Not in the Quebec-Windsor corridor. There's enough people, and the density is high enough for rail to be useful.
The environmental benefits are great and all, but you'll get downtown to downtown faster and cheaper than car or train with high speed rail. Like, get off work in downtown Toronto, eat on the train, and watch a Sens game at 7 at LeBreton Flats, and back home for midnight sort of speed.
I'm indifferent about the Leafs, but Steve Dangle seems like a nice guy, so I kinda cheer for them.
Dude, BC Election. Do you even have a Liberal candidate? The BC Libs collapsed. It's probably Cons vs. NDP vs. maybe Greens + Fringe.
Voted today in the District Electoral Office. (Going on holiday for quite a bit of election season, so it was just easier.)
Er, yes!
But you do know Tumbler Ridge is a coal mining town in south Peace River and that engine was a coal hauler through the mountains on a dedicated freight line to Prince George, right?
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/taylor-bachrach-train-1.7061205
Oh, at least one minister is aware.
Bachrach has been doing some good things, like taking VIA home for Christmas to point out that passenger rail should have priority. He doesn't have the experience that Cullen did, but he's promising.
I suspect we're of similar ages, since I had to scroll down this far to find Due South.
"You know we just took out seven guys? One more and you qualify for American citizenship."
...Hamas was conducting raids from the hallways and offices of an active hospital in a war zone?
The point I was making is that the Israeli official position changed. They said they needed to attack because of an active base in the tunnels. There is no evidence of a base in the tunnels. They found a small weapons cache! Yes, that makes sense, they were treating wounded people in a war one, some of them would would have weapons, which would need to go somewhere.
When Israeli forces took the hospital, there was scant evidence of their position. If there was good evidence, we would have definitely heard about it. I can only conclude that Israeli intelligence was either wrong or lying, barring good evidence to the contrary.
In justifying its first raid, Israel said that underneath the hospital lay a complex network of tunnels, a central command center for Hamas. Evidence produced from that raid— caches of weapons, a tunnel leading to small, rusty quarters that appeared out of use, and no scores of militants found — fell far short of the claim . Hagari said Monday that the intelligence had been wrong and that Israel had tipped off Hamas militants at Shifa by announcing its attack plans.
“They left there because they knew we were coming,” he said. “And this time, we did something else.”
By doubling back to Shifa in mid-March, he said, forces surprised militants who had regrouped inside.
He said the military now believes militants operated mainly from the hospital wards themselves, not tunnels underneath.
Apparently they weren't using those tunnels now.
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/gaza-prison-doctor-accuse-torture-israel-hamas-war-rcna159710
Also, the hospital chief has some things to say as well.
Inconvenient, but it needs a bunch of work.
This would be great help if it was labelled, as I'm colorblind.
When will we three meet again? In thunder, lightning, or in rain?
When the hurly-burlys done, when the battle's lost and won.
That will be ere the set of sun.
Where shall we meet?
Upon the heath.
There to meet MacBeth.
Loblaws would sell Arizona Iced Tea for $1.99.
Managed to lock up a quest in a convenience store. I think getting caught moved an object off-track.