Liberals want more trains...what century is this!?
where is my rocket pack and/or teleporter!
Note of caution though. What makes sense between Tokyo and Osaka, makes less sense between other cities.The Tōkaidō Shinkansen is the world's busiest high-speed rail line. Carrying 151 million passengers a year (March 2008),[1] it has transported more passengers (over 4 billion, network over 6 billion)[2] than any other high speed line in the world.[3] Between Tokyo and Osaka, the two largest metropolises in Japan, up to ten trains per hour with sixteen cars each (1,300 seats capacity) run in each direction with a minimum headway of three minutes between trains. Though largely a long-distance transport system, the Shinkansen also serves commuters who travel to work in metropolitan areas from outlying cities.
. . .
The Shinkansen has had a significant effect on Japan's business, economy, society, environment and culture.[6] The time savings alone from switching from a conventional to a high-speed network have been estimated at 400 million hours, an economic impact of ¥ 500 billion per year.[6]
However, the vast construction costs of the Shinkansen network, particularly the later, less profitable lines often driven more by political interference than actual demand, imposed vast debt servicing costs on JNR that, by 1971, made JNR unprofitable even before depreciation.[10] JNR's Shinkansen-fueled debt eventually ballooned to ¥28 trillion and was an instrumental factor in the company's eventual privatization and breakup.[10] The privatized JRs eventually paid a total of only ¥9.2 trillion to acquire JNR's Shinkansen network.[6]
Is this a relatively painless way to make a dent in the deficit?more than $700 billion gathers dust in accounts all around Washington.
. . .
This includes $12.2 billion unspent at the Agriculture Department, $16.4 billion at Labor, $25.2 billion at Housing and Urban Development, $71.4 billion at Defense, and $309.1 billion at Treasury.
. . .
if only 20 percent of these funds could be liberated, then some $140.6 billion could be redirected immediately to reduce the deficit
. . .
In fact, Senator Coburn’s office estimates that $82.4 billion of these funds are between six and 20 years old!
Because NASA is involved in a lot of high end basic research and does neat things that make this nation worth living in.
Evidence?
Is this a relatively painless way to make a dent in the deficit?
http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/budget/fy2012/assets/trs.pdf
most importantly, it cuts billions in military budgets and programs that the Pentagon doesn't even want.
does the GOP budget for 2012 cut these programs?
It is easy for politicians to say they are going to do things in the future especially spending cuts , raising taxes and balancing budgets.I keep hearing "1.1 trillion over ten years". Is that right?
I keep hearing "1.1 trillion over ten years". Is that right?
Odd it only took the feds 3 years to increase it by that much. If that isn't an argument for a balanced budget amendment, I don't know what is.
Didn't I get an email explaining that the proposed cut would be like on of us cutting our monthly budget by 7¢ ? Anybody here want to re-do the math?
When I looked back at this thread it just strikes me as funny. What 24 billion was saved? The extra 24 billion that could have been decided to be in the budget?
the budget could have been 4 trillion but since they came up with 3.7trillion then they could say they saved 300,000,000,000.
Why not cut NASA? What's NASA doing that makes it sacrosanct from even temporary cuts during a time when the interest on our growing debt threatens the very stability of our nation?
When I looked back at this thread it just strikes me as funny. What 24 billion was saved? The extra 24 billion that could have been decided to be in the budget?