Jacob Shell

28.4K posts

Jacob Shell banner
Jacob Shell

Jacob Shell

@JacobAShell

Geographer. Prof at Temple University. Author of 2 books. Elephants. Maps. Archaeofuturist Transportation.

Philadelphia, USA Se unió Aralık 2016
1.2K Siguiendo15.3K Seguidores
Coddled Affluent Professional
Coddled Affluent Professional@feelsdesperate·
OBAA is a fever dream where all sorts of exhausted tropes are imposed onto the current political moment without being able to provide any narrative coherence. Viewed ironically, as a disorienting spasm of the post war lib ideological order that points to its breakdown and imminent senescence, the film is effective. I thought it had an almost elegiac quality to it and that it was affectionate towards a once dominant type of cultural programming that is now very close to being formally decommissioned.
Ann Coulter@AnnCoulter

Liel Leibovitz in the Free Press: "As a work of art, One Battle After Another is irredeemable. It feels like the sort of thing written by a committee of socialist college sophomores cracking each other up ... "Paul Thomas Anderson seems interested more in purring for his fellow progressives than in making interesting movies ..."

English
22
9
150
14.4K
Benjamin Ryan
Benjamin Ryan@benryanwriter·
@AnnCoulter I can barely remember what happened in the movie. The only decent part was the visual effect on the big screen when they were scaling those vertiginous hills toward the end. Where is the Phantom Thread sequel I demanded???
English
3
0
19
4.2K
Ann Coulter
Ann Coulter@AnnCoulter·
Liel Leibovitz in the Free Press: "As a work of art, One Battle After Another is irredeemable. It feels like the sort of thing written by a committee of socialist college sophomores cracking each other up ... "Paul Thomas Anderson seems interested more in purring for his fellow progressives than in making interesting movies ..."
Ann Coulter tweet media
English
131
70
1K
230.8K
Jacob Shell
Jacob Shell@JacobAShell·
@Tom_Rowsell OK fair enough. But the "racial stakes" still don't make sense. Is it as petty as "Anatolia is in Asia, not Europe"? So it's just about disassociating this history from "Europe"?
English
1
0
1
208
Tom Rowsell
Tom Rowsell@Tom_Rowsell·
@JacobAShell Bad choice of words. Estonian comes from a migration of Siberians much later, and Armenian comes from a migration of Europeans into Armenia. CHG and EHG are not proto-anything from today. But WSH are without doubt a European racial type
English
2
0
13
713
Tom Rowsell
Tom Rowsell@Tom_Rowsell·
Remembering in 2022 when I politely pushed back on the Southern Arc hypothesis, and suggested Harvard didn't have proper evidence of the alleged sub-Caucasian source of PIE and that they had ignored Sredny Stog. Then loads of brown people said I was "coping" or "crashing out". Then in 2024 when the same authors published a paper debunking their own claims and showing Sredny Stog was indeed, as I had suggested, the original PIE culture, there was not one among my detractors decent enough to admit "Rowsell was right".
Tom Rowsell tweet mediaTom Rowsell tweet media
English
48
120
1.9K
63.2K
Jacob Shell
Jacob Shell@JacobAShell·
I mean of course nothing like this can be built if it costs the entire GDP of California just to get one line
English
1
0
3
397
Iain Cameron
Iain Cameron@theiaincameron·
The most isolated settlement in the world is the fabulously titled Edinburgh of the Seven Seas, on Tristan da Cunha, a tiny island deep in the south Atlantic. The settlement is roughly 2,800 kilometres (1,750 miles) from South Africa and over 3,200 kilometres (2,000 miles) from South America. There is no airport on the island. The only way to reach it is by a six-to-seven-day boat journey from Cape Town, South Africa, on ships that typically only visit about 8 to 12 times per year. Most residents are descendants of just 15 original settlers from the 19th century, and only seven family surnames currently exist on the island (Glass, Swain, Green, Rogers, Hagan, Repetto, and Lavarello).
Iain Cameron tweet mediaIain Cameron tweet mediaIain Cameron tweet media
English
16
37
463
43.4K
The Man in Seat 61
The Man in Seat 61@seatsixtyone·
Today’s guess the station competition…
The Man in Seat 61 tweet media
English
15
1
35
16.8K
Jacob Shell
Jacob Shell@JacobAShell·
@poiThePoi CA HSR is going through a lot more parks and open space than Detroit highways had to!
English
0
0
0
197
Poi
Poi@poiThePoi·
@JacobAShell In Michigan, they used to build them through parks and play connect the dots with the parks. But they also built a lot of of them through exurbs that didn't exist yet and also weren't the most valuable farmland in the country.
English
2
0
0
206
Jacob Shell
Jacob Shell@JacobAShell·
Why werent the interstates as expensive to build? Didnt they also involve eminent domain, the state becoming "landlord" for tenants of seized rental properties, etc?
No Safe Words@Cyber_Trailer

Since my account is somewhat anonymous I’m going to disclose where some of the California high-speed rail money gets wasted. 99% of you don’t realize where giant chunks of the money is disappearing to. The California high-speed rail authority, literally owns thousands of parcels of land that are in various stages continued litigation, tenant improvements, eviction, and constant maintenance. For example, there are many homes and apartment complexes in the plant path that have been purchased years ahead of construction. Removing those tenants is a slow and expensive process. (let’s ignore the extra stress on housing that all of these destroyed properties are causing) In some cases, these are low rent apartments with a lengthy eviction process During that process, the state of California is the landlord and has to maintain the property codes the same as any other landlord. This means repairs, adding smoke detectors, fixing roofs, vegetation management, landscaping, paying off tenants to leave early, boarding up Windows, constant trash cleanups, towing vehicles etc. But the High Speed Rail Authority doesn’t just have to maintain these properties at normal cost. Every single bit of that work has to be done at California prevailing wage rates. The work can only be done through qualified contractors that have passed through a long series of idiotic mazes to qualify to perform the work. An average rate per hour (charge rate) for a worker to perform any service on these properties is approximately $200 an hour for labor only. The cost go up for specialized work, like electricians, plumbers, or machine operators. Properties that are literally worthless are being maintained at huge expense just so the next round of homeless transients can break into the property and cause more damage. For reasons I can’t explain, the process to finally demo and remove the structures takes years. I’m only mentioning the tip of the iceberg regarding my firsthand knowledge. Completely separate from those outlandish costs are the inflation caused by the construction. The prevailing word on the street is that nothing is getting done. The truth is that a lot is getting done and none of it efficiently. The amount of concrete being poured daily and monthly to build gigantic overpasses for both the rail and roadways is not understood. In these work areas, every concrete mixing company is fully scheduled out and cannot offer building materials for other basic services such as building a house often times for weeks when the average lead time for many of these services used to be one day. And that’s just the schedule, never mind the huge cost increases from straining the supply chain and Labor pool. The amount of concrete and steel that has gone into the structures so far is massive. Dozens and dozens of new water wells have been dug just for dust control. Thousands upon thousands of acres of highly productive tree fruits and nuts have been torn up and shredded. Utility scale solar fields have been uprooted and sometimes relocated at extravagant costs. Every type of business you can imagine has gone through either a closure, relocation, or a long-term tenant agreement with the rail authority. In some cases, it’s just a buyout where the business closes its doors forever. The owners get something all of the workers get nothing. Don’t get me started on how thick the layers of bureaucracy are for these minute tasks that occur on all of these properties. The inefficiency is far beyond your wildest dreams. In many cases, this is not related to fraud in any way it’s just absolute ignorance, red tape, and failed leadership. I can go much deeper into specific examples, but I think that gives some of you an idea of what’s actually happening in California. If a rail is ever usable, some portions of the structures will be decades old and already in disrepair.

English
8
2
30
4.6K
Jacob Shell
Jacob Shell@JacobAShell·
@Cyber_Trailer I dont understand how the country built urban freeways so much more easily in the 60s. Didnt it have to "become the landlord" of seized buildings back then too? And yet everything got built, usually within just a few years
English
1
0
9
351
No Safe Words
No Safe Words@Cyber_Trailer·
Since my account is somewhat anonymous I’m going to disclose where some of the California high-speed rail money gets wasted. 99% of you don’t realize where giant chunks of the money is disappearing to. The California high-speed rail authority, literally owns thousands of parcels of land that are in various stages continued litigation, tenant improvements, eviction, and constant maintenance. For example, there are many homes and apartment complexes in the plant path that have been purchased years ahead of construction. Removing those tenants is a slow and expensive process. (let’s ignore the extra stress on housing that all of these destroyed properties are causing) In some cases, these are low rent apartments with a lengthy eviction process During that process, the state of California is the landlord and has to maintain the property codes the same as any other landlord. This means repairs, adding smoke detectors, fixing roofs, vegetation management, landscaping, paying off tenants to leave early, boarding up Windows, constant trash cleanups, towing vehicles etc. But the High Speed Rail Authority doesn’t just have to maintain these properties at normal cost. Every single bit of that work has to be done at California prevailing wage rates. The work can only be done through qualified contractors that have passed through a long series of idiotic mazes to qualify to perform the work. An average rate per hour (charge rate) for a worker to perform any service on these properties is approximately $200 an hour for labor only. The cost go up for specialized work, like electricians, plumbers, or machine operators. Properties that are literally worthless are being maintained at huge expense just so the next round of homeless transients can break into the property and cause more damage. For reasons I can’t explain, the process to finally demo and remove the structures takes years. I’m only mentioning the tip of the iceberg regarding my firsthand knowledge. Completely separate from those outlandish costs are the inflation caused by the construction. The prevailing word on the street is that nothing is getting done. The truth is that a lot is getting done and none of it efficiently. The amount of concrete being poured daily and monthly to build gigantic overpasses for both the rail and roadways is not understood. In these work areas, every concrete mixing company is fully scheduled out and cannot offer building materials for other basic services such as building a house often times for weeks when the average lead time for many of these services used to be one day. And that’s just the schedule, never mind the huge cost increases from straining the supply chain and Labor pool. The amount of concrete and steel that has gone into the structures so far is massive. Dozens and dozens of new water wells have been dug just for dust control. Thousands upon thousands of acres of highly productive tree fruits and nuts have been torn up and shredded. Utility scale solar fields have been uprooted and sometimes relocated at extravagant costs. Every type of business you can imagine has gone through either a closure, relocation, or a long-term tenant agreement with the rail authority. In some cases, it’s just a buyout where the business closes its doors forever. The owners get something all of the workers get nothing. Don’t get me started on how thick the layers of bureaucracy are for these minute tasks that occur on all of these properties. The inefficiency is far beyond your wildest dreams. In many cases, this is not related to fraud in any way it’s just absolute ignorance, red tape, and failed leadership. I can go much deeper into specific examples, but I think that gives some of you an idea of what’s actually happening in California. If a rail is ever usable, some portions of the structures will be decades old and already in disrepair.
English
220
772
3K
240.1K
Jacob Shell
Jacob Shell@JacobAShell·
@skibidiquasar Boston built the Central Artery! And Mass Pike. And they had all the land claimed and razed for the Inner Loop in Roxbury
English
0
0
4
223
Technomad Biker
Technomad Biker@skibidiquasar·
@JacobAShell No they actually got told to fuck off by a bunch of people which explains some of the weirder routings like I-95 being MA-128 instead of going through Boston.
English
1
0
3
245
Jacob Shell
Jacob Shell@JacobAShell·
People who don't already know are very surprised when you reveal to them where this is.
Jacob Shell tweet media
English
114
52
1.9K
200.8K
Jacob Shell
Jacob Shell@JacobAShell·
@Ozymetsdias If I didnt know Im not sure what I'd fixate on here to sleuth it. Maybe the car sizes? The clearness of the air?
Jacob Shell tweet media
English
1
0
15
21.7K
Jacob Shell
Jacob Shell@JacobAShell·
@shsnnsdn Edinburgh of the 7 Seas is more isolated in terms of distance from the next perm settlement and also larger (a real town) compared to Adamstown.
English
0
0
16
5.2K
Shsnnsdn
Shsnnsdn@shsnnsdn·
@JacobAShell adamstown in pitcairn islands is farther away from any large landmass. a boat got get from here to south africa in only a few days
English
1
0
9
5.6K
Jacob Shell
Jacob Shell@JacobAShell·
Edinburgh of the Seven Seas, the most isolated town on the planet.
Jacob Shell tweet mediaJacob Shell tweet media
English
56
286
5.8K
344.9K
Jacob Shell
Jacob Shell@JacobAShell·
@Tom_Rowsell I'm not perceiving the "racial stakes" from their POV. If the Yamnaya were the offspring of Proto-Estonians and Proto-Armenias...so what. I dont see why anyone today would have their chauvinism tickled by this
English
4
0
10
894
Tom Rowsell
Tom Rowsell@Tom_Rowsell·
@JacobAShell It's a mixture of woke and racial chauvinists of southern origin refusing to accept reality
English
3
0
114
3.3K
Jacob Shell
Jacob Shell@JacobAShell·
Like I said earlier, the whole point of these things is they're supposed to be kinda cheap. Not saying they're ineffective, but if you're splurging then the thing to build is a highway tunnel or viaduct, not a 100 million dollar pedestrian bridge for deer.
Benji Backer@BenjiBacker

Colorado built this wildlife overpass last year for $15 million. It’ll pay for itself within five years from the avoided collisions. California spending $114 million on a failed wildlife overpass is absurd.

English
6
4
96
5.1K