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2026年4月24日 星期五

The Pharaoh’s New High-Speed Rail: A Monument to Human Hubris

 

The Pharaoh’s New High-Speed Rail: A Monument to Human Hubris

If you want to understand the modern soul, don’t look at our philosophy books—look at our concrete. Between 1995 and 2025, humanity has been obsessed with "Megaprojects." We are talking about $10 billion-plus endeavors that make the Tower of Babel look like a DIY shed project. From the International Space Station to China’s Belt and Road, we are still obsessed with building monuments to our own collective ego.

As a species, we haven't evolved much since the Great Pyramids. Desmond Morris would tell you that the "human animal" is still just a tribal primate trying to signal status. In the past, a King built a cathedral; today, a Prime Minister orders a high-speed rail that inevitably ends up costing four times the original estimate and stops three towns short of the destination.

The data is damning. Whether it’s the democratic "Planning Hell" of the California High-Speed Rail or the authoritarian "Invisible Costs" of the Three Gorges Dam, the story is always the same: Human beings are pathologically incapable of estimating the cost of their own ambition. We suffer from a "Pharaoh Complex"—the delusional belief that by piling enough stone (or debt) toward the heavens, we can achieve political immortality.

The irony is delicious. In the West, projects like the Berlin Brandenburg Airport become a comedy of errors, proving that "German Efficiency" is a marketing myth. In the East, projects are completed with terrifying speed, only to find they’ve built a bridge to nowhere or a debt trap for their neighbors. We trade democratic paralysis for autocratic recklessness, yet both paths lead to the same graveyard of "White Elephants."

History warns us: the moment a civilization shifts from investing in its people to obsessing over its monuments, the decline has already begun. A megaproject is often the final flare of a burning empire—bright, expensive, and a signal that the fire is running out of fuel.