Dec 30
Sunday
Brussels Main Station
Sitting in the food court of this large modern facility. Cate and I taking turns wandering around and watching our stuff.
Our Thayls bullet train will be boarding soon. It travels at 188 miles an hour.
A mile every 20 seconds.
How “did” America fall
So far behind in transportation.
A high speed train between Portland and Seattle would eliminate the need for Horizon air shuttles. As it did between Brussels and Paris.
And rather than jet fuel, they run on electricity. Most of it from renewable energy.
It was a decision by governments here to build this infrastructure.
I was thinking, what we our governments doing when Europe was building high speed trains.
Well. One thing. Fighting wars. The four and one half trillion spent in Iraq could have built the Seattle-Portland bullet train with change left over.
When I hear the anti tax people say, we can’t
Afford to do something. I wonder, why were they silent when we wasted $200
Million a day in a pile
Of sand.
If anyone had asked my vote between Iraq and a high speed train.
If we can’t afford to build great things anymore and feed and house the hungry and unsheltered, but we can invade countries with no exit plan, then maybe we do have something to learn from our European brothers and sisters.
To be sure, Europe is having its struggles in self governing. For Britain, it was a failure of democracy over elected representation.
The populous bought a lie that leaving the EU would save
Money. The very morning after the measure passed the Brexit leaders admitted that was not true. (More on the wonders of traveling between EU countries later )
France has had a long history of labor strikes as well as beheading leaders who cater too much to themselves and the wealthy.
Spain is struggling with regional separatism. With the central government making things worse with a heavy hand in responding to demands for Catalan independence.
Other countries here seem to be figuring it out. Scandinavia and the Low Countries are enjoying relative political calm.
Beyond Europe, it can get worse. Today we get to see a Canby friend of ours in Paris. She had been working for an NGO in the Congo. Her organization sent her to Paris to wait out the elections which have turned violent enough to temporarily evacuate international staff.
It is a big world out here. Some things different. Some things the same.
Last night on the train from
Brugge to Brussels, a multi-French speaking couple (black Dad, white mom) and their kids sat across from us.
The smallest, a girl, sat on her
Fathers knee as they chatted. I was able to figure out the conversation was what to bring on a vacation with the father asking his three year old. She said suitcase. And he agreed. She said mama and papa. He said yes. Then words I didn’t understand but it made him laugh and with a grin said, no.
The girl giggled and hugged her papas face — obviously pleased with making her father laugh.
I was 4,000 miles away from
Home and nearly two decades from moments like that with
My Then- three year olds.
But I’ve never forgotten the joy. And my kids know it. Before she left for Spain, Cate got me a framed photo of her sitting on my knee as we chatted.
As Barry said
There is more than unites us
Than which divides us.
P








