Saturday, September 20, 2008

Worst Public Transport in the World

Worst Public Transport in the World

I am riding on an Amtrak train going to visit my family in upstate New York.

No, my wording is flawed, I am not riding, but sitting in an Amtrak train. The train is late and is not moving at the side of a platform in Albany. The train is broken, the switches on the tracks are broken, everything is broken. The story of this brief journey and can sum up public transport in the USA in totality:

It is all broken.
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Wade from Vagabond Journey.com
in Upstate, New York, USA- September 20, 2008
Travelogue -- Travel Photos
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It seems as if my country was once the beacon of progress in the world, now it is just a stale imposter of what it use to be: a bright smiling face in a two dimensional photograph, a stage set of ply-board facades, an empty lot hidden behind glorious castle walls.

I fear to say it but the USA is quickly becoming a Potemkin village that has been erected to mask our insecurities from a world of czars.

"Potemkin villages were purportedly fake settlements erected at the direction of Russian minister Grigori Aleksandrovich Potemkin to fool Empress Catherine II during her visit to Crimea in 1787." Wikipedia Potemkin Village

It is my impression that the public transport of a country signifies, more than anything else, the current state of the nation. If people can not efficiently move from point A to point B then I feel that this is one of the first signs of societal collapse.

The USA is big. People here are accustom to travel long distances quickly and efficiently as a part of their regular existence. It is a part of our psychological makeup of geography to know that we can traverse a continent as a way of course. A distance of a thousand miles means little to an American. There was once cheap fuel and traveling was easy: we just jumped into our car and went. Now gas is nearly four times the price it was when I was growing up and long distance automobile travel is quickly becoming less of a possibility.

Sadly, public transport has not jumped to the rescue, and taking trains and buses in the USA is not a strong locomotive possibility. Trains are regularly late, continuously breaks down, and are expensive. The long-distance public bus service of the USA is even more of a joke, as it is often times cheaper to fly in an airplane than to take the Greyhound.

Now, I sit for some silly reason in the Albany train station wondering when my train will move again.

When India, China, Latin America, and most of the world can move people within their borders far more efficiently and cheaply than the supposed economic and cultural superpower on the planet I must decry that a reevaluation of this title must be sought. The public transport of the USA would be staunchly unacceptable in most of the regions of the globe that I have traveled.

From where I am sitting, bored and stiff in a go-nowhere train, the USA is no longer a top-dog sort of nation.

I predict that within the next 10 years the infrastructure of my country will collapse upon itself. Too many corners have been cut, too much of the substance that made this country great has been diluted, too many resources have been misplaced. We are a nation of people who are accepting plastic over wood, fancy packaging over a good product, the cheap and synthetic over good quality. Americans are growing accustom to losing their jobs, getting paid less, and paying more for what they need to survive. Even the Wall Street geeks are feeling the noose. And it is no longer a surprise for the Amtrak train to be hours late as it chugs to a standstill on the precipice of America.

It is all downhill from here.

This is my country.

The law of diminishing returns is plunging fast to ground zero.

The USA is as broken as this train.

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Worst Public Transport in the World
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3 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

USA has certainly neglected its infrastructure since building the Interstate highway system over 50 years ago. A sad state of affairs, and we will pay the price. I find it a little scary that neither of the presidential candidates even speak of the issue. Truly a case where things might have to get worse before they get better. I don't really know the solution, but think part of it is we must get serious about educating and training a new generation of engineers. Every kid who has the brains and desire to study engineering should have free university schooling available (this is the case in many countries around the world). There is no guarantee that the US will remain one of the leading countries in the world. Empires have declined and collapsed throughout history. g.

September 21, 2008  
Anonymous Steve-O said...

"an empty lot hidden behind glorious castle walls."

This is one of the best descriptions of the U.S. that I've ever heard. I feel the same way, why do you think I jumped to a small liferaft off the coast of Eastern Asia.

September 21, 2008  
Blogger Wade Vagabond Journey.com said...

Yeah, it is an interesting place in history: the downfall of a global power. My only fear is that this fall will be gradual and we in the USA will wake up one morning with the little dog syndrome of the French haha.

Steve-O, I think I am going to commandeer your raft and float on to Asia with you.

Wade

September 22, 2008  

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