but you did vote for politicians who do not punish criminals or do not want to greatly increase their investment into policing/crime reduction. |
Install those walk-through weapons detectors in the easternmost Purple Line stations. That should reduce the potential for it becoming the criminals' shuttle to Bethesda Row. |
The problem with metro is criminals also use it to slip away, easy escape. Anything that slows people.dowb entering is good. |
The number one deterrent is that it will be operated by a private company with a profit motive to not allow people to ride without paying a fare. The second deterrent, related to the first, is that unless there is a massive fare subsidy in addition to the $200 million per year operating subsidy that the state is obliged to pay, the Purple Line will be ridiculously expensive. |
The purple line is the worst and dumbest tax taxpayer funded project in MD history. Such a colossal waste of our money.
And yes, Bethesda Row will have much, much more crime and overcrowding. |
Bethesda and Silver Spring are the largest economic centers in the county. How do you propose people travel between them as the county grows? East-West Highway and 495 both cannot be expanded due to housing already in place. |
I've never been to downtown Bethesda, is it worth going there? |
If you have to ask... |
No, it's terrible. Don't waste your time. It has good schools professors at Maryland want a nice place to live, that is why the purple line is going in. Going out in Bethesda is like entering the 9 circles of he$$ |
It's so crowded, nobody goes there anymore. |
It is a pity that the Purple line is kinda slow, but even then, I suspect it will be even more successful than some of their boosters expect.
One day it will be hard to imagine the area without it, just like imagining DC without the Metro would be. |
This is a feature, not a bug. To those making transit decisions in the DC metro area, it is more equitable to spread crime to high SES mostly white areas. If some neighborhoods are crime-ridden and unsafe, all must be. |
Is it LGBT friendly there or is it mostly straight people that would look at a visibly queer couple like we don't belong there? I've been to Takoma Park and felt safe and absolutely fine. |
Bethesda is in Montgomery County. There are visibly queer couples everywhere in Montgomery County. Even in Damascus at the Jimmie Cone. I wouldn't go to Bethesda as a tourist destination, but it's a perfectly fine place, unless you're somebody who's super mad about tall buildings and the fact that it's not 1970 in Montgomery County anymore. |
The freight rail line was planned for decades for light rail conversion by the county. Discussions began in the 1970s well before many of us were even alive. Then a republican governor went all in to enthusiastically support the Purple Line project posing for the photo ops and what have you. Even years of lawsuits by a seemingly endless array of anti-transit advocates—bike advocates, nature lovers, rail trail boosters, the town of Chevy Chase, friends of the chevy chase library, and the wealthy country club members—couldn’t stop it. Overall the Purple Line will be an economic boon for the region. And despite the naysayers, will be wildly popular for years to come. Imagine taking the Purple Line from Bethesda to College Park for a public lecture by an academic followed by a relaxing dinner in Silver Spring, at Red Lobster for example. |