Chinese Launching Another High-Speed Rail Line.

It’s hard for Americans to imagine the scope of the high-speed rail system now being constructed in China.
In the summer of 2011, I took one of their high-speed trains from Beijing to Shanghai, a line that had only been opened a month or so earlier.  The conventional trains cover that route in anywhere from nine to 12 hours. One train, obviously a “local”, leaves Beijing at noon and finally reaches Shanghai just after 8:00 the next morning.
But the new high-speed trains are something else altogether. Departing from Beijing’s huge and almost new South Station (above), they cut that former travel time in half, making the run to Shanghai in less than five hours at speeds topping out at a bit over 200 mph.
And now the Chinese have announced still another high-speedrail route, this one linking Beijing and Guangzhou (formerly called Canton). Test runs are being conducted with regularly scheduled trains to begin operating next month. 

Conventional trains now complete the Beijing-Guangzhou run in about 20 hours; the high-speed trains will do it in eight!
Here’s my point: critics of high-speed rail in this country grudgingly acknowledge its success in Europe, but claim it won’t work in the U.S. because distances between major cities here are so much greater.
Really? Well, for the record, it’s 900 miles from Beijing to Shanghai … and 1436 miles from Beijing to Guangzhou.
See, this is what bothers me so much about the folks who loudly attack the idea of high-speed rail in this country:
They don’t know what they’re talking about!