Last weekend saw 'The Greatest Gathering' at Derby's rail works, recently voted by the public as the historic centre of locomotive building in the UK. It celebrated 200 years since the first passengers were drawn between Stockton and Darlington and featured any number of historic types, brought together for one weekend in the one place. Tickets sold out in hours and I wish I could have been there.
It could though be considered to be a celebration of the sale of UK assets to foreign shareholders, what is left of rail engineering having been sold long ago to a French multinational known for corruption to the same extent as it is for building railways.
The UK's most recent efforts ~ a high speed service between London and the North ~ failed enroute to Birmingham, and more recently the electrification of lines from London to Derby lost the will to live a little way north of Leicester. In China whilst all this goes on, they are trialling a service around twice the speed of our failed 'high speed' efforts... ironically using a technology attributed to Eric Laithwaite, who was born a stone's throw from here.
I've travelled on the maglev service between Pudong airport and Shanghai, and it is as close to travelling on a jet airliner as you can get whilst still moving over ground.
I've also ~ for the last time ~ used a train to get to Manchester Airport, seeing why we have a problem with rail transport in the UK. The service is over-priced and of dubious reliability, so people avoid it if at all possible. This leads to a doom spiral in which tax-payer revenue is effectively transferred to foreign shareholders.
We should close the railways and just transfer the cash, as with every other utility.
The train up top is a diesel multiple unit (DMU) of the sort we'd take to go shopping in Liverpool decades ago, and I'd still rather a ride in one of those than in the one below... they were so bad, they were good.