amw

cars and events

Feb 21, 2024 09:27

ohnotheydidnt dropped a great wank post today: US Swifties can't comprehend the concept of public transport in Melbourne. But, probably because it was posted when America was awake and the rest of the world was still asleep, there is a bunch of bizarro comments like how people would rather sit in the comfort of their own car for two hours waiting to get out of ( Read more... )

teh internets, raving, simple living

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amw February 25 2024, 07:45:43 UTC
I'm never sure how much of that GM versus streetcars conspiracy really affected the adoption of private internal combustion vehicles and how much was just a result of ordinary people with a fantasy of being kings finding that owning a personal carriage and a castle in the suburbs brought them closer to that fantasy. Although I suppose that's exactly the job of marketing professionals, manipulating people into believing that buying something will give them power, so perhaps it's still the fault of the car companies...

The thing that frustrates me is people who complain that the communists are coming to take their cars (and guns, and meat, and...) when that's not how it ends up working in practice. Lots of Germans own cars, but they use them for longer weekend trips, not for nipping down to the supermarket for a loaf of bread or taking the kids to school. Ravers in Taiwan might live in the city and take the subway everywhere, but once a month they rent a car to go to a festival. Meanwhile children and the elderly and disabled and millions of other people who cannot or do not want to drive are still able to live full lives. It doesn't have to be an all or nothing solution, it's just about using the right tool for the right job, and ensuring the default tool is also the most accessible and inclusive one.

As usual in America, the government failed the people. I wonder if part of the problem is the massively decentralized nature of the US government, but Canada and Australia are more centralized and still have problems with car centric development. Although from my experience slightly less bad than America.

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geminiwench February 26 2024, 05:28:48 UTC
Our local papers reported on why they burned their streetcars, exactly stating it was a part of the contract with the new bus company the city had signed. They weren't even allowed to keep one for posterity, although the city had legally asked to keep one, hoping to put it in a park as a band pavillion.

So... do I send copies of that microfische to snopes or.... who? Ha!

The trains were built SO weird in America... it was all self-funded these little local business/development barons who couldn't/wouldn't work together, and just competed to the point the rail system connected... but didn't actually work together. By the 1950s, the highway system was sold (by car manufacturers) as the way of the future and a way around our crappy train system.

And it's just been that way ever since. A few American cities were forward looking enough to invest in major and dedicated public transportation systems. NYC impressed me so much (having only known Seattle's and San Francisco's subways) but then I saw how Europe does it and I realized how far behind ALL our public transport is.
Every facet shows a lack of care, investment, or even... interest in the concept DESPITE how effective and efficient it is INCLUDING cost effective/efficient in mega-business minded America. The public good doesn't often get good marketing in America;) ha!

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