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drpmjhess
Guest
You’re still thinking in terms of Age of Oil geography, rather than in bioregional terms. Countries can be smaller, without the need for lots of travel between them. Cascadia could be a unified country stretching from Vancouver to Eugene, Oregon; rail travel would be easy. The Eastern seabord and the Great Lakes region and much of the South could be unified countries. Southern California + Baja + western Arizona could be another, although much less densely populated. People would not have the same need to travel frequently between the east and west coats – this “need” was invented when cheap petroleum made it possible.As a country, France is pretty tiny in size … about the same size as New York State, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Illinois combined. So their rail network has to cover a much smaller country. In addition, the eastern part of the United States is mountainous and has a lot of rivers … and getting around, over and through those make rail transportation much more difficult than in the relatively flat France…