It's funny you should mention that Klinger. Most of the people living near the Frankfurt am Main airport, one of the busiest in Western Europe, bought their homes and the plots they were on in the 1970's for one reason only, it was cheaper than dirt, something of a rarity as dirt is actually very expensive in this country. When they bought the houses they knew full well that they were going to be living next an airport that could possibly expand over time, and they also knew that they would have to do some serious soundproofing work on their homes if they didn't want to live to the serenity of USAF C-130s and various passenger craft flying over their heads. Now these same people are griping about the noise made by all the air traffic.
The former Army Airfield in Finthen, the nearest airport to my home, had almost the same problem. Ever since the Army pulled out and the base was turned over to the German government in 1992, it's been kept running as an airfield by a number of private pilots who are mostly weekend flyers. Sadly, this little airfield which I enjoyed bicycling to just to see the planes taking off, has been closed to all air traffic with the exception of planes that must undertake an emergency landing. Why? Because some knuckleheads in the next town over made a petition, signed sadly by a large number of the local populace, to close down the airfield due to all the noise from the small Cessnas and Pipers puttering about on sunny afternoons.
Again, not unlike this heritage railroad which was reopened. The heritage railroad I work at, the Nassauische Touristik-Bahn e.V. runs 50's era passenger trains on the part of the Aartalbahn between Hahn-Wehen and Wiesbaden-Dotzheim (we used to be able to run to Hohenstein (Nassau), but that's another story) during the warmer months of the year. The Aartalbahn in its entirity now stands a decent chance of getting completely restored to a regular railroad line with daily train traffic. Upon hearing this some members of the Wiesbaden populace who live near the railroad line raised such an uproar that they have gone so far as to form a group called BSAB Wiesbaden. The goal of the group? To curtail, prevent, and so otherwise make impossible the "reactivation" of the Aartalbahn, and uses buses instead as a means of passenger transportation. They have even go so far as to get the city of Wiesbaden to no longer allow freight traffic on the line within the city, due to the supposed "hellish noise" and the possibility that vibrations in the ground will cause cracks in their house foundations. And yet, many of these same people have lived in Wiesbaden long enough to have endured the many heavy freight trains shuttling between Limburg and the Wiesbaden-West freight depot. Some have even lived there long enough to have seen these same trains being pulled by steam locomotives, which when climbing the hill to Eiserne Hand create the greatest cacophonous concert of steam and metal for miles around.
I personally think that all these people are idiots for very obvious reasons. Those who are complaining about air traffic in Frankfurt have no doubt flown into or out of that airport before, the same people who closed down the Finthen airfield never raised a fuss when the US Army was flying Chinooks and Hueys on a daily basis, and they still didn't complain for nearly two decades afterwards. I think the biggest fools though are the ones complaining about the Aartalbahn. These people apparently do not even realize that there are certain parts of the world where public transportation in any form hardly exists, and those of you who live in the United States can certainly attest to this. I find it catastrophically stupid that people complain about something that was already there to begin with, especially when they've used it on occasion. However, they're
really stupid when they don't think that anybody would want to live so close to these places or listen to the noise that comes with it. I myself desire nothing less than to live next a heavily trafficed railroad line, and if that means living a kilometer from an airport's main runway that plays host to hordes of Russian cargo planes, so be it!
My 2¢ death rant of the day.
WileeCoyote
