Canada’s population is growing fast, especially in cities like Toronto, Vancouver, and Montréal. As more people move into urban and suburban areas, our current transportation systems are struggling to keep up. Highways are overcrowded, commutes are longer, and housing costs are rising partly because people have to live close to where they work.
Building more train lines—both between and within cities—would help fix this. Trains can move large numbers of people quickly and efficiently, easing traffic and reducing pressure on housing in city cores. Reliable rail links would let more Canadians live in smaller towns while still accessing good jobs, schools, and services in major cities.
With better regional and national rail networks, Canada could grow in a more balanced way. Instead of packing millions more people into already full urban centers, we could spread growth across connected communities. Trains make that possible—and in a country as large and expanding as Canada, that’s exactly what’s needed.
But you might ask, what would we do with all these trains once they wipe out all the Indians? Simple, we use them like civialized people and live happlily ever after.
Building more train lines—both between and within cities—would help fix this. Trains can move large numbers of people quickly and efficiently, easing traffic and reducing pressure on housing in city cores. Reliable rail links would let more Canadians live in smaller towns while still accessing good jobs, schools, and services in major cities.
With better regional and national rail networks, Canada could grow in a more balanced way. Instead of packing millions more people into already full urban centers, we could spread growth across connected communities. Trains make that possible—and in a country as large and expanding as Canada, that’s exactly what’s needed.
But you might ask, what would we do with all these trains once they wipe out all the Indians? Simple, we use them like civialized people and live happlily ever after.
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