Curious Hair wrote:
Yeah, and to bring it back to Russia, you always hear about what a low-trust, thuggish society it is over there, and maybe it is, but everyone seems to be on their best behavior when it comes to transit. Maybe part of that is because the Metro feels like a great public space, maybe it's because they'll be shot on sight if they act up.
But too many progressives revel in the squalid conditions of American public transit because it makes people confront poverty. Hey, if you don't like it when someone who smells like weed and urine asks you for money, then solve homelessness or move back to Iowa. I don't know what we even do when the people who should want transit to be good actually want it to be strategically bad.
It is why I brought up Brazil. I must have taken a hundred or so rides in three weeks on the Rio & Sao Paulo metro’s and never saw a single incident. In Chicago or New York I’m more likely to witness one hundred incidents in one ride than a hundred rides without an incident.
And this is Brazil we are talking about here. A country analogous to the United States in many more ways than anywhere in Europe or Asia.
I’ve actually been fortunate enough to see someone disciplined on a U-Bahn train in Berlin at Mockernbrucke stop. White guy, clearly some issues and he smelled bad but was not causing any issues. Well I’m sure you know in Germany there are no turnstiles, fares are on an enforced honor system and this guy didn’t pay. He was resistant to the fare-checker, so she radio’d ahead and sure enough two cops basically brutalized this guy and carried him off the train. Overreaction? Well if that guys gets his ass kicked for not paying two euros then shit imagine what happens to the guy who gets in people’s faces and spills booze all over everyone?
At some level there are places where you gotta suspend the feel goodies of liberal democracy just to make sure everyone gets along. The train is one of those places where your Bill of Rights get checked at the door. People don’t really seem to mind this standard when it is applied to air travel (though you always have line crossers anywhere). Somehow it became just a fundamental human right to be a psychopath in public in America, and we would rather live like shit than suspend that right.