You've overlooked the fact that these are NOT well outside the core in an apples to apples comparison with Toronto.
OK, fair enough. But in that case, why does it materially matter how far outside the core the corridor actually is? It's not as though density is a function of how far removed from the core the area is, there are a lot of factors.
I'm very explicitly addressing the fact that's not what he argued, but that his concern over slower car travel would be caused by the same grade conflicts that would slow LRT - NOT that he cared about that. Maybe read what I said before writing your next novel.
I read what you said very well. But despite the disclaimers you put, the entire rest of your argument is about how he got it more right than all the "experts". Your disclaimer goes against the entire rest of the content of your post, and it is very easy to see where your sympathies lie.
It's truly stunning how the same gaggle of people who argued against all evidence for years took the briefest of breaks from arguing their inane points in the week after Line 6's disastrous opening.... and then immediately continued on as if nothing had changed. It's clearly useless to try and engage with people who are both incapable of integrating new information into their mind, and who treat forms of rail vehicles as a sort of idol to be uplifted....instead of a form of transportation intended to move people.
Because
operational practices can change!!!
What part of this concept is so difficult for you to understand? All the pro-LRT folks are equally dismayed at the poor early performance of the Finch LRT, and want it to do better. You, and all the other subway foamers on this forum, seem incapable of comprehending, despite thousands of messages explaining to the contrary in great detail, that slowness is NOT an inherent feature of LRTs, and that the solution to that slowness isn't to give sprawling suburbia subways, but to
improve the operational speeds.
You keep arguing against a strawman that doesn't exist. I repeat: slowness is
NOT an inherent feature of LRTs. Suggesting it is is intellectually on the same level as saying that subways are bad because the H6 subway cars were unreliable lemons, or that buses are bad because the same could be said of the Orion hybrids. Maybe we wouldn't have to keep trotting out the same "inane points" over and over again if you actually mounted a coherent argument against them.
N.B. I am pro-LRT because it's a cheaper option of delivering high capacity transit. In a world that has limited amounts of money, the greedy suburbanites of Toronto should not have access to all the monies for new transit projects. If that strikes you as idolatry, that's your problem and should deal with it accordingly.