Missing kick off on friday for a start.
And how would having a railway run by civil servants have helped?
Missing kick off on friday for a start.
So what significant change would we see if it were run by these 'train experts' again?
That's not the question to be asked. "How would having a single nationalised railway have helped?" is what you should be asking.And how would having a railway run by civil servants have helped?
It never was run by civil servants. Wherever did you get that stupid idea from? It was run by RAILWAYMEN, who pretty much got side-lined when the privatisation bean-counters moved in. Trouble is, bean-counters only know how to count beans.............I used to travel every day and still do several times a week. I don't know what everyone is complaining out. It is a massively expensive service to provide, massively subsidised by the taxpayer, and serving more people travelling than ever before. So it is going to have some problems. But no idea why anyone thinks it would be 'better' if it was run by civil servants.
And how would having a railway run by civil servants have helped?
Read Ernest's post on that thread.
I have. I used to be able to buy 8 Black Jacks for a penny. So what? Life moves on.
I have. I used to be able to buy 8 Black Jacks for a penny. So what? Life moves on.
I can't take you seriously. You're a blue-rinse Tory, fair enough. So highlight the good things they've done on relevant threads. But where they've massively ****ed up, don't try and defend the indefensible. It is risible.
Anyway, I've answer your question. How about you answer mine - what is so good about a privatised rail network?
Yes, I was there. There was industrial action going on. Water still came out of the tap, and the gas cooker always hummed away merrily. What's that got to do with nationalisation? Nothing.What about the early 1970's?
I think the infrastructure needs a lot spent on it if it's going to come up german/swiss standards.
The fact that passenger numbers have doubled is obviously a success, but this is largely because the off-peak advance fares are now so cheap, partly driven by low cost airline. That is the benefit of competition right there.Passenger numbers have DOUBLED between 2004 and 2014.
The biggest investment was made by the Blair Labour government when they injected massive amounts of subsidy into the industry in the late 90s and early noughties. Nothing to do with the companies themselves or privatisation. That would have happened had the industry been nationalised.Massive investment, after decades of under-investment, in the quality of track, stations and rolling stock.
Show me someone who states privatisation works, and I'll show you someone who is mental (or has their snout in the railways trough)
Unlike the BR days when the station master would put on the bowler hat..
There is only one objective to privatisation and that is to make money for shareholders. That's it. It tells you in a nutshell what is wrong with privatised services. They are their to create profit, not to service the consumer.
The latter is usually a necessity in order to deliver the former over a sustained period of time.