post: 3844073, member: 3177"]I think you might have slightly missed the point. I was suggesting that some people may ask what benefit those places not directly connected to HS2 will enjoy
You said that "these cities have been doing relatively well in recent decades how well will it help those cities and regions that actually need the help like Bradford, Liverpool, Nottingham, Hull, Middlesbrough, Sunderland, Cumbria, Scotland, Wales etc" << i.e. you don't like the idea of building railways in prosperous areas and you don't like the idea of building something that won't benefit Sunderland/ Scotland/ Wales?
Nobody seems to have a problem with something like the East-West railway, even though it benefits the relatively prosperous Oxfordshire/ Buckinghamshire/ Cambridgeshire etc - yet when HS2 is proposed the reaction is along the lines of "I'm against it because it won't regenerate various struggling towns".
I'm not sure why HS2 gets treated differently like this - I'm not even sure that heavy rail is the best way to solve the long standing problems of post-industrial towns (not surprising that rail enthusiasts want to solve every problem by building a railway...).
But then it's part of the HS2 hypocrisy. The people who say they are against it because it'll turn big cities like Birmingham/ Leeds into dormitory towns for London tend to be the people who want to link small towns/ villages to big cities (when it comes to re-opening rural lines). Self driving cars aren't a reason not to build Aberystwyth - Carmarthen but will apparently scupper HS2. This new fangled broadband will mean we don't need fast services from Manchester/ Leeds to London, but that doesn't stop people wanting faster services from Manchester to Leeds.
One rule for HS2 and another rule for everything else...
To get directly back to the original question, "Why are people opposed to HS2?", it does seem to me that the whole project has been extraordinarily badly marketed to the public
There seems to be a lot of criticism on here for the marketing, even from intelligent enthusiasts who can clearly see the reality of what HS2 will be achieving - the Government aren't great at advertising many projects but we can assess the costs/benefits of those projects - did the Government market GWML electrification?
Problem is, that works both ways. Damned if you do, damned if you don't.
Publish even a specification level, and people will think it's set in stone. e.g. Place X doesn't benefit as much as Place Y, (or Place Xs trains now can call at Place Y on their way to Place Z) so place X now campaigns against HS2, inspite of the benefits to Place Y (who might not realise they benefit, as people don't/can't travel to Place Z today)
With future services, as London Reconnections once put it, its balancing actual current passengers versus theoetical future passengers (who don't exist yet)
It's the latter who are the real beneficiaries of HS2, but don't/can't realise that yet, but it's the former who do exist and can be vocal about how their 0807 into town might arrive at 0812 in future.
Agreed - look at all of the moaning on here about very minor changes to the ScotRail timetable (e.g. the Dunblane - Edinburgh service being moved to something like 06:58, rather than a few minutes after seven) - any indicative timetable for ten years time is just going to be a hostage to fortune - a lot can happen in a decade - we could have a nationalised railway, we could be fuelling trains with brand new technology, we could have urban hyper loops/ monorails/ whatever. Ten years ago we were only just getting around to infrastructure investment (the modest "Lancashire Triangle" proposals).