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so yeah i reckon "virtual ventra cards" are a-coming. they saw how the city is hustling with those cards (again, $5 to get one before you ever put on transit value, and a lot of this is to subsidize the costs of this rushcard-that-nobody-asked-for built into the card, which is of course the impetus for the anti-consumer-benefit of the card because showing you the only piece of information pertinent enough to show you via the classic system for the last 20-30/+ years or whatever, transit balance, is impossible because you have to protect this sacrosanct debit card on the ventra! card.
Yeah, I had to get my Ventra card on Tuesday to make a quick trip up to Lake View for coffee and tea. Stood down in the mezzanine at Lake fumbling with that machine for like five minutes so that I could have the pleasure of getting packed like sardines in those new L cars with seats on the sides so everyone can just stand in the middle. I miss my flimsy magnetic cards. So you're telling me I can't check my balance on these? I'll have to write down all my trips and deposits with pen and paper and keep that next to it in my wallet. The 21st century, ladies and gentlemen.
You know what's funny, though? Lest anyone think I'm some fare-jumping fiend, I didn't start this winning streak until a few months ago. I'm batting a Williamsian .400 on paying fare now, but when I rode to/from Fox Lake, I never missed a ticket. In fact, I'm pretty sure Metra encouraged me to get around paying full price! When I was in Missouri and I'd come back up for air, I'd take Amtrak into Union Station then take the MD-North up. These were generally the last or second to last trains to leave on Sunday night, and once I had a conversation along these lines:
"One-way to Fox Lake, please?"
"All the way to Fox Lake?"
"Yep."
"
Allll the way to Fox Lake."
"Afraid so."
"Yeah?"
"Yeah."
"Seven dollars."
Now don't tell me that nice woman at the ticket window was not taking pity on one of the few Union Station denizens at 10:30 on a Sunday night who didn't obviously appear to be homeless and was trying to get me to say "no, tell you what, I'll get just get a ride home at Northbrook, you're right."
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Molly Lambert wrote:
The future holds the possibility to be great or terrible, and since it has not yet occurred it remains simultaneously both.