Absolutely, and in the densely populated areas, the trains make sense.
However, there is a HUGE space that isn't very populated between SF and LA... You've got moderately populated Monterey Bay, and really that's not that populated, then a lot of farms/vineyards/etc until you start hitting the outskirts of LA (Lancaster, etc).
Now, North LA to the base of San Diego, that's a very populated area, and would allow for easier trips into Mexico with pushing the rail down across the border into Tijuana.
Yes but the bay area and LA are two regions which commonly commute between each other. If building this rail line means businessmen, students, and families (travelling for Disneyland, say) can get from one end of the state to the other (because honestly, who goes up to Redding?) both cheaply and affordably, and without having to go through the rigamarole of the airport, is that really such a waste of money (especially when it doesn't actually eat into our budget that much at all?
Let me tell you as somebody who has had to travel from Northern California to LA. It sucks. If you're taking a car it really sucks. Gas is expensive, it's 6 hours and traffic stops entirely the instant you enter the San Fernando valley. If you get a flat out in the central valley ain't nobody gonna help you. If you don't have a car, it still sucks. There are no trains, let me repeat that
no trains which go from San Jose/San Francisco to LA directly. Your only alternatives are to take the Grayhound, which is cheap, but also takes 10 hours at minimum, requires you to wait for the buses literally in the epicenter of each respective city's ghetto, and they're just extremely uncomfortable in general. The other alternative is air travel. The problem with air travel is that it's expensive (try finding a flight for under 180 dollars round trip) only really services San Francisco and occasionally Oakland (good luck if you live in San Jose), and you still have to go through all the crap you ordinarily have to go through on an airplane.
Personally I have been a huge fan and proponent of this High Speed Rail project at least since 2008. I really don't think there is much better that California can spend their money on. It beats the hell out of a lot of the other crappy pet projects who get portions of the budget allocated via the Proposition system.
I've already explained this to you in another thread Kochman. These sorts of things are not why California is in dire straits. It has nothing to do with expensive welfare or "costly" infrastructure expenses. It has to do with a variety of systemic issues including our budget amendment process, massive gerrymandering, and a backwards proposition system which forcibly allocates portions of the budget, no matter how silly and frivolous, to some person's (or corporation's) pet project via a simple majority. Often these propositions are intentionally worded confusingly to help this.
An excellent example of the above would be Proposition 8, which was a constitutional ban on gay marriage. The problem was that you would get people who wouldn't properly read the bill, but know (through ads and publicity) that the prop was about gay marriage. People would vote "yes" assuming this meant that they were saying "yes, I think gay marriage should be legal" rather than what they were actually voting for which was "yes I don't think gays should ever be allowed to marry ever". It sounds silly, but this really was a problem and I watched people get the bill mixed up on a regular basis.
Anyway, other problems with our state include the fact we are as populous and wealthy as most modern 1st world countries, and yet are forced to give away a sizeable chunk of our tax dollars and aren't allowed to run a deficit, effectively barring us from solving our own infrastructure and employment issues through deficit spending, as most modern nations would.
Additionally in the late 70s we voted through a measure making it so that property taxes cannot be higher than 1% of the value of the property. Oh, hey, guess where all of our school funding comes from? Yeah, that would be property taxes. Whoops. Chalk that one up to a proposition system success. We also repealed a tax on luxury car licenses that in the early 2000s was bringing in revenue to the order of over 10 billion. Yeah, sure wish we could have that back now, too.
I don't know why I keep having to remind you of this, I'm sure you've heard me say this at least 10 or 11 times by now.