Do High-Speed Rail Projects Increase Happiness? (vice.com) 142
According to a recent study involving a sample of 28,646 Chinese people, high-speed rail projects were found to increase individual happiness, albeit not by much. An anonymous reader shares an excerpt from a Motherboard article: It can increase happiness, especially for people who live in regional capitals, rural areas, men and the elderly, but only by an increase of .076 on the happiness scale of one to five. To put it another way, as the study does, "The coefficient accounts for 1.997 percent of the mean of happiness." This is statistically significant, in the strict definition of whether results are due to chance, and therefore a publishable scientific finding. But it is hardly meaningful in terms of how much high speed rail influences the happiness of Chinese people. I mean, come on. Two measly percent?
In the "policy implications" section, the study authors pose a tantalizing question: "What is the significance of economic growth if it cannot effectively improve residents' happiness?" While the two percent happiness finding may be marginal, they're at least asking the right questions.
In the "policy implications" section, the study authors pose a tantalizing question: "What is the significance of economic growth if it cannot effectively improve residents' happiness?" While the two percent happiness finding may be marginal, they're at least asking the right questions.
Not significant (Score:3)
The law of headlines applies. 0.076 on a scale of 1 to 5 is not significant by any human meaning of the word.
I don't even believe that this is significant statistically; I can't credit that you can match the control group (no high speed rail) with the experimental group (high speed rail) sufficiently well that you can say that the effect is related to the high speed rail, and not due to some other differences between the groups.
Not quantitative (Score:2)
That depends enormously on how non-linear the scale is in the relevant region. In reality, all of these "Rank your subjective evaluation on a scale of 1 to n" questions are spurious attempts to quantify the qualitative. In some cases it may be possible to get statistically significant results by comparing each individual's ranking before and after an event to see how many go up, go down, or remain unchanged; but any analysis beyo
Hard, probably impossible, to measure [Re:Not q... (Score:2)
That depends enormously on how non-linear the scale is in the relevant region. In reality, all of these "Rank your subjective evaluation on a scale of 1 to n" questions are spurious attempts to quantify the qualitative.
True enough. Subjective scales cannot be linear nor non-linear, since there is not objective measure.
What "0.076 on a scale of 1-5" actually means is that one person in 13 ranked their happiness one point higher on the 1 to 5 scale.
In some cases it may be possible to get statistically significant results by comparing each individual's ranking before and after an event to see how many go up, go down, or remain unchanged; but any analysis beyond that is unreasonable.
The non-paywalled portion of the actual paper https://www.sciencedirect.com/... [sciencedirect.com] doesn't give enough information to tell whether the survey is a before- and after- opening high-speed rail stations in cities, or comparing cities with- and without high speed rail.
If it is indeed a b
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Clearly you didn't read the paragraph or you would have seen this:
This is statistically significant, in the strict definition of whether results are due to chance, and therefore a publishable scientific finding.
It doesn't matter what you believe, the numbers say otherwise.
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I don't even believe that this is significant statistically;
Clearly you didn't read the paragraph or you would have seen this:
This is statistically significant, in the strict definition of whether results are due to chance, and therefore a publishable scientific finding.
It doesn't matter what you believe, the numbers say otherwise.
Let me rephrase this for you, then: I don't believe that the statistical manipulations that the authors used to conclude that the results they measure are due to the factor they studied (high-speed rail), rather than due to other factors (systematic differences in the populations studied) have sufficient refinement to justify a conclusion that their result of a 0.075 difference is meaningful.
Re: Not significant (Score:2)
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Well, it is relevant since it is one of the most recent attempts to do something like this in the US, and it is in one of the most populous and wealthy states in the Union.
It is a shining example of attempting this in the US, especially if you are wanting this to be wide spread across the nation, especially in areas with less population and state wealth.
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Well, I didn't look up the stats myself...just was going on what folks on here post when I've ever said something negative about California, like the exodus of people and companies from CA...they always come back and put forth the large economy, large population
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I think the US is still capable of large projects but they have to be projects a lot of people want.
There was absolutely not a huge out cry in California among normal people for a HSR project from SF to LA.
Everyone knew it was a boondoggle shit project at $30 billion, now it's going to be at least 3-4x that much and will not be all that high speed and alleviates none of the problems that all public transit have, namely how do I get to and from the train?
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I think the US is still capable of large projects but they have to be projects a lot of people want.
There was absolutely not a huge out cry in California among normal people for a HSR project from SF to LA
Almost all large projects are guaranteed to run into delays and cost overruns. Remember the Big Dig? Or the time the tunnel boring machine broke down in Seattle and it took two years to replace it?
Unfortunately people are idiots and what they would "want" is another lane on the highway or the hyperloop.
You build the train stations and then can add local transport around it since there's now a reason to do it.
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If I'm alone, I can fly to LA from SF, rent a car or Uber everywhere. Car rental is likely cheaper.
If I'm in a group, driving a car down is wasaay cheaper on a per person basis, and we don't have to fuck with the airport and Uber or rental. I can drive and it's about the same cost but more convenient and saves time.
If I take the HSR which will never finish then see above about the airport.
Why do I need HSR?
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If I'm alone, I can fly to LA from SF, rent a car or Uber everywhere. Car rental is likely cheaper. If I'm in a group, driving a car down is wasaay cheaper on a per person basis, and we don't have to fuck with the airport and Uber or rental. I can drive and it's about the same cost but more convenient and saves time. If I take the HSR which will never finish then see above about the airport.
Why do I need HSR?
Because air travel burns fossil fuels, and HSR will be electric.
Because it might be quite a bit faster if you're going from downtown to downtown. Downtown SF is half an hour from SFO by public transit (or 15-ish minutes by car), and downtown LA can up to an hour and 20 minutes from LAX by light rail (or up to 50 minutes by car). And you have to arrive at the airport an hour before the flight so you don't miss it because of security delays. Now add time on the other end to rent a car or wait for a cab/bus
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Lol, electric burns fossil fuels, too. Where do you think all that electricity comes from? It isn't unicorn farts.
And your concept of downtown SF to SFO is *FUCKING NUTS*!!! Have you EVER been to SF?
I lived there for YEARS. You are lucky to go from downtown to the freeway in 15 minutes. And by public transit?
You're super crazy. Let's assume you -start- standing in a BART station, then it takes 10-15 minutes for your train to show up, then it's another 25 minutes to the SFO station, and I'm being gener
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Florida is doing just fine without bringing in more people from NY or anywhere, else, thanks. I can easily imagine the additional traffic, increased cost in restaurants, higher crime, higher taxes to put more cops on the streets, and the rest of the mess more people will bring. It's bad enough when the snow birds show up in their Cadillacs. Keep your NYC/Orlando HSR, thanks.
You call HSR progress and you insult people who own land that don't want a huge ass loud train driving through their town or getting
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It does make sense that having access to cheap, fast travel would make people happier.
It may "make sense", but this particular data does not show it.
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It does make sense that having access to cheap, fast travel would make people happier.
It does?
I'm sure that I'm in the minority but I really hate traveling, especially when I have to do it surrounded by strangers. Strangers that invade my personal space, make irritating noises, cough and sneeze in my general vicinity or who are carrying crying or obnoxious children with them etc.
I get that I'm privileged, owning a vehicle and living in a North American country with lots of well developed roads... but now that I write that out, it occurs to me that I *really* hate driving too. Not driving its
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I don't think anyone has objection to them being built, as long as it isn't MANDATED in any way, for an area to do it, nor have tax payers on the hook for developing it.
As long as it isn't govt. mandated to build all new communities in this fashion....that's
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Nobody's suggesting they should be mandated. They only want it be legal to build them. That means lifting regulations that prohibit multifamily homes, mixed use and so on where zoning laws currently mandate SFH homes. You said you don't want certain types of neighborhoods to be mandated, right?
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Well, I don't think we should upend existing neighborhoods in cities, etc.
If you want to zone new areas to have those mixed use areas legal, then sure...build it there and see how it does, eh?
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So you think neighborhoods should be completely immune to change, they should be preserved as-is in perpetuity like exhibits in some giant museum.
Just curious, do you serve on an HOA board?
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Oh well, where I live...everyone seems quite happy with is, so....and I don't know anyone so far that lives in current neighborhoods with single family dwellings and have cars complaining.
I think they would be up in arms if it was all torn up and upended. Lots of generational wealth at risk there.
I CERTAINLY don't want to live in what is projected as a 15 minu
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Lots of places are zoned for multi family use. We even have a name for those places.
The "nice" name is section 8 housing.
The honest name is ghetto or slum.
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I don't think anyone has objection to them being built, as long as it isn't MANDATED in any way, for an area to do it, nor have tax payers on the hook for developing it..
Are you ok with tax payers being on the hook for subsidizing your preferred sprawl?
As long as it isn't govt. mandated to build all new communities in this fashion....that's cool if some investors want to and see if that's what the people want.
Are government mandates on minimum parking requirements and zoning rules that result in the current mess cool?
As long as there is choice.
I would not want to live in a 15 min. city.
I have no objections if others do...as long as there is choice.
What you see right now is a result of deliberate policy choices. These can and should be changed. If you don't want to be able to easily reach everything you need, you can still drive around in a circles for a bit.
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Secondly, for most people, the deal isn't "Oh no! I might have to sit next to a person!", it's "Oh thank fuck, I can read a book, close my eyes and listen to some music, stare out the window, rather than spend literally 45 minutes-two hours at a time guiding a large metal box between two white lines literally on penalty of death (that is, one mistake, and there's high risk you're going to die.
It really depends on where you live.
Where I live, mass-transit is hit-or-miss, with a whole lot of miss. The only express service is by bus, and it really only goes from specific stops in outlying areas to a fairly narrow section of the main city's downtown. The main bus network and the light rail are all low speed and may routes have large gaps in time between services, so the amount of time required to use these services to get around can be enormous compared to driving. I just did a comparison of my d
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This discussion is about high speed rail. Why are you talking about jet lag and commuter trains?
It's clear you've never actually been on a high speed train, because everything you're complaining about is unrelated. That's not how they go in the real world.
What's your motivation to throw a fit on the internet about something completely off topic?
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I was on the HSR in Japan. It felt very much like being on a plane but slower.
I'm neither opposed nor in favor of HSR. It is appropriate for some areas and stupid in others. My experience wasn't magically amazing nor did it particularly suck, it was a thing, I did it. It was ok for the price. I would have been just as happy or happier paying a bit more to be on a plane.
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Equally it can make people unhappy:
Noise from the rail lines.
Disruption from the construction.
Crowding from extra commuters moving to the area.
Increased housing prices due to shorter travel times to major working centres.
Building rail lines is difficult, especially in developed and densely populated countries. It can be extremely costly and time consuming to get an unbroken and sufficiently straight strip of land running between two distant points when there are already obstacles in the way. Would you give
Additive (Score:4, Funny)
So why don't we just make 50 high speed rails and make everyone super happy?
Re: Additive (Score:5, Insightful)
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Any country that's putting private car ownership ahead of public transportation and walkabikity in its suburban and urban areas is bound to be a shittier place to live than places that prioritize humans over cars.
Wow, you moved those goalposts by miles there.
One could just as easily claim that any country that prioritizes conformance and being part of the herd above individual freedom and autonomy is bound to be a place where people feel compelled to report happiness as part of a herd
Re: Additive (Score:5, Insightful)
When millions of commuters get into their cars only to get stuck in miles and miles of traffic congestions and take hours to travel to work, they're free and autonomous individuals or just a conformist herd?
And just to note: you can own a car and still commute by public transportation.
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to your question about individuals versus herd, my partner chooses to drive her 35 to 75 minute commute because public transit is an 1h 45 to 2 h 30. She refused
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Speaking of which, I try to schedule my driving to avoid traffic congestion.
You will probably say traffic congestion is a sign that the roads are inadequate. To which I would reply that traffic congestion is a sign that your city's buses get stuck in traffic. [youtu.be] That's easy to fix. [nacto.org]
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Only if your public transportation system is run by imbeciles who insist on treating it like a business that it isn't, instead of a public service that it is. We should expect our officials to run it as a public service, and hold them to it. Contrast the American way to the Dutch way and just be impressed how much worse it is to even drive here as a result, and we spend mo
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This is about high-speed rail programs. Those are not used to relieve rush hour congestion, which is what you are talking about. Please keep up.
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it you're looking at this in terms of china, the highway system there is relatively new, and there is very little traffic, except inside the major cities.
High speed rail there is more an intercity travel method, and feels a lot like traveling by plane with their implementation of it and the process of boarding.
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Yeah, let's not do that. It's creepy and weird. Even when we do it at the airport. The way most of the world handles the ticketing and boarding process for rail is just fine, and Amtrak's a little on the anal side as it is.
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above individual freedom
I don't think you know what that means. What part of living in a place where you very life is dependent on buying an expensive device with real running costs, having to ask the government for permission to use it (and pay them too), and above all can't do that for all sorts of conditions (such as not being old enough) do you consider to be "individual freedom"?
You define freedom as having a car which allows you to live your life.
I define freedom as not needing a car to live mine.
BeauHD fails badly using chatgpt headlines. (Score:2)
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You must be new here. This has been going on for 25 years here.
Just go with it. It's a tradition. With time, you'll learn to like it.
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Dupes were coded in to make the site feel more human run.
High-speed rails sure cause excitement (Score:3)
The faster you snort, the quicker you get high.
2% increased happiness in China is significant (Score:2, Funny)
It means 98% of the survey's respondents didn't heed the party's order to be happy about high-speed rail.
Re:2% increased happiness in China is significant (Score:4, Insightful)
It's almost as if people have the wrong idea how what life in China is actually like.
It was quite interesting to watch minds get blown when the CCP responded to zero COVID protests by abandoning the policy. It didn't last though, they were soon back to assuming that China was something like North Korea or East Germany.
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It was quite interesting to watch minds get blown when the CCP responded to zero COVID protests by abandoning the policy.
In every government, you need the consent of the governed. If enough people revolt at once, you can either massacre them (with the attendant economic impact) or change your plans. It's not a big surprise that the CCP responded to such widespread protest the way they did. It's how they respond to less distributed protest that's the concern.
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It was quite interesting to watch minds get blown when the CCP responded to zero COVID protests by abandoning the policy. It didn't last though, they were soon back to assuming that China was something like North Korea or East Germany.
WTF? There were plenty of protests in China over COVID policies. People got thrown in jail, which is what the CCP does. That stopped the protests. The bitching online never stopped though and finally Dictator For Life Xi decided he'd pushed everybody far enough, so the lockdowns stopped. For what it's worth, China is a lot like East Germany. Some years ago I had a real born and raised in China girlfriend and she told me a horror story of her and her roommates being pulled from their dorm rooms i
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I'm not saying China doesn't have a lot of problems, but you are extrapolating too much.
Think about how your own country looks from the outside. I'm British. It's illegal to protest here if your protest annoys people. People are regularly illegally detained, beaten, even raped by the police. There is still systemic discrimination against British people from the Carribbean, including deaths at the hands of the state. Our last two leaders were not elected, they were installed, and the government is suppressin
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Have you ever lived in China?
Known anyone who has that wasn't a 50 center?
Where did you get this tra-la-la idea that the cccp is responsive to the needs and wants of the Chinese people?
You know who are also Chinese people?
The Uyghur
Tibetans
Falun Gong
The 8% who aren't Han
I suspect most of them would dispute your Disney like perspective on life in China.
The ones still alive and not in jail or a rape center, anyway.
Oh for sure these projects increase happiness (Score:2)
If I was a contractor on a high-speed rail project I'd be happy as hell, singing all the way to the bank.
You can milk the project for decades.
Scary that china has the money (Score:2)
A high speed rail line isn't enough (Score:5, Insightful)
That said as the price of cars skyrockets and begins to devour people's incomes increased public transportation will have an outsized impact on happiness even without walkable cities. Car companies are increasingly using the Apple computer model or you focus on selling a small number of expensive products instead of a large number of mass market ones. With wages continuously not keeping Pace with inflation that means cars are increasingly becoming unaffordable in a society that is built around affordable automobiles
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That said as the price of cars skyrockets and begins to devour people's incomes increased public transportation will have an outsized impact on happiness even without walkable cities.
The future of transportation for low-income folks will be self-driving cars as a service. When people are priced out of owning, never underestimate the ability of rent-seekers to find new markets to exploit.
I don't think so (Score:2)
If we do see self driving cars as "the future" I think it'll suck very nearly as much money ou
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There are millions of people who can't drive - elderly, kids, disabled, etc. - and they benefit immensely from other affordable options, mass transit for popular routes, and ride-sharing / robotaxis for unique routes. And even for people who can drive, buying a car is inefficient, as the car is on average only 5% utilized, so it's just sitting in a parking lot or driveway all the rest of the time, consuming space. A shared car can be more like 50% utilized, meaning that you can satisfy the same demand with
Re: A high speed rail line isn't enough (Score:2)
My mom is elderly. Using public transportation is more difficult for her than driving because it is hard for her to walk very far. It is also scarier. Older people are less will equipped to deal with strangers, unfamiliar settings, or the complexities and uncertainties of public transit.
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It can also be cheaper for poor people to buy a beater and run it the rest of the way into the ground than shell out for public transit.
A car is also freedom. Mobility is power.
With a car a poor person has a wider range of movement to get a better job and improve their life instead of being limited to the local bus/train routes and schedules to their shit 9-6 job that has to be on a public transit route,
So annoying when rich people talk about the joys of having a walking life style like some kind of Hollyw
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You do realize that inflation is also making it harder to build out public transportation, don't you? Oh wait of course you don't. Let's just borrow more money to pursue public projects. What's the worst that could happen? More inflation?
Um... no, it's not (Score:2)
Inflation today is a legal & social issue, not an economic one.
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Lol, you have absolutely no understanding of basic economics.
You can't print up an extra 6+ trillion bucks, dump it into the economy as "free money" (as opposed to in exchange for goods and productive services) and expect anything than higher inflation.
This isn't even Econ 101. It's Econ 1. Or even pre-Econ required to get into the basic Econ 1 class.
Where do you get this shit from?
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Deficit spending (and the 'spending and borrowing' you're complaining about) peaked under Trump, back in 2020, it's dropped dramatically under Biden. That being said, when the economy slows down is when the government is supposed to step in and boost the economy with more spending, and in particular to invest in things like infrastructure that have a huge multiplier effect - a dollar spend on infrastructure turns it about $11 in economic benefit because not only do the construction workers spend their wages
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What infrastructure has the government been spending on?
Didn't we just pass a huge, falsely named, infrastructure bill? What real infrastructure is that money tagged for? How much is going to real projects?
At last check, about 10%. The other zillions is all crap that will increase inflation as no useful goods or services are being acquired with that money.
Or else (Score:2)
Man, lot to unpack here. (Score:2)
Let's just ignore the possibility that such a small deviation is quite possibly mis-read. What about causation?
Saying high-speed rail "increases" happiness is ignoring what caused the high-speed rail to exist in the first place. The fact that the government, or in rare cases private industry, was willing to sink a LOT of money into something helpful may be indicative that there are, in fact, other areas where they have spent a LOT of money to do something helpful. Like, other forms of mass transit, city pla
People are never happy. (Score:3)
The Grand Canal, which linked the north of China to the south, brought great economic opportunities. Its unpopularity helped take down the Sui Dynasty that built it. The immediately following Tang and Song Dynasties, prospered greatly from it, but if you asked anyone they would never say the Grand Canal increased their happiness.
Technology can improve lives. But people just get used to it and take it for granted. "Happiness" is not a good measure.
Okay, but how long have they had it? (Score:3)
The other important avenue to investigate: if you take it away from them and give them slower rail, how much does their happiness decrease?
You eventually just accept any increase in performance as the "norm" and are no longer happy about it. You just accept it, and then resent it if it goes away/
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Kinda makes you wonder how many of these people surveyed have cars.
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THIS!! People are *horrible* judges about the increases in their quality of life and thus their happiness. They simply assume that it should have been that happy the whole time. People are GREAT at complaining and telling you how difficult life has gotten due to a specific change.
The study should have asked:
1. Rate your current happiness on a scale of -5 to +5 (feel free to use decimal points to the 0.00).
2. Imagine you suddenly high-speed rail between major metropolitan areas in your state. How much has yo
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We sort-of did that where I live, actually. Federal government announcement for near a billion dollars for HSR, connecting several major cities. State was on board with it. Most of the people in the state were excited about it. Initial design was unveiled. Then a republican governor gets elected, turns down the federal funds because trains are socialist or something, and the funding goes to another state for another project.
I think the official line was that the state might have to pay to maintain it in the
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You got lucky. Let California show you how it's done.
The rest of your argument is, "We piss away money on sports teams and other stupid shit so we should piss away money on stupid HSR, too!"
How about instead arguing to cut off all the stupid shit and lower taxes so people keep more of their own money to spend on things they decide for themselves are important to them?
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That's a good idea. We'll lower our taxes by privatizing all the infrastructure so people can decide for themselves whether the benefit of driving on a road or crossing a bridge is worth the toll.
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We require roads. No one has demonstrated or shown in any way that we require HSR.
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No one has demonstrated or shown in any way that we require HSR.
It's not a requirement that you enjoy your life either. Nothing requires that you don't waste many hours driving when the journey could be quicker and more pleasant. You actually require very few things.
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Yes it is a requirement that I enjoy my life or I'll spend my time money effort and vote to change that.
If I don't have roads I will agitate to get roads or move someplace that does.
If I don't have HSR, so what?
Without roads, the entire global system of commerce breaks down and most of the planet starves to death.
Without HSR... uh.... hmmm... well... yeah... there's that thing we can't do without which is uhm... really important... uh huh... you know what I mean!
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Ok, so your argument is that if it's something we require, it's ok for it to be socialized. Roads, food, clothing, housing, healthcare, and so on.
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It is something society requires. Without roads, society as we know it will collapse. If the roads all magically disappears one day the first thing that would happen is new roads being built,everywhere.
If HSR all magically disappeared or never existed, so fucking what? Society will not break down or run more poorly in any way whatsoever.
If you are naked, hungry, cold, and sick, then that's your problem. Get a job. No one else is hurt nor is society going to break down if you don't get the latest cooles
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You must be trolling if you claim that society doesn't require food to survive.
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They were not given HSR. Nor could it be "taken away". Their money was spent on it, they own it, they have a fair expectation that their money will somehow improve their lives. And if you spend their money on something and "take it away" or they never get it then they will be justifiably unhappy that their money got stolen.
Governments do not create anything. People do.
Happiness (Score:2)
I think if you asked a typical NYC Subway rider the same question, you'd get a different answer. Mass transit is supposed to improve the quality of life by offering mobility at a free or reasonable price. I'll remember that smiling the next time I'm standing in an overfilled subway car next to somebody yelling at me that smells like urine.
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You literally couldn't move all of those people around NYC with cars, though. There just isn't physically enough space. So the choice for the people you couldn't accommodate that way isn't between the subway and cars, it's between the subway and nothing. Even if they walked, the foot traffic congestion would be a problem!
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Yes, you'd get a different answer because you're asking someone commuting on a subway about high speed rail, which is something different altogether.
You'd probably get a different answer if you asked someone on a private plane too. And you'll possibly be surprised to learn that private planes aren't high speed rail either.
I get that the US has never had HSR and most people are unfamiliar with it, but FFS, you're on the internet so you should at least be able to google it and learn what it is before ranting
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It's called an Analogy, HSR is Mass Transit, very expensive, and typically is not self-sustaining in terms of revenue. The French gov't still dumps a ton of money into SNCF
But these guys can spell it out more concisely. [cato.org]
The NYC Subway was built when labor was much cheaper and digging up existing infrastructure to make room for it was a matter of cause, the city wanted to do it so they went ahead and did it
I'm sure in China, HSR is "inexpensive to ride" but normally the ticket costs on an HSR vs. normal train
I'm sure they're all thrilled, to a man, about (Score:2)
their Dear Leader and his glorious public works. You see, unlike us in the decadent West, who view massive public works as detrimental to the environment or detrimental to the free enterprise system, the Great and Glorious Chinese Communist Party has discovered the secret of how to force a smile on every face at the sight of a high speed rail line out to the middle of nowhere.
The secret is actually quite simple: tell everyone the Dear Leader personally directed its design and construction.
If you have to (Score:2)
They do (Score:2)
Each time a new TGV line opens, with stations somewhere in the sticks, real-estate prices go up since Parisians will buy everything up.
So it's not for everyone.
Did they ... (Score:2)
Sure. Lots of people are happy. (Score:2)
For government officials beholden to voters, they're happier because they're "doing something" (with someone else's $, but still).
For the whole host of contractors, construction firms, diversity managers (to ensure we have the right 'blend' of diverse employees on the project - gov't contracts, don'cha know) all of them are delighted with the sort of open-ended, open-schedule, cost+ contracts that are issued when the priority isn't a finite thing as much as an ongoing hole in the ground into which money can
I've been on Chinas high speed rail.. (Score:2)
traveling on china's high speed rail is roughly the same as going to the airport. I don't really see how it would give any more happiness than having an airport nearby.
you enter the rail station, wait in line for your ticket, if your not a citizen you wait even longer!, then you go through security screening, just like at US airports. After making it thorough the security screening, you enter the terminal (like the airport), and wait for your train to arrive.
riding the train, you get a bit more space than o
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That's just China, in a normal country you just go to the train platform.
Ruby (Score:2)
Just in case... (Score:2)
Just in case you were wondering why Vice is going belly-up, /. has offered this item in evidence.
You need geostatistica to estimate it! (Score:2)
So the use of geostatistics [wikipedia.org] is strogly recommended, to properly estimate the degree of excitement.
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Two sides of this coin (Score:2)
I live in a rural area and we were fairly cut off from the capital>
Until in the 1970's a new bridge was build bringing us within an hour of that capital which was nice for many people.
But the number of burglaries and other incidents also started to rise...
Now they are planning a railway line that'll connect the capital to the north and further into Germany.
Yes it is going to be nice when I can simply
The question is always backwards (Score:2)
Happiness is a unidimensional scalar value? (Score:2)
Maybe the problem with the 2% increase in happiness is that the metric for happiness is flawed. Happiness is not unidimensional, scalar, or constant across people or time. For example, the contractor who got rich from building the rail line is likely pretty happy, the guy whose house got demolished in the process is likely really unhappy, and the person who lives far from the rail line likely doesn't care.
From the study [sciencedirect.com], "When the happiness range is from 1 to 5, the opening of the HSR will bring about a 0