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The brilliant Ray Lahood, Republican. His son is running against a conservative next week. And of course, the whole GOP establishment sides with Lahood Jr.

Please don't call them "RINO's"! They are socialists/facists. Which is what the GOP is. There is no room in the GOP for conservatives. There never was.

1 posted on 07/02/2015 12:01:45 AM PDT by Forgotten Amendments
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To: Forgotten Amendments

Monorail, monorail, monorail...


2 posted on 07/02/2015 12:02:45 AM PDT by Secret Agent Man (Gone Galt; Not averse to Going Bronson.)
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To: Forgotten Amendments

Well, that wind based power source is mellenia more mature.


3 posted on 07/02/2015 12:06:55 AM PDT by Paladin2 (Ive given up on aphostrophys and spell chek on my current device...)
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To: Forgotten Amendments

In before the streetcar named desire reference.


4 posted on 07/02/2015 12:07:16 AM PDT by Redcitizen
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To: Forgotten Amendments

Reason is a bit short on facts from time to time, aren’t they.

The bus is as old as the streetcar, frankly, whether motorized, electrified or horse-drawn. What is wrong is how governments and their politicians of every level make both technologies (contemporaries of each other, remember) into political footballs over who can spend the most on them.

But Reason, if they so feel like it, can play the game with the politicians instead of telling it straight.


7 posted on 07/02/2015 12:15:53 AM PDT by Olog-hai
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To: Forgotten Amendments

I saw a short clip of a street car that was driven by the riders. Seats arranged along the outsides pointing inwards. You sit down, hold onto a bar and pedal!

That’s what they should put in every urban city. But, you’d get some people saying it was racist because it is the modern day version of a slave ship with rowers.

Still, a neat idea. Get your exercise, or don’t. You have to realize some will fake it and just ride the pedals, and the tram will go much slower. It’s like that in real life, too. When too many don’t pedal (what we are approaching— or have now) then it sputters to a stop at the first incline.


12 posted on 07/02/2015 2:13:55 AM PDT by Gaffer
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To: Forgotten Amendments
H Street has become an interesting story and those of us who live here are interested in how the streetcar project rolls out. My own view is that the city has been caught betwixt and between, and may be in the process of bungling a good idea due to failures in execution. We had a run of pretty good mayors after Marion Barry, and I think Tony Williams or Adrian Fenty would have had this up and running by now. But Vince Gray and Murial Bowser are a different story. Gentrification is changing D.C. politics, but nowhere is it written that the path will be smooth.

H Street was wrecked by the 1969 riots and left destitute by D.C.'s crash and burn of the 1970's. It is one of those puzzling but interesting areas that has resisted innumerable attempts at revival, for reasons that call for a modern Jane Jacobs to chronicle. It is now reviving, with Capitol Hill's gentrification to the south and the neighborhoods north of H flipping fast. H Street is becoming a playground for the current wave of gentrifiers, and is filling up with restaurants and nightspots. If I were 30 years younger, I'd probably be down there; as it is, 8th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue S.E. are a lot closer, and more sedate.

The streetcar was originally supposed to link the Minnesota Avenue metro station on the other side of the Anacostia River with Union Station, a major hub for metro, bus, and trains. There were conceptual notions of eventually building a much broader network as well, eventually creating a surface light rail network to complement (and fill some of the major gaps in) the below-ground metro system. To make this work, of course, the city would have to decisively privilege streetcars over automobiles, and that remains politically difficult. That said, if you have logged enough quality hours in D.C. congestion, you would be tempted to at least consider the idea.

The congestion is driving gentrification, as more and more people are weighing suburban square footage against brutal commutes, and choosing closer-in neighborhoods. Streetcars are attractive to the gentrification demographic. They are resisted by many of the people who are threatened by gentrification. (Reason, of course, was careful to seek a couple of these out, and to put a racial twist on the story.) Suburbanites are mixed; some of them, especially those who use the city for recreation, like the idea. Those who care nothing for the city outside of their own office building are likely to dislike streetcars as impediments to traffic.

Anyhow, the danged thing is built. It is a sunk cost. It's time to go operational. If the city needs to close a traffic lane on H Street to create the needed space, that's fine with me. The only people that will seriously inconvenience are PG county commuters using Benning Road, which connects to H at our infamous starburst intersection. Benning Road commuters can find another route, or take metro.

15 posted on 07/02/2015 4:12:56 AM PDT by sphinx
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To: Forgotten Amendments

LOL Atlanta recently revived a streetcar that travels about a mile for a gazillion dollars. It then had no ridership so it was decided by the morons in Atlanta that it would be free until the end of this year. A local news report last night could hardly contain their excitement that ridership has been going up for the last month——well, duh!!! Interviews with the patrons asking if they would pay a buck to ride were, however, not as encouraging—probably not.


18 posted on 07/02/2015 4:52:43 AM PDT by freeangel ( (free speech is only good until someone else doesn't like it)
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To: Forgotten Amendments

Why have vehicles that must have rails to run on within cities. Rubber tired vehicles do the same thing but can go on any road. I’m a believer in expanding bus services.


19 posted on 07/02/2015 5:06:36 AM PDT by cymbeline
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To: Forgotten Amendments

“The Secret Scam of Streetcars: How to Sell a 100-Year-Old Technology as the Future of Transportation”

While I do agree with the above, one must also look at non-rail intercity transportation 100 years ago...and if you did, you’d find that the country was LOADED with TOLL ROADS. In fact it wasn’t until 60 years ago that freeways even started being built.

So what does “Reason” magazine want? Why they want to FLOOD this country with TOLL ROADS, including the conversion of our now-free Interstates to TOLL ROADS (look up Robert Poole).

So please forgive me if I think they’re being a bit selective in their outrage here.


20 posted on 07/02/2015 5:54:46 AM PDT by BobL (REPUBLICANS - Fight for the WHITE VOTE...and you will win (see my 'about' page))
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To: Forgotten Amendments

Streetcar bfl


26 posted on 07/02/2015 7:09:58 AM PDT by tanknetter
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To: Forgotten Amendments

There is a reason that these systems were scrapped, they didn’t work.


28 posted on 07/02/2015 7:16:37 AM PDT by dila813
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