• ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net
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    8 hours ago

    Oh, right: they put fences around the train tracks? They don’t do that here that I’ve seen outside of junctions. Much bigger fences around the highways.

    Where is here? In Spain high speed railway is fenced:

    We’re talking barbed wire. But you’re right, in different places the trains and tracks are different so breakdowns are handled in another way. Where I live railway very often looks like this:

    or this:

    You’re not walking people out of there. I don’t know people who remember car breakdown as a traumatic experience. I do know people who had very unpleasant experiences in trains. That’s all. Trains are great, we should be investing in trains and promoting them but there are limits to what trains can do.

    • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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      8 hours ago

      Heh, “here” is the US. We built roads next to nearly all of the train tracks and we don’t have high speed rail.

      A pretty normal arrangement:

      This is what freeways look like in a lot of cities:

      Either that, or elevated. When you get to the suburbs they tend to start putting up sound barriers:

      You can also just be on a road so remote that it takes forever for someone to even notice you.

      We have a lot of people die every year trying to walk off the highways from getting hit and, in the winter particularly, there’s messaging about not leaving your car because of the danger.

      As a result of all that, this is the most light-hearted way of describing how the comment landed: