Genuine Question. Even if I look at hungarian Transport, and they to this day use trains from the UdSSR, they come more consistantly then the DB.

They are really Bad sometimes, with like 20 seperate prices: Theres the bayernwald ticket that only works in the alps, then theres the official ticket to the destination. Theres a special offer, but only in the very special APP. You can use a d-ticket, but look! Some random ass slum in the middle of the worlds ass dosent accept that, but it does the MVV zone Tickets. But then you need the MVV zone 11-M, a ticket to the beginning to the Nürnberg zones, and a ticket for the Nürnberg zones.

And yet this shit is better than americas rails? How?

    • Luffy@lemmy.mlOP
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      10 days ago

      Really? Like… How do you move around then? Only cars? But if you dont want / have a car? If youre still doing your drivers license?

      • Balerion6@lemmy.world
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        7 days ago

        Fuck you, that’s how. It’s pretty much only cars. Not having a car isn’t really an option here, unless maybe you live in the heart of a big city.

        • TexasDrunk@lemmy.world
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          10 days ago

          A big city not in the South. Houston and Dallas are #4 and #9. There’s public transit but it fucking sucks both places.

          • zeldakong64@lemmy.world
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            9 days ago

            I think Boston’s is pretty extensive as well, but that’s more of a mid-sized city and the infrastructure is certainly older

      • 🔰Hurling⚜️Durling🔱@lemmy.world
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        10 days ago

        In many places it’s illegal to walk on the side of the road for motorist safety, and no they don’t see value adding sidewalks. Other places don’t like people that’s not from that area walking in front of their house and will call the police every single time.

        • ByteJunk@lemmy.world
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          10 days ago

          Not German, but close enough - there’s usually at least one bus within walkable distance, even if it’s only like 4 times a day or something, that connects to a larger hub.

          I lived in a place where I had to be by the bus stop at 7h30. If I missed that I’d have to wait for the next at 8h15, and if I missed that one, I’d better call to say I wasn’t able to go that day.

          However, in smaller towns and in the countryside, with no cars, life is so different to the frenetic chaos of big cities that it’s hard to put into words.

        • Luffy@lemmy.mlOP
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          10 days ago

          Dont know, I live in a pretty walkable City where I can bike in 5 Minuten from one end to the other, with a tech store, School, Beach, Bank, etc. Everything you would need. I have a train coming hourly if I want to go to the Beach or munich, but its admittadly way worse (20-30 mins) to bike to the next bigger City.

          • 🔰Hurling⚜️Durling🔱@lemmy.world
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            9 days ago

            Last time I visited the Netherlands I thought I was in walkability heaven

            Edit: shit, sorry. Forgot you said Germany… But my comment still stands, although I bet Germany is at least as nice as well.

        • BakerBagel@midwest.social
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          10 days ago

          We aren’t just talking small towns though. Any city that isn’t New York, Chicago, or Boston might as well not have any rail service at all. Houston has 22.7 miles of passenger railway that is only located downtown. Columbus Ohio has a metro of 2.2 million people and doesn’t have a single inch of passenger rail. Cleveland has an OK system by American standards, which i use whenever i go to Cleveland, but the only option for me to take a train into Cleveland from where i live in NW Ohio would take an hour longer than just driving there outright.

      • Drewfro66@lemmygrad.ml
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        10 days ago

        Most cities have a bus service, but they only rarely connect to smaller towns (“smaller” being relative here, like 30,000 people).

        To put it in perspective, I live in a suburban apartment outside of a medium-sized city in Ohio. There is a single busline that goes through my neighborhood (which thankfully has a stop right outside my complex). A bus comes by once an hour between 7 AM and 7 PM.

        This can get you to work if you’re lucky enough to work a 9-5 next to a bus stop. My work has a bus stop, but I work a 4-12, so no luck.

        My favorite bar is in the next town over, a college town about 15 minutes down the road. If I wanted to get there by public transit, I would need to wait for the hourly bus outside of my apartment, get off at a grocery store, wait about a half an hour for a connecting bus from the college town’s bus service, and that’s not even counting the drive time.

        And if I don’t leave the bar by 6 PM, of course, I’m stranded without an Uber or something, because even on weekends (not that I have weekends off work) the busses only run till 7 PM.

        And there’s other towns nearby that I literally cannot take public transport to. I had to work an event in a smaller city (but still probably within the top 20 in the state for population) about half an hour drive away. There is no bus service that connects me to them. The only options are driving or Uber.

  • Deflated0ne@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    American public transit doesn’t exist outside of a couple major cities.

    So yeah. Probably the absolute worst Europe has to offer is a world altering step up.

  • Tracaine@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    What is public transport? I think we need to establish that first. You mean like…the school bus? That’s the only kind I’ve ever seen.

    • twice_hatch@midwest.social
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      10 days ago

      Kids get public transport, education, and sometimes even food

      Old folks get walkable communities

      College kids (at great expense) also do

      The revealed preference is that we could have an excellent quality of life except for voters hating 18-65 year old adults

  • TommySoda@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    I’m 30 years old and have taken a bus once in my entire life. Not because it sucks but because it’s simply nonexistent. I’d have to drive 30 minutes just to get to the place that had the public transport and at that point I might as well just drive all the way there. And I don’t even think the US has any trains that go between cities anymore except for commercial trains. I literally live next to a train track and it’s all cargo trains. I’ve never seen a passenger car on a train in my entire life. Could just be where I live, but I’ve driven from coast to coast and the only trains are cargo trains.

  • figjam@midwest.social
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    9 days ago

    I live in the largest city in a Midwestern state. To access amtrak (the only passenger rail in the us)I need to drive 3 hours to the nearest station.

    The city is shaped like a lopsided clock. I live in the burbs around 1 o’clock. I work for a fortune 50 company headquartered at 10 o’clock. To take the bus to my job I need to take the bus downtown and wait for an out bound. This would take 90 minutes when I could drive in 25.

    America has not made public transit a serious option unless you are in Chicago, NYC or DC.

  • azimir@lemmy.ml
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    10 days ago

    America is owned and operated by rich people. They couldn’t make money running passenger trains so once we were ordered to invest in car-only infrastructure the trains were mostly disbanded and shut down. There’s a ghost of a system left with just a few corridors that could be considered bare minimum service in a developed nation.

    How many kilometers of high speed rail does the US have? Zero. We have some that gets close, but not really.

    My mid-sized city has two trains per day, one each direction, and they both leave between 1am and 2am. In Germany you would have 30+ trains per day in a city this size, likely a notable S-Bahn network, and also some trams and/or U-Bahns in the city to compliment busses. I’ve got busses in town, but they operated about every 30-45 minutes each, with evening service being every 60 minutes. Here’s the fun part: our busses are the most used public transit system for a mid-sized city in the US right now and it’s still pathetic when compared to even basic services in Europe.

    DB needs to keep getting investment. Germany must get to a dedicated passenger rail network to separate out the freight trains. DB should also be re-nationalized and operated as a national service, not a for profit system that will inevitably fail as a commercial venture, leading to yet more terrible service. Here’s hoping the latest German Parliament follows through on investment money that they pushed through at the start of the year! Also, keep the Deutschland Karte! That’s such a great resource for everyone.

  • PTSDwarrior@lemmy.ml
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    9 days ago

    It may be bad in Germany but its worse in the USA. I live in the San Francisco Bay Area, which has better transit options than the rest of the country. But its limited just to the city of San Francisco itself and maybe some parts outside the city. I just came back from a short trip to Germany, where my family lives. They live in Kassel, a mid-sized city in the north central part of the country. Even a mid-sized city has an extensive tram network and bus system. And a monthly transit card doesn’t cost as much. Getting to Kassel itself was easy by train, though the train was 1/2 hour late. I am very, very jealous of my family.

  • Jankatarch@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    I had a bus skip my part of the route in US.

    They literally took a whole different route that skips over the stop sign I am waiting at so they can get to the last stop faster and clock out.

    I was using dart which gives live maps view of where the bus is.

    Also sometimes busses malfunction and can’t work but still go through all the stops, just don’t let people in. Dart doesn’t tell you they malfunctioned. You have to see for yourself when bus rolls by.

    As far as drivers are concerned, someone’s phone wasn’t working so they restarted it to show the ticket. Our driver called the police for “delaying the bus.” Entire bus had to walk to next stop.

    Yippeee

  • sylver_dragon@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    I happen to be a prime example of how bad US Rail is this week. I’m taking my son from near Fredericksburg (the real one), up to Ballston for a summer camp. We have a couple options:

    1. Drive
    • Distance: ~70 miles one way, ~140 round trip
    • Time: 1 hour and 45 minutes one way, with traffic. ~3.5 hours round trip.
    • Cost:
      • 4 gallons (US) of gas @ $3.50/gal: $14
      • Wear and tear: estimate at 0.5 gas cost: $7
      • Parking: $11
      • Total: $32/day
    1. Virginia Railway Express (VRE) and Washington Area Metro (WMATA)
    • Distance: N/A
    • Time:
      • Drive to Fredericksburg station: 20 minutes
      • VRE (Fredericksburg to L’Enfant station) - 1 hour 20 minutes
      • WMATA (L’Enfant to Ballston) - 20 minutes
      • Total: 2 hours one way, 4 hours round trip
    • Cost:
      • Drive: we’ll just ignore this, it’s close enough to zero.
      • VRE: $23.56/person * 2 people: $47.12
      • WMATA: $3.45/person * 2 people: $6.90
      • Total: $54.02/day

    So, for the low, low cost of about 1.68 times the cost of driving, we can take slightly longer to get to our destination and have zero control over our schedule, which makes the actual time devoted to travel considerably longer. We tried the public transit route last year, and it meant leaving earlier in the morning (about 30 minutes) to catch a train to get us there on time, and getting us home around 45 minutes later. And this is right around the US Capitol, which has some of the better transit options. Needless to say, we’re driving this year.

    I really want to be able to take transit, but it’s basically dead in the US. Earlier this year, I needed to go to Boston for work. Catching a train from Washington, DC to Boston meant an 7 hour train ride (using the “high speed” Acela line) at ~$500 round trip. Flying was 1.5 hours and cost ~$300 round trip. Wanna guess which option I used?

    Basically, all of the incentives are stacked against transit options in the US. Except within certain metro areas, driving or flying is always cheaper and faster. Yes, inside those metro areas, public transit can be great. I used to work in Washington, DC and used the VRE I mentioned earlier to get there and then WMATA or the Capital BikeShare to get to my office. That was great, since I didn’t have to drive into DC every day, which sucks big donkey balls. But it probably wasn’t cost effective and wasn’t really time efficient either.

  • Scott_of_the_Arctic@lemmy.world
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    9 days ago

    To be fair, German public transport (and I admit that I’ve only taken it around Berlin) is about average for Europe. Better than Norway not as good as the Netherlands.

    From my limited travel around the states I can say that availability of public transport varies a lot from town to town.

    Local transport: San Fransisco has a lot of public transport and its pretty reliable. I spent over a week in Shreveport Louisiana and I only saw a bus once. maybe I wasn’t in the right place at the right time of day but it wasn’t everywhere like in a European city. I haven’t been to New York, but I have a new Yorker friend who says the subway stations are essentially a place for homeless people to masturbate when they get banned from the library. The entire state of Wyoming doesn’t seem to have any public transport.

    Intercity transport: The greyhound busses are used almost exclusively by people who are not legally allowed to drive (full of meth heads and schizophrenic nuns) the drivers were obviously whichever mentally ill passenger was closest to the front when the previous driver overdosed. They’ll do things like throw their hands in the air and say don’t worry jesus is protecting us! That’s if there is a bus between cities. There isn’t a bus between salt lake city and park city next door for example. The trains have been reduced steadily to the point where the majority of us cities don’t even have a train station.

    So yes Germany has excellent public transport, with the exception of having to validate your ticket before you get on the train (That’s an inefficient waste of time).

  • Aeri@lemmy.world
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    9 days ago

    American public transport either doesn’t exist or is considered to only be for poor people and migrant workers [sic].

    The only place this isn’t true is in a big city.