The cops camoed out in tacticool gear during the playoffs added to the existing discomfort.Quote:
Particularly Minute Maid Park where everybody is basically just standing on the street.
The cops camoed out in tacticool gear during the playoffs added to the existing discomfort.Quote:
Particularly Minute Maid Park where everybody is basically just standing on the street.
ok here goes: rail is point to point fixed infrastructure that necessitates large, uninterrupted surface use. Since it's high speed, turn radii are massive. High speed also means that grading, ballast, rail, and catenary all have to be within extremely tight specs. Same issue for rolling stock. Then you have to partition the right of way in such a manner that kids playing around couldn't throw sticks or rocks or whatever else onto the track itself.TriAg2010 said:blindey said:uh, hi. Have you ever been on the Eurostar? Every person and every item you bring is metal detected/x-rayed. Everything.JJxvi said:
Trains will never require TSA except through sheer paranoia.
If you think the TSA would just roll over and let more agency expansion and regulatory creep go away, I've got a bridge to sell you.
Then sell me a bridge. TSA performs no security screening for Amtrak Acela, which has been an operating high-speed train for more than 15 years now. You just walk-up and board.
I've road the Eurostar, TGV, ICE, NSB, Trenitalia, and Italo. Eurostar is the only one that performs any security screening. They do so because of the increased safety risks traveling through a long undersea tunnel and because the train crosses the Schengen Area. Smugglers have tried to exploit the Chunnel since it first opened.
jamaggie06 said:
Again, the solution isn't to spend money on a fixed route boondoggle guaranteed to lose money. It's to change the way we handle air travel. There is no reason air travel should be as inefficient as it is. Whatever security is sufficent for a train terminal should be sufficient for a air terminal.
blindey said:ok here goes: rail is point to point fixed infrastructure that necessitates large, uninterrupted surface use. Since it's high speed, turn radii are massive. High speed also means that grading, ballast, rail, and catenary all have to be within extremely tight specs. Same issue for rolling stock. Then you have to partition the right of way in such a manner that kids playing around couldn't throw sticks or rocks or whatever else onto the track itself.TriAg2010 said:blindey said:uh, hi. Have you ever been on the Eurostar? Every person and every item you bring is metal detected/x-rayed. Everything.JJxvi said:
Trains will never require TSA except through sheer paranoia.
If you think the TSA would just roll over and let more agency expansion and regulatory creep go away, I've got a bridge to sell you.
Then sell me a bridge. TSA performs no security screening for Amtrak Acela, which has been an operating high-speed train for more than 15 years now. You just walk-up and board.
I've road the Eurostar, TGV, ICE, NSB, Trenitalia, and Italo. Eurostar is the only one that performs any security screening. They do so because of the increased safety risks traveling through a long undersea tunnel and because the train crosses the Schengen Area. Smugglers have tried to exploit the Chunnel since it first opened.
Basically, high speed rail is super high specification version of technology from 150 years ago. In a place where population density is so low, it would have been a waste 50 years ago and it's certainly a waste now given that air travel is so cheap and efficient and we are on the cusp of self driving cars.
And speaking of the other high speed offerings in Europe and elsewhere (even the Acela): i know that they don't all have high security. But I disagree with you. TheTSA will want their finger in the pie.
jamaggie06 said:
So the only relevant comparison is a bomb?
Ok, well, by your logic, trains should require far more security bc on a plane, a madman can only kill X number of people, but on a train, if a madman or two brings a couple of AK-47s and spare mags, they can walk up and down all the rail cars, gunning everyone down at their leisure.
So, just bc a specific weapon localized on a plane may kill everyone board, doesn't negate that there are other threats specific to trains that pose greater potential loss of life. I see estimates of 1,000 seats per train for Caltrans proposed rail.
believe it or not there is. I've seen them.Mr. AGSPRT04 said:
You think there's a passenger brake on a 200mph bullet train?