Never said there were no captive shippers, but then again, they all do have choices.
Know all about “captive” shippers, most of the PTRA customers would fall into your skewed definition of captive.
They aren’t, they could truck it out, but that would cost more.
The rub is the wheat farmers don’t like the alternatives, and the cost, regardless of what mode is used.
What they want is a break on their shipping cost, which it would appear that you have a vested interest in.
I notice you don’t carry on near as much about the poor coal mines, or the fruit growers, or the captive General Motors plants, most of which are served by only one railroad.
That and it’s just easier to gripe about the railroads, which the farmers, and you, seem to heartily wish would somehow turn into a public utility.
They are not, but you guys seem to think that if you repeat the same nonsense over and over again, by simple rote and repetition the rest of the world will agree, if only to make you be quite.
Add in the fact that you need a villain to make your pseudo economics appear to make sense, and the fact that the wheat growers in Montana somehow seem to think that because they grow their crop out in the middle of nowhere, they should get a break on shipping cost…
You just willing ignore the free market place forces at play…one of which is if you build your product far away from the transportation center, then it will cost you more to ship your product, regardless of the product, or it’s supposed public value, and regardless of how many carriers serve your area…not a hard concept to grasp, but then again, you seem to think “fair” is a business concept due “the people”, and profit is a dirty word…
Yup, railroads cut deals with some big shippers, almost every business in the world does so, and they cut deals with their suppliers, shippers, buyers and retailers, its part of doing business.
Get it…business, not “p