OK, so how much research have you done into the project? By that long, rambling, spittle-flecked post, I'd say fuck all. I'm no fan of Boris, but I must point out that the New Bus For London is:martindtanderson wrote:About getting rid of the "bendy buses"... All that was needed, was conductors in between the 2 sets of back doors. Double Decked buses are dangerous, and are not as wheelchair or pushchair accessible! Not to mention the waste of money replacing them with a nostalgia induced vanity project.
1) No more dangerous than any other bus. If you are referring to their height meaning they are more likely to tip over, then you've been watching too much Top Gear. If you are referring to their height meaning they could be driven under low bridges, then rest assured that is extremely unusual and statistically irrelevant, with all sorts of safeguards put in against it happening.
2) Accessible. The NBFL has been designed to be both wheelchair and pushchair accessible, in line with disability legislation imposed by both our national government and the European Parliament.
3) a Nostalgia Induced Vanity Project? Well, while the shape may resemble the RT and the Routemaster, it is different in the same way a Kinder Egg and a Creme Egg are different. It has a modern hybrid engine, additional doors, the rear platform can be closed at quieter times, Oyster card readers, the option of conductorless operation and more importantly, was designed and built by a British company. When trains are being tendered out to foreign companies, this is a vital Northern Irish engineering contract.
I've ridden on a bendy bus. They're counter intuitive, induce motion sickness, have been proven to be dangerous and while introducing capacity, by introducing an extra conductor to each service as you suggest would totally negate the whole reasoning for their introduction.