I actually do think a HSR to, say, Valdivia, or Puerto Montt, would have excellent demand if it a) went faster than 200kph (making it a four or five hour trip, instead of the 10 hours it generally takes by bus), b) was a milk run (say, a short stop every hour) and c) you could park your car in a train wagon and then go to sit in a normal passenger seat. This would be excellent for a variety of reasons, and I'm told was a feature of the chilean system pre-dictatorship (autotren, i'm told it was, and really there's no reason why it wouldn't be common: one of the cheapest possible wagons is just a closed box where you can stow cars. 3,3 meters, which is I gather a typical wagon width, is more than enough for a car to maneouver into a diagonal position. This makes the train the only option if you want to arrive at your destination and then have a car since airlifting a car would only be cheap if we were to get some sort of extremely cheap kwh batteries, and perhaps not even then. I mean okay there's renting but that sucks. What zomp says is my least favourite thing about planes: it takes me all day to get to valdivia (a town I like and visit relatively often) by car, and it takes me all day to go by plane as well: the perverse thing is that plane tickets to the south are super cheap, cheaper than a comfortable bed bus.
MacAnDàil wrote:But they did that because they were a superpower. If China under the current political system gets to the same position, I am convinced that they would do as bad if not worse. I hope that they will never reach the same power level that the US has had for decades.
Perhaps, but also perhaps not. different empires empire in different ways: China says it wants to just be economically and politically hegemonic without messing too much with the rest of the world's internal affairs and, though I know very little about the history of chinese foreign policy, I understand it has done so before, more establishing tributary relationships than outright annexing and invading, a la russia, or funding insurrectionary fascists and religious fundamentalist groups in order to closely control policy, like the US tends to do. we can say that China is worse and will therefore do worse things, but I don't think I have a very solid view that China is inherently worse: after all, it has done less bad things.
And like, I get it, this is a very subjective thing: the US has been a decent ally to english-speaking countries, and it's understandable you think it's a preferrable overlord, but I don't think I share this predilection: this is likely because the 'is a democracy' thing is really not that big a deal to me, not because I don't value the idea of democracy -i do- but because... you know, just because we call something 'a democracy' doesn't mean it is actually democratic. liberals tend to speak of whether things 'are a democracy or not', and the only way of being a democracy is being a multi-party, freedom of enterpreneurship, parties funded by private individuals and companies, liberal parliamentary-presidential representative democracy with universal suffrage, direct national elections and the rest of it... but if we see that this system is not perfect, and that it's in some ways anti-democratic, then the question's about being democratic, not about being 'a democracy': regarding the rule of law, this notion somewhat falls down under class analysis: I know how things are like in my own country which is called 'a democracy', and I don't expect these things are very different in yours:
wage theft, for example, is much more money stolen -and much more important money, too- than muggings and bank robberies, and yet it's very weakly enforced, commonly criminals get away with it, and generally does not involve jail time: from this we gleam that it is the private property of rich people that the court and police system protect, and fuck the poors (so, a flawed democracy, just like a single-party one is flawed: or, perhaps not harshly, false democracy in both cases). this has a long corollary I expect I don't need to elaborate too much: the crimes rich people engage in are in general weakly investigated and punished, rich people get away with great evil simply cause they're rich, and the crimes poor people do are harshly punished, and all -to put it in Zizekian terms, so on and so on. from this we gleam that rule of law applies mostly ti rich people, the rest of us be damned. btw this is also true regarding non economics crimes: if you're a rich 30yo and run over a random guy you're likely to not see jail, but if you're black and get caught with 10 grams of weed we know what happens. the rich friends of epstein got away scott free, blablabla.
The free and fair election thing is also weak: sure, there's no state intervention in elections in decent 'democracies', but there is intervention by other, equally undemocratic powers, and I see no reason to regarding one as a greater violation of democracy than the other.
The constitutional rights, weeeell.... I meean... you know, surveilance state, military industrial complex, the CIA, political opponents and opponents of corporations getting suicided -happens routinely in my under-the-sphere-of-the-us 'democracy', and in all latam for that matter: they both seem weak in this sense: where the chinese have social credit points the yanks have, you know, credit credit points. freedom of speech is nice, but kind of token if you can get fired for discussing, for example, unions. freedom of association is nice, but when you can be fired for getting into a union it's also kind of token. same with right to property: it's mostly an excuse for rich people to fuck poor people, and the property of the little guy is much less protected. political and legal equality would be nice, but when rich people can buy politicians and I can't it's the same. and we already know we're not equal under the law with wealthier people than us in our 'democracies', so...
The early US certainly had franchise restrictions (mentioned in later posts above), but it was still some form of representative government, inherently preferable to an autocratic one.
I mean, but the chinese also have elections! sure, they're somewhat limited in their options, though so are the yanks, corrupted by state interference, though so are the yanks, gerrymandering and lobbying and corporate donors and the rest of it. the relevant elections in China are all inside the CPP, but the CPP is not six rich guys in a room, it's got a hundred million members, and presumably they get to elect their local party committees, and then those elect the higher up party committees and so on: it's not a perfect system, but then again, neither is the US one: They just both look like imperfect and corrupt democracies from where I sit. Don't get me wrong, I wish the PRC did some democratic reforms, but hopefully those won't be 'state and party no longer interferes, instead big business does', you know.