next millennium.

      • @[email protected]
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        461 year ago

        Sure, and that future likely involves a lot of trains.

        I want super high speed rail instead of airplanes. I want regular high speed rail instead of highways. I want medium speed rail instead of roads. And so on. The technology is there, and we already have the land for most of it, we just need to stop building so many roads and actually build solid rail infrastructure.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          Agreed.

          I live in the Bay Area and because of my anxiety I can’t drive, but I can get to most places I need to be by BART/light rail.

          it’s just one mode of transportation. In Japan also have a comprehensive bus system as well as small towns you can only get by car which rail trains use to service in the 1900s.

          People will still have cars. We’ll still have roads and their big dick trucks. I don’t understand how this is a bad idea. LA to Vegas high speed would have been amazing. I lived in oak hills by the 15 seeing the traffic and how many people die on the pass due to car accidents was just horrifying.

          • @[email protected]
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            111 year ago

            Sure, that should be an option too!

            If you visit Europe or Japan, you’ll find that trains and airplanes both exist, and both are popular and inexpensive. That’s what I’d like to see happen elsewhere in the world as well, rely less on personal vehicles and more on mass transit, though preserve each as an option.

          • @[email protected]
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            271 year ago

            No, nothing has “infested” Lemmy. It’s just that many people understand, that rails are much more efficient than roads and that individual traffic on large scale has no future. At least if you want our future to be survivable.

          • @[email protected]
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            1 year ago

            Sure, we can absolutely have both, we should just be preferring mass transit to personal transit for populated areas.

            In my area, we have:

            • one major corridor with a big highway (5+ lanes) and a commuter train line
            • a light rail system in the urban area, with some branches extending to the suburbs
            • old freight rail line that connects to the existing light rail system and passes through several suburban areas, but doesn’t have light rail service
            • long stretches of “nothing” (~50 miles) to smaller metro areas, and after a few hundred miles goes to a popular tourist destination

            We’ve been having more traffic recently, so what’s the state-wide transportation system’s decision? Delay expansion of rail and expand the highway.

            What we should instead be doing is:

            1. extend light rail through existing rail line through busy corridor - great alternative to the commuter rail since it goes different places
            2. increase housing density along rail lines through zoning changes, and mix in commercial zoning w/ residential
            3. improve cycling and pedestrian infrastructure with a focus on connecting to rail infrastructure
            4. reroute cars to make it less convenient to get around in the city by car - i.e. nudge people toward using transit instead of personal vehicles

            Transit will never fully replace personal vehicles, but it can drastically reduce the need for driving within urban and suburban areas. Rail lines are a lot cheaper to maintain than roads, and trains can carry a lot more people than cars. In other words, if we can get people to use trains more than cars, we can reduce our spending on transportation infrastructure.

            We should absolutely keep and improve our existing highway infrastructure, but we should also be phasing out a lot of our road infrastructure in densely populated areas in favor of mass transit options that move people more efficiently.

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            I agree with you! Fuckcars takes it to such an extreme I find it very very difficult to side with them. Cars have their uses

      • @[email protected]
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        191 year ago

        It’ll only get worse until we start building for the next millennium.

        I guess we’re fucked then

        • OOFshoot
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          101 year ago

          Yeah, I agree. It’s not hard to build infrastructure that lasts forever, it’s just no one wants to pay for it.

          • @Eldritch
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            71 year ago

            I would gladly pay for it. Unfortunately most of us that would gladly pay for it can’t afford to pay for it. And the people that could afford to pay for it don’t get rich by spending their own money. They want everyone else to spend their money on it so they can use it for free.

            • Applesauce
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              81 year ago

              To build that infrastructure, an increase in taxes will be needed. The middle and lower tax brackets can’t afford any additional taxes at this time, so that leaves corporations and the upper tax brackets that will need to foot the bill. They don’t want that, so they pay to have campaigns of ignorance blasted at the masses to induce fear of any tax reform.

              At the end of the day, nothing gets fixed and the wealthy keep their money.

              • @stankbucket
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                51 year ago

                Or things get fixed at 10x what the actual costs should be because the people who award the contract are paid with part of that excess and it helps them keep the seat that allows them to continue funneling money.

              • @[email protected]
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                1 year ago

                Plus, why build anything properly when you can build it shit and (a) get paid the same anyway or (b) keep getting paid indefinitely to come back and finish the job?

  • tl;dr botB
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    481 year ago

    tl;dr:

    COLUMBUS, Mont. - A bridge that crosses the Yellowstone River in Montana collapsed early Saturday, plunging portions of a freight train carrying hazardous materials into the rushing water below. David Stamey, the county’s chief of emergency services, said there was no immediate danger for the crews working at the site, and the hazardous material was being diluted by the swollen river. The area is in a sparsely populated section of the Yellowstone River Valley, surrounded by ranch and farmland. The river there flows away from Yellowstone National Park, which is about 110 miles southwest. ADVERTISEMENT. The Yellowstone saw record flooding in 2022 that caused extensive damage to Yellowstone National Park and adjacent towns in Montana.


    I am a bot in training. Feedback

  • Seasons
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    351 year ago

    I love crumbling infrastructure, it’s my favorite.

    Thank you government

    • @Eldritch
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      251 year ago

      Thank you wealthy capitalists and oligarchs who bought control of government.

      • @stankbucket
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        61 year ago

        And thank you government for allowing the continued sale of all power to the highest bidder because of your refusal to punish open bribery.

        • @Eldritch
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          -11 year ago

          Government is us. We’ve got no one to blame for this but ourselves. I mean people like you and myself might see this as the obvious problem. But far too many people are oblivious or simply don’t have a problem with it. Or have been made to feel that we have little resource for it and simply must accept it.

          • @stankbucket
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            01 year ago

            Except we have no power to pick better representative because the party picks them and we get to choose between two identically useless options.

            • @Eldritch
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              01 year ago

              You definitely don’t if you’re defeatist

  • Zeusbottom
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    281 year ago

    We love our infrastructure, but we don’t want to pay for the upkeep.

    • BrooklynMan
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      61 year ago

      A huge infrastructure bill got passed recently. Of course, that doesn’t mean it all gets fixed right away.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    Hmm last nights news was way more entertaining.

    Lately we had:

    Extra juicy Trump indictments

    Suspenseful submarine countdown

    Andrew Tate charged

    Putin’s military disregarding his orders while under imminent threat

    I’m sure I missed something else.

    Gonna be hard to top that. And I’m not sure I want anything to.

      • @grue
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        1 year ago

        As far as I know, it’s a Frank Lloyd Wright thing about radical decentralization/individualism.

        Most sources on the web are unhelpful because they only talk about it as applied to architecture, but he had a bunch of ideas about urban planning (or rather, anti-urban planning) that are much less well known and get drowned out in the noise.

        Here’s one half-decent article I’ve managed to find about it

        The TL;DR is that Wright liked the idea of basically replacing cities with endless suburbia/Jeffersonian hobby farms interspersed with small towns, such that everything would be self-contained/self-sufficient. Or something like that, anyway. (In hindsight, the legacy of Wright’s idea is that American society took the “spread everything out” part without the “and get rid of cities” part and invented disastrous suburban sprawl.)

        Anyway, I think “usonian” is being used here to allude to the idea of failing to provide sufficient Federal funding for infrastructure because of misguided individualism, maybe?

        • @xohshoo
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          31 year ago

          agree, it’s a Frank Lloyd Wright thing maybe mixed with Esperanto. It comes from abbreviating United States of North America (USONA), then because it’s popularity around the time of it’s invention by Zamenhof, was adopted into Esperanto as the name of USA, somewhat modified as “Usono” https://eo.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landnomo_kaj_loĝantoj_pri_Usono

          I’m not sure if @[email protected] is an esperantisto or if it’s used in other contexts as well