20 pointsby raybb9 hours ago3 comments
  • donkey_brains6 hours ago
    Wow, that headline really sticks out. It’s very, very hard to overlook. Is’s guaranteed to make the Guardian’s readers prick up their ears, and it shows that this paper has a firm grasp on this topic and is ahead of the competition. They’ve really shone a shaft of light on this topic and I’m glad they had the balls to go with this penetrating headline. They’ve proven once again that the pen is mightier than the sword.
  • ETlol6 hours ago
    God it's frustrating how slow making these rail transits has been. The D line was literally planned out back in the 1960s and it took this long? I understand the plethora of problems the engineers faced when completing this. But I find it funny that once the World Cup was planned to be in LA, that's when LA leadership expedited all the legal and corporate hurdles in order to make sure we don't have another carmagetton
    • bradchrisan hour ago
      Some of this was covered in the article, but it’s not actually Los Angeles’ leadership’s fault (rare praise for a city I love and call home), it was shovel-ready and funded to be built in the 80s. Then there was a ballot measure due to ongoing construction problems of a separate line in the 80s that banned tunneling in Los Angeles. This wasn’t overturned until 2007! Then Beverly Hills (which is also not part of Los Angeles city government) fought this line for another 10 years, again with tunneling concerns, because they didn’t want it under them (not so fun fact, Doug Emhoff, Kamala Harris’ husband, represented them). It went to the California Supreme Court and then the Federal Appeals Court, and finally, in 2017 was allowed to commence construction. Then Beverly Hills decided they wanted (and got) not one but TWO stops (and the only ones outside of downtown with turnstiles). Funny.

      An indictment of the state legal system’s slowness, yes (see CAHSR), but the city consistently has fought many of its own nimby residents, other cities, the state, and the United States trying to claw back funding for this for those 60 years. It would not have been built without generations of support from city leadership. So there is hope!

      With hundreds of miles funded and planned for or already under construction in the next two decades, the city’s rail future may be the brightest in the country.

    • raybban hour ago
      Yeah... Kinda like how Paris used the Olympics to get the political willpower to cleanup the river.

      City's trying to brand themselves and look good on a global stage does funny things.

  • euroderf4 hours ago
    I've lived in LA and I've lived in Scandinavia. And car life sucks. So good luck and Godspeed, Los Angeles.