EgonSpengler
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- Jun 26, 2014
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I'm envisioning (a) I'm rich like Bruce Wayne and (b) it's a near future of environmental catastrophe where airplane travel is over, and you have people traveling on trains, airships and maritime ships again. (I read The Ministry for the Future by Kim Stanley Robinson not too long ago. I'm also hearing stories about, for example, FIFA expanding its schedule, which will add something like a billion annual air-miles traveled by soccer/football clubs and basically working to hasten the end of civilization as we know it and bring on the next Age, whatever that will be.) If I were stupid-rich, I'd travel a lot. And if I wanted or needed to avoid using planes, I'd prefer a train to an airship, most of the time. Of course, if I were stupid-rich, I'd have both, but this thread is about the train.Which raises the question, how long and how frequently am I going to be on this train?
According to Amtrak, a cross-country trip in North America currently takes 60-70 hours. That's with a handful of stops and a 4-hour layover in Chicago. Unless I was in a hurry to attend a Comic Con or take Melissa O'Neil to lunch (or, heck, to take Melissa O'Neil to Comic-Con), I would make a lot of stops along the way. I'd probably have a layover in Chicago of, like, 4 days rather than 4 hours. Crossing Europe by train must be similar. The modern Orient Express goes London to Venice in 2 days, or Paris to Istanbul - the classic route - in 6 days. I assume the latter must make a lot of stops where passengers can disembark for a few hours, kind of like taking a cruise ship. I would imagine even today you can get just about anywhere in N. America or Europe by train. So after Comic-Con, Melissa and I will be heading to Mexico City, 'cause you cannot get good Mexican food around here.
I like the outside-the-box thinking, though.I don’t know about how to power a train, but I found the Germans in the 1930’s tried to build one that had a propeller on the back. It was discontinued because you couldn’t connect anything to the back and having a giant propeller spinning around busy railway platforms was thought by some to possibly be unsafe.

Oh, yeah. Good idea. I hadn't thought of that. I wouldn't need a dining room or anything, but a private suite to sleep if I arrive in the middle of the night (sleeping in moving vehicles can be tough, and even on a fancy train, you'd probably be in a narrow bed) or just to take a shower before heading out into the city. Sounds good to me.And ofcourse with a royal train goes a royal suite, in several stations :
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Markante plekken: het Koninklijk Salon, het geheim van station Brussel-Centraal
In de reeks "Markante plekken" gaat onze fotograaf Alexander Dumarey elke week op zoek naar een opvallende plek met een verhaal. Vandaag: het Koninklijk salon in Brussel-Centraalwww.vrt.be
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