
Originally Posted by
isuzutoo-eh
(sorry to pick on your post Frank, i've been doing that a lot lately i am afraid)
Fifty years ago, everything was moved by rail. The joke is now, the joke is the railways can't deliver due to getting run down and selling off the infrastructure till it cannot do its job.
Every station used to have a goods siding, even in suburbia. Towns were built not around roads but around the railways. Roads were built to service the railways. Don't believe it? Check old maps- roads radiate from rail centres. Some towns didn't have road access at all, Tullah in Tas only got a road 40 years after the railway was built, Magnet in Tas never got a road and closed when the mine railway closed. You still can't drive there...
Every conceivable cargo was shipped by rail-livestock, meat, milk, mail, the circus, cement, eggs, grain, fruit, fuel both liquid solid and gas, sugar, army tanks, bricks, steel, manure, pets, water in times of drought, your great grandmother's piano likely arrived by rail unless you lived a few km from the manufacturer. Hell the railways introduced containerised interstate shipping to Australia. Minimum quantity one postcard.
If the trucks stop, the railways could, if given a fighting chance, take up the slack. Not overnight, that is impossible. But trucks aren't Australia's saviour as some seem to think.
Funny enough if the trains stop, most of us wouldn't have electricity and so wouldn't be able to argue the point at all. Not like trucks have a hope in hell of moving the hundreds of thousands of tonnes of coal that the railways can per day.
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