fuck_cars

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SadSadSatellite, in Truck bloat is killing us, new crash data reveals

So are we going to like, do something about it?

HiddenLayer5,
@HiddenLayer5@lemmy.ml avatar

Nah, because that would involve the slightest reduction in personal freedom which as we all know is a fate not only worse than death, but worse than hellfire itself.

scrubbles,
@scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech avatar

What? Are you suggesting I drive a smaller truck just to help other people? Are you saying I crash into people? I need that giant truck! Do you know how much I haul and tow every day?! I mean, I don’t, I commute back and forth to work every day in it, but I need to do that. My coworkers see that truck next to their cars and think “Damn, that guy drives a Truck”. Maybe if they see how big of a truck I drive it’ll make up for the crippling social anxiety I have that I just keep pushing further and further down, maybe it’ll make up for not getting that promotion I worked for. Now they’ll have to notice me. So no, you aren’t taking away my F350 Mega Macho Man-Manliness Super Truck. How else will people know I’m a man?

Which is why we call them ESTs. Emotional Support Trucks.

HiddenLayer5, (edited )
@HiddenLayer5@lemmy.ml avatar

Oversized and/or overpriced cars owned by men are also often referred to as “compensators.”

notatoad,

Even bigger trucks?

themeatbridge, in Yes, also Teslas

I’m not unsympathetic to the fuckcars movement, but I have to ask about the road salt. When it snows and the roads are icy, what’s supposed to happen? What’s the plan for getting around, for getting to work, for getting to school? We can be using beet juice and other less impactful de-icing brines, but you still need the cars to get people where they need to go. Is the argument that people should stay home? Are we suggesting that colder climates just shouldn’t be populated? Busses need the road salt, too. Trains and trolleys de-ice their tracks. Even urban areas where you can walk everywhere need to salt the sidewalks.

Zoboomafoo,
@Zoboomafoo@lemmy.world avatar

Beet Juice? Do they remove the color or will everything be stained purple forever?

skillissuer,
@skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

that’s processed sugar beet waste, not literal beet juice

dditty,

You can use a brine salt solution before it precipitates to reduce overall salt usage by 60-70%.

www.nytimes.com/…/road-salt-water-supply.html

Stamau123,

In Colorado we spray ‘sand’ which is still a chemical mix with actual sand, but less disruptive

ChickenLadyLovesLife,

This incidentally is why used school buses from Colorado are highly desirable in the skoolie community (a skoolie is a used school bus converted to a motorhome). In addition to the generally high-quality transmissions and retarders (essentially for handling mountainous terrain), the “sand” you use doesn’t promote rusting-out of the bus bodies like road salt does. In a sense, though, this is still bad for the environment: the extended lifespan of these vehicles keeps them on the road spitting out carbon dioxide longer then they otherwise would.

Masimatutu, (edited )
@Masimatutu@mander.xyz avatar

Where I live it’s common to spread gravel on the snow to increase grip. And then, of course, it is expected that everyone has the appropriate shoes and bike tires to not slip.

And even when salt is used, cars need a lot more salt per person than other modes of transport does.

edit: clarification

KnightontheSun,

When I lived near a volcanic area, they used the cinders for winter grip. Played hell on car paint. So, add that to the runoff.

themeatbridge,

If it’s cold enough to freeze the ground, I’m not riding my bike. First, having the right tires is one thing, but black ice and surprise potholes will eat your snow tires. Second, it’s going to be too cold to be out in the cold air for the several hours you need to bike to school or work.

Busses require the same amount of roads as cars. So you’re going to need the same amount of salt for busses. You might need less for sidewalks, but that’s only because people cannot walk as far as they can drive.

Masimatutu,
@Masimatutu@mander.xyz avatar

If everyone who normally takes the car would switch to taking the bus, all of a sudden you’d only need one lane in places where you previously needed two or three, because cars are very space-inefficient, so that makes a big difference.

Also, it’s not quite true that they’d require the same amount of roads. I don’t know about where you’re from, but where I live buses use about a quarter of the roads and you can still easily get anywhere by bus.

Additionally, salt isn’t used for rail vehicles at all.

themeatbridge,

I think public transit is important, good for the environment, and should be a much larger budget item everywhere.

But your math simply isn’t true everywhere. You can’t take 20 cars off the road and put them all on a bus, because those 20 cars aren’t going to the same place at the same time. Urban areas that already have busses blanketing the city and running constantly, the math works and you just need additional busses to up capacity. But for where I live, on the edge of suburban and rural areas, you’d need a thousand more busses on the road to cover every route and destination. And these are places where most roads are only one lane in each direction. The major highways would still need several lanes because of the additional busses to fill demand for additional routes, and smaller roads would need to be widened in many places to allow for the larger turning radius of a bus.

So you need the same amount of salt to cover the same amount of road. Maybe some areas could recapture a lane or two for bike lanes and pedestrians, but you still need to salt those, and they won’t have the benefit of being driven upon, which crushes ice and moves it out of the way. One or two slip and fall lawsuits later, and municipalities are just going to close them any time there’s a little snow.

Once again, I’ll say that the argument against cars is compelling. We should work to provide more public transit, because it is better for society to have reliable public transit. We should protect bike lanes, because it is better for our health and the environment, and encouraged freedom and development for adolescents. We should make more residential areas walkable because it is better for communities to be walkable. It fosters relationships among neighbors, encourages the support of local businesses, and improves the health and wellbeing of everyone who lives there.

Those are the arguments that get you there. Talk about the good it does, not the bad it doesn’t. People who don’t already agree with you will pick the one thing that doesn’t ring true and key in to ignore and dismiss the rest.

deweydecibel, (edited )

And even when salt is used, cars need a lot more salt per person than other modes of transport does.

Can I get a source on this? I’m not even sure what you mean by it, because salt clears active roadways as much as it does backroads, so how is this being measured “per person”?

Where I live it’s common to spread gravel on the snow to increase grip. And then, of course, it is expected that everyone has the appropriate shoes and bike tires to not slip.

You’re talking about pedestrians, but what about non-pedestrian traffic? The roads are more than just avenues to get to the grocery store, they’re also how the grocery store gets stocked with goods for rising out storms. It how the ambulance gets to you.

And what about the disabled or elderly? Can you get a wheelchair across the gravel?

Masimatutu,
@Masimatutu@mander.xyz avatar

This picture comes to mind:

https://images-cdn.9gag.com/photo/aE16W0e_700b.jpg

For pedestrians and bikers, you need a lot less surface to deice, plus the lower speeds means it is not quite as vital to see all the snow gone directly. And yes, you will need roads for different purposes, but you would need a lot fewer of them, and with fewer lanes, if everyone wouldn’t take the car. Also, for supplying stores, a lot of the things trucks do can easily be done by trains.

grue,
echo64,

I don’t think trains de-ice anything, no one’s out there deicing train tracks - they are far too remote

themeatbridge,

Depends on the location, but there are a few different strategies for trains in cold weather.

www.cnn.com/2019/01/30/us/…/index.html

MajorMajormajormajor,

Here in Canada there are definitely de-icing/ snow removal machines used on the tracks. Large propane heaters keep switches clear of ice so they can operate. Hi-rail trucks will go ahead of trains through the mountain passes to ensure the way is clear. During particularly bad snow storms they can use machines like this to clear the snow.

The trains will also release gravel on the rail to improve braking times.

legion02,

There’s literally a special type of train for clearing the tracks.

theluddite,
@theluddite@lemmy.ml avatar

When it snows and the roads are icy, what’s supposed to happen? What’s the plan for getting around, for getting to work, for getting to school? […] Are we suggesting that colder climates just shouldn’t be populated?

This line of questioning is really important, and it’s why I think there’s no addressing our devastation of the environment without digging deep into the assumptions of our society.

Society, as we understand it today, requires all of us going to work and school every day, no matter the weather, otherwise it doesn’t work. We can’t live like that. It just doesn’t work. We exist in the world, and our attempts to pretend like we are somehow apart or above it, that our daily lives shouldn’t be impacted by it, are destructive. We just can’t be in such a hurry all the time.

So yes, when the weather is bad, we need to slow down, focusing our efforts on our highest priority infrastructure, like ambulances, with everyone else taking a beat, or even pitching in. To do that, we need to rethink our society, because as things stand now, I agree with you, that’s not really possible.

This is why I think degrowth and socialism are the only human way through the climate crisis. Capitalism is a death cult of infinite growth that forces each of us to contribute to our own destruction every day because we have to get to work to live every single day.

FlyingSquid,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

They use sand around here (Indiana).

planetaryprotection,

Yeah, I think the argument is that you shouldn’t need the cars to get people where they need to go. This can be addressed two ways: either we don’t use cars or we don’t need to go (as far).

People should be able to travel with other modes that require less salt to deice, and cities could be built to not require cars for most trips. Salting sidewalks and bus lanes is better than salting those things plus roads and highways.

It’s also worth considering that yes, people should be able to just stay home. People shouldn’t be at risk of losing their job/home because they couldn’t safely make it into work. Parents shouldn’t have to rely on school as daycare.

I’d be curious to see if urban heat Island affects salt use. Maybe if we build dense enough, we don’t even really need salt to cover 99% of the population.

deweydecibel,

So…the issue isn’t cars, it’s capitalism? All we need to do to get rid of cars and all their negative effects is rearrange our country on a socioeconomic level?

thatsTheCatch,

Yes, capitalism is the root problem. Some people argue that you cannot overcome climate change under capitalism (and neoliberalism, specifically).

But I think it’s unlikely we’ll be able to change the underlying system without society collapsing in some way. Or a revolution.

However, I don’t think you have to get rid of capitalism to reduce cars and make a positive impact. Climate change is a scale: the more we do now, the less bad it will be in the future. So doing something is still better than nothing, even if it doesn’t solve the problem entirely.

Reducing cars (and therefore emissions) can be helped by improving public transport and increasing the number of options for transport. In many places, cars are the only way to get anywhere, especially in countries that focus on car infrastructure. Having the options to bus, train, bike, walk, or drive will reduce the number of drivers. In the case of bike lanes, at least in my country, there is evidence that adding bike lanes increases the number of cyclists (and therefore decreases the number of cars on the road). “Build it and they will come,” if you will.

I have a car, but I most often bike or take the bus. We can’t get rid of cars entirely; there are reasons people need them (tradies needing vans with their equipment, certain disabilities needing customized transport options, courier parcel delivery, etc.). But reducing the number on the road at any time is helpful.

Steve, in Speed camera cut down for second time in Cornwall

Lol when I read the title I was happy for them

frazw, in Electric cars: The equivalent of switching from binge drinking whiskey to binge drinking wine.

I’m sure this is unpopular this community but I feel like “fuck cars” folks are either living in a dream world where public transport can answer everyone’s transportation needs. If you live in a city with all the amenities you need where public transport is good and economically viable sure, “Fuck cars”, but if you don’t…

mondoman712,

People are advocating for denser cities with better public transport, not for you to use the shitty bus in your suburb.

synae,
@synae@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Haven’t driven in over a decade, can confirm it’s like living a dream

grue,

but if you don’t…

…then either you’re a farmer or the area you live was built wrong and needs to be fixed.

ImpossibilityBox,

I’m not a farmer, my nearest grocery store is 8 miles away. It’s rural and the cost of living is extremely cheap. it also snows a ton and often drops to sub zero temps.

What my solution? How does this get fixed for me?

grue, (edited )

What my solution? How does this get fixed for me?

It doesn’t. But that’s okay, because nobody gives a shit about special snowflakes way off the tail end of the bell curve like you – solving the problem for the 80% of everybody else, for whom reasonable solutions do apply, is plenty good enough!

Demanding that any solution be perfect enough to solve it for literally everyone including you is just bad-faith reactionary bullshit.

franklin, (edited )
@franklin@lemmy.world avatar

Did you know that most people live in cities? About 60% of North America live in what is considered to be a metropolitan area.

In most of these areas aggressive expansion of public transit is a no brainer.

It doesn’t have to work everywhere to be a good idea

Z27F, (edited )

deleted_by_author

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  • ImpossibilityBox,

    Bad example that you provided. I do not lease or make payments on my car. I may be on the end of the been curve but you save assume every person ever pays what’s in the articles headlines.

    Using the calculator literally provided in the article you are citing my monthly cost for my car is $120. A lot less than the $1000/month they say as an average.

    I’m also saving way more than that per month in rent by living where I do outside of a town or city.

    HenriVolney,

    Well, can’t you resettle in a more compact town?

    ProgrammingSocks,

    This is bait

    HenriVolney,

    Not a bait. I guess I belong to a small group of people who decide to make life-changing commitments in order to minimize their impact on the environment.

    frazw,

    You assume your proposal is an “easy” solution. The main reason I live here in the first place is because the surrounding cities, that do have amenities and public transport, are much more expensive to live in. Is not that the town I live in is large in area, it’s quite walkable, it simply doesn’t have much.

    It also reminds me of a guy I used to know who said he didn’t need a watch. Claiming he didn’t need to know the time that often. But what did he do? He asked everyone around him what the time was instead. Quite often. Oh and he was usually late to class.

    Why am I telling you about him? Because it is the same sentiment as “I don’t need a car, if I want to see my friends (and relatives) I simply ask them to travel to me.”

    HenriVolney,

    You are clearly pointing one if the real solutions to individual motorized transportation, which is shared motorized transportation. In my area, people constantly borrow vehicles, equipments, tools and so on.

    HiddenLayer5, (edited )
    @HiddenLayer5@lemmy.ml avatar

    If you only have the option to drive and it looks like it will never change where you live, then yes, driving electric is better than driving an ICE car. You’re not the problem for needing to live your life with the limited options you have access to. However, that does not mean the intrinsic problems with cars disappear the instant they become electric, and this meme is mainly meant to respond to the techbro people who think just because electric cars exist now it makes transit obsolete or it solves literally everything wrong with cars in general, and use that to actively resist public transportation or attempt to turn public opinion against it. I should have added additional context to make that clearer.

    frazw,

    Well I do drive electric now but I could not get by without a car. Honestly I would love it if public transport were viable for everyone. In London and Zurich I have experienced public transport that worked. Where I live a 1 hour car journey can mean a 3 or 4 hour trip by public transport and only if you are travelling at the right time of day. Unfortunately I don’t necessarily get to choose when I make some of those trips because it is part of my job. Unfortunately here, public transport is slow, expensive and unreliable here.

    I know electric cars don’t solve everything, and maybe this meme is not exactly what I’m responding to, but for a lot of people, public transport is just not a viable alternative.

    Like I said I know it’s not going to be a popular sentiment here.

    tenacious_mucus, (edited ) in Parkable cities

    Underground parking garages are very common over here. Most of the times these city squares are exactly that, a huge multi-level underground parking garage because these squares are always event spaces, and they are usually city-center so even when there isnt events, people have somewhere to park when just visiting the city. Yes, there will even be long lines of traffic waiting/hoping for a spot during event periods.

    With that said, they do fill up, usually fast. So most events suggest finding public transportation. This just means people park further away and then take the bus/rail/etc the rest of the way. These Markets arent just for the locals, people travel from all over to come to them. So public transportation for long-distant travel, while totally possible, isnt always as practical (sometimes nor affordable or possible) for everyone. Plus, long distance trains do sell out. We just spent most of the season traveling all over Central Europe going to various markets.

    kameecoding,

    Shh, you are one step away from mentioning P+R and blowing the mind of Americans

    IronicDeadPan,

    Does that stand for park + ride?

    tenacious_mucus,

    Lol…oops… Def didnt use the crap outta that on our trip last week!

    njordomir,

    I remember in Germany they would have a “Festbuß”, festival bus, which were additional public transit routes from surrounding villages to wherever the event is happening. They are usually advertised in advance to give people additional option.

    tenacious_mucus,

    Yup, still a thing! Especially if a lot of surrounding villages are doing things, like christmas markets. Or even within a village with lots of small stops, like a bar-hopping type deal. The buses just loop, sometimes in both directions, through all the stops. They are separate from the normal transit buses, you gotta buy their specific ticket (or it’s free) and they are usually travel bus types rather than city transit buses. The inner-village ones are just passenger vans, though.

    Awoo, (edited ) in Speed camera cut down for second time in Cornwall

    Lmao cutting down speed cameras is praxis. Jog on. These things are just there to make local councils money.

    When they actually want a slower road they put speed bumps or traffic islands on it.

    Satanic_Mills,

    Yes, let’s stick speedbumps on the M4 clean air zone outside Newport, that’ll solve things.

    Awoo,

    Eh? This is nowhere near Newport and it’s not a motorway either.

    Satanic_Mills,

    There are speed cameras all over the country, including on non-residential roads where traffic calming measures are not appropiate interventions.

    mondoman712,

    They wouldn’t make money if people managed to, you know, just follow the speed limit. If you can’t follow a basic rule of the road you shouldn’t be driving.

    Awoo, (edited )

    We live in material reality, not a fantasy in your head. Justifying bullshit that specifically fucks over the poor while not really affecting the rich (because fines are just fees you pay to break the law when you’re rich enough for them to be minor inconveniences) with what amounts to Cartman screaming RESPECT MAH AUTHORITAH is bullshit. You want people to actually slow down? Redesign the road.

    This praxis does two things, it prevents the poor being fucked over if these are just there to make council money, or it causes them to give up on the camera and properly redesign the road when it’s actually about real safety concerns.

    Given this has happened before and they only replaced the camera I’m siding with “it’s for council income not actual safety”. If they do it again I feel doubley vindicated in that opinion. If it’s actually about real safety concerns they’ll give up on the camera and add in pedestrian refuge islands to slow traffic instead. Love these badboys

    https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/444e22c7-fba2-46cf-8892-15ffe06de8ee.png

    7bicycles,

    You want people to actually slow down? Redesign the road.

    I’ve posed this question elsewhere in this thread and: what until then? Like what do you do until a good, what, 50 - 90% of road depending on criteria, is redesigned?

    Awoo, (edited )

    The process and length of time it takes for either option are practically the same. It’s irrelevant. Not to mention a traffic island costs like £3k while a camera costs £85k (guess why they pick the camera despite the price).

    7bicycles,

    The process and length of time it takes for either option are practically the same.

    Sure, but you’re arguing for like instant speed camera abolishment or destruction here, aye?

    Not to mention a traffic island costs like £3k while a camera costs £85k (guess why they pick the camera despite the price).

    Dunno if you got to that one already but I’ve did a reply pointing out where you’re a bit off there

    Awoo, (edited )

    Sure, but you’re arguing for like instant speed camera abolishment or destruction here, aye?

    As a means of discouraging their construction in the first place and the harm they do to the poor I am defending the person who did this.

    I am not advocating anyone do anything illegal. illegal-to-say

    7bicycles,

    You can just say yes, you don’t have to couch this shit in a good WKUK skit.

    Do they do harm to the poor that are on bicycles, or walking, then?

    Awoo, (edited )

    Having been to court twice for online related stuff I will absolutely couch this shit.

    I do not see how that question is doing anything but attempting some sort of gotcha or accusation that these people deserve to be fucked over instead of have real designs that don’t result in their lives being made harder.

    7bicycles,

    Having been to court twice for online related stuff I will absolutely couch this shit.

    Fair, I meant it more on “don’t do it on my accord”

    I do not see how that question is doing anything but attempting some sort of gotcha or accusation that these people

    Your these people just seems to have some very oddly drawn lines is the heart of it. It does include poor drivers, to whom speed cameras are a problem and not that much of a solution, it does not seem to include poor people not in a car, who profit from this. My FALGSOC doesn’t have speed cameras in it - who’s would - but it’s a long way from here to there.

    deserve to be fucked over instead of have real designs that don’t result in their lives being made harder. It seems like spite to me.

    This is running on the assumption that I think people deserve to be fucked over for speeding, and that’s the main motivation. Sure, some of them, but that’s not the kind of distinction a speed cam could make on account of how it works. I’d very much be open to them not issuing fines but other punishments - as appropiate - to not make them so classist. Loss of driving license, if you really, really fuck up in a sports car that gets impounded or such, but I’ll concede, even that is far out from today, but just to point it out,

    My point here is that for every one it fucks over, it helps other people not being fucked over, because it does do something against speeding. My line of reasoning for speed cams is not that it fucks people over, it’s that it helps people. You wanna focus on the first part, I’m trying to get you to see the issue is more complex than that, at least if you include people outside of cars in your consideration. They’re not a good solution, by any means, again, I assume our optimal way of solving it is quite similar. For the meantime though, the fuck else do you do? Just abandon all traffic enforcement until all the roads get fixed? So what, 20 years of being vulnerable road users being even more endangered than now?

    Awoo,

    My point here is that for every one it fucks over, it helps other people not being fucked over, because it does do something against speeding. My line of reasoning for speed cams is not that it fucks people over, it’s that it helps people. You wanna focus on the first part, I’m trying to get you to see the issue is more complex than that, at least if you include people outside of cars in your consideration.

    Well my line of reasoning is that there is an alternative that fucks no poor people over, and that taking action to achieve that end us a good thing. A negative in the short term leads to a longterm positive.

    Also I see no other method of doing this. If you go to the council and say “I want to replace this highly profitable traffic camera making hundreds of thousands per year with a traffic island that will make no money at all” the decision that any team will make internally is obvious. That issue inevitably leads to destruction of these cameras as the only method of causing the alternative to occur.

    7bicycles,

    A negative in the short term leads to a longterm positive.

    I do not want to die a martyr to the fight against traffic cams.

    Also I see no other method of doing this. If you go to the council and say “I want to replace this highly profitable traffic camera making hundreds of thousands per year with a traffic island that will make no money at all” the decision that any team will make internally is obvious.

    That kind of poses the second question as to what, in the interim, will be cut as per budget, but that’s a sidenote. I guarantee you without change far reaching enough to societally gain a new understanding of public space and roads, when the last speed cam is dismantled you’ll find all the roads still suck ass and will not be redesigned. Once you have the change so far reaching that you can reunderstand basically every road, yeah, then you don’t need the traffic cams anymore and they can be dismantled.

    Awoo,

    Meanwhile, in the real world we must be concerned with actually viable change.

    when the last speed cam is dismantled you’ll find all the roads still suck ass and will not be redesigned

    This is just factually not true, evidenced by the abundance of traffic calming measures that exists, and those that have replaced cameras.

    You are inventing a fantasy reality to suit an anti car obsession. One I share, car reduction is good. However you’re being a tit now.

    7bicycles,

    Meanwhile, in the real world we must be concerned with actually viable change.

    Real Zach Brannigan hours here on account of “It might get a lot of other people killed but that’s a sacrifice I’m willing to make”

    You are inventing a fantasy reality to suit an anti car obsession. One I share, car reduction is good. However you’re being a tit now.

    What part of this is fantasy. Like where do you see the political potential for a nigh nationwide road redesign.

    Awoo,

    I was ruder than I should’ve been, I thought you were the other person who has irritated me a bit.

    I guarantee you without change far reaching enough to societally gain a new understanding of public space and roads

    This is the weird fantasy part I was referring to. It’s like, just nonsense. It comes off like an american attitude being ported to the UK with absolutely no adaptation whatsoever to British conditions. Our conditions are nothing like america. Getting rid of cameras and getting traffic calming measures installed instead is not particularly difficult, it’s about the same. This idea of complete and widespread reinterpretation of public space? It doesn’t make sense here.

    The particular road from the OP is a main road through rural space between major locations. By American standards it would be considered idyllic.

    https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/2dde2d99-c535-4561-b731-55dc1cffcea1.png

    Parts of the road already have traffic calming measures.

    https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/1ddc3303-df7d-4b14-bfe1-5e80ee991019.png

    This is very easily expanded upon with the addition of chicanes, which are in wide use (hundreds of thousands) across the country.

    https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/d81cfff0-d030-4873-82aa-3ff60596a899.png

    https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/5fa63dc3-bd1d-4b5a-93e1-9bbe4a350e8d.png

    https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/0421294d-ce9c-403b-abd6-e34c9ecbe716.png#

    https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/89d4af93-3457-4abb-9614-acbdf0dc0f23.png

    There’s no “reimagining” needed here. People don’t need to develop a new consciousness of public space. We do not live in a country that is utterly obsessed with cars like america. And we aren’t opposed to limiting them. There are zero political barriers to this, the only barrier is the profit/revenue barrier of the traffic camera obsessed crowd. I must stress, I am not just cherrypicking out rare projects that look good. This shit is bog standard, everywhere in the country already. In every town, in every village, in every city. Outisde every school. In every residential area. All over the country.

    It is categorically not the same environment here and we do not share the same political barriers or problems.

    7bicycles,

    This is the weird fantasy part I was referring to. It’s like, just nonsense. It comes off like an american attitude being ported to the UK with absolutely no adaptation whatsoever to British conditions. Our conditions are nothing like america. Getting rid of cameras and getting traffic calming measures installed instead is not particularly difficult, it’s about the same. This idea of complete and widespread reinterpretation of public space? It doesn’t make sense here.

    I’m german tho.

    By American standards it would be considered idyllic.

    As such, I do not believe american standards as per roads are anything to go by

    Parts of the road already have traffic calming measures.

    That’s not really gonna stop anybody from speeding down the remaining lane(s) because they’re still very wide. It’s good for pedestrians, probably, don’t get me wrong, doesn’t really fight the speeding problem at all.

    This is very easily expanded upon with the addition of chicanes, which are in wide use (hundreds of thousands) across the country.

    These do

    There’s no “reimagining” needed here. People don’t need to develop a new consciousness of public space.

    Those are very much spotwork as per slowing down cars. They work for that spot, yes. It is however absolutely not hard to accelerate a car again. This is a good idea to slow people down before a busy or a school crossing or something, the third picture especially is just going to lead to slow down / wait -> mash gas pedal

    We do not live in a country that is utterly obsessed with cars like america.

    True, but also nigh about the lowest bar to clear right after like Saudi Arabia.

    There are zero political barriers to this, the only barrier is the profit/revenue barrier of the traffic camera obsessed crowd.

    And you accuse me of living in some fantasy reality?

    In every town, in every village, in every city. Outisde every school. In every residential area. All over the country.

    Same, could find similar features here by looking out my old apartments window. Hell, do you one better than that, we have shit like this

    https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/da817aa1-0f08-452f-9f76-95587ddeb3e0.png

    Sorry for the grainy pictures, didn’t wanna spend that much time on google. Now that’s a road you can’t speed on, on account of many chicanes and other built up enviroments, not just the single one and then it’s open road before and after.

    Doesn’t mean the rest of it isn’t incredibly car brained and hostile, and as such, transportation by foot or cycling sucks major ass.

    If your vision of not being carbrained is “do better than the USA”, yeah, you’re there, but that shouldn’t be the end goal

    mondoman712,

    The local community campaigned to get these speed cameras because people were speeding. Redesigning the road would be great, if the council had money to, but I doubt they do.

    Poor people aren’t getting screwed over by this because poor people can’t afford to drive, they’re the ones that have to deal with the unsafe driving of the middle class dada on their German coupes that can’t bare to drive at less that 50mph.

    Saledovil,

    Couldn’t they just plant some of these bad boys along the road? Like, put two in the center, and you have a pedestrian refuge island.

    Awoo, (edited )

    It literally says in this article that one of the cameras mentioned has clocked 17,000 people. Of course they have money to do it. Croydon council responded to FOI request stating it costs £2.5-£3.5k to install traffic islands. The cost of a speed camera installation on the other hand is £85,000 according to Bedford Council, with a £5000 annual upkeep cost.

    The cost of physical redesign traffic calming measures is significantly cheaper to install than the cameras, whose cost is justified by councils because of the income they bring in thereafter.

    The insistence on replacing it instead of doing something else is being justified internally because even with these attacks they consider it to be making more than it’s costing them.

    Poor people aren’t getting screwed over by this because poor people can’t afford to drive,

    Mate fuck right off. This statement just screams that you’ve never actually done any organising or volunteering with the poor in the UK. Please volunteer at a food bank for once in your fucking life and learn what kinds of people the 3million people in this country attending them are like. It will surprise you, expand your view of society a bit, and you’ll be doing an actually-good useful thing.

    mondoman712,

    The poorest people own the fewest cars, and are the most affected by things like air pollution, and if they do have to own cars they’re the ones most at hurt by car dependency (which is perpetuated by road violence caused by things like speeding).

    And please don’t pretend like you know my life.

    Awoo,

    If you say utterly stupid ass things like poor people don’t own cars I will absolutely assume you don’t interact with the people struggling to survive in this country in any capacity. It’s a bloody stupid thing to say mate.

    I mean what I said, go and volunteer and see for yourself.

    mondoman712, (edited )

    I’m sorry I didn’t think I needed to spell it out that much to you. Obviously I don’t think all poor people don’t drive. But the poorest don’t, and statistically poorer people drive a lot less and are more impacted by things like this.

    Awoo,

    Ok so you finally agree that some poor people suffer because of this and that there is an alternative that exists where no poor people suffer at all?

    Doing the alternative is good and taking action that leads to the alternative is good.

    mondoman712,

    I don’t agree that speeding is ok if poor people do it, and I don’t think the removal of the speed cameras is a step to the better alternative, unless it’s part of removing cars from the road in question entirely.

    Awoo,

    Ok so what do you expect to happen when you rock up to the council and say “Hi, I want to replace this speed camera making tens of thousands in profit per year with this other solution that makes no money at all” ?

    Please tell me what you think the pathway to the alternative better solution is.

    mondoman712,

    I wouldn’t replace it. Some people will still speed even with traffic calming so the camera is still useful.

    If you want to reduce the council’s income from speed cameras, the first thing would be to elect a central government that will properly fund local councils so they have the budget to make decisions like that.

    Awoo, (edited )

    You physically can’t speed with traffic calming, they will just crash and fuck up their vehicles.

    This conversation is silly. Right from the start if you were committed to this fuck the poor nonsense you should have just been honest and admitted it so neither of our times would have been wasted on this ridiculous farce.

    Not really that surprised, typical liberal bullshit. Gonna vote Starmer too yeah?

    mondoman712,

    I’m not a lib, I’m not a fan of Keith, and I’m not saying “fuck the poor”. Poor people are the most impacted by car dependency which is perpetuated by dangerous driving. If you don’t want to have this conversation anymore you can stop replying.

    Awoo,

    Ay that’s a surprise at least.

    You’re not being realistic though. Will continue congratulating the gang for cutting these down, fairly sure some of the ycl lads have done a few.

    mondoman712,

    Because fuck pedestrians amirite lads

    Awoo,

    you have not listened to a word i’ve said lmao

    mondoman712,

    Now you can see what it’s like arguing with you.

    7bicycles,

    Croydon council responded to FOI request stating it costs £2.5-£3.5k to install traffic islands. The cost of a speed camera installation on the other hand is £85,000 according to Bedford Council, with a £5000 annual upkeep cost.

    Croydon cites average cost for roughly such an action at 2,5k - 3,5k in a denial of the FOI request which means there’s pretty much no way to know how much it actually costs depending on what they calculate the average on and if you have any idea about the cost of public works that number should strike you as very, very oddly low.

    Wiltshire government here cites about 45.000k for a traffic island narrowing a road to one lane, all in all.

    The source you cite for the cameras, however, puts those costs for 2 cameras, so 42,500 a pop / 2500 upkeep annual, albeit with returns via fines obviously.

    diskmaster23,

    Upvoted for an early reference of South Park

    FlyingSquid, in same bed length
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    Yeah, but which one will make women think my penis is huge?

    HeyThisIsntTheYMCA,
    @HeyThisIsntTheYMCA@lemmy.world avatar

    Front one, dude

    jimbo,

    A truck like the front one is driven by someone with nothing to prove.

    FlyingSquid,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    You’re right! It’s true! Little cars make penises look bigger based on relative sizes!

    Reddfugee42,

    No no no but which one will make his BUDDIES insecure. That’s the kicker.

    Anticorp,

    Given the stereotype, I guess the tiny truck?

    pingveno,

    Ever wonder why this thing can only go 55 MPH? Yup, my Magnum dong! Nothing slows down a truck like moving around that hunk of meat, let me tell you! Now about our date.

    Cannacheques,

    Because your dick is always a ratio of your car size

    trolololol,

    inverse ratio

    Cannacheques,

    Why don’t we have ratios for other things besides dick size though?

    trolololol,

    Bank account

    Rudeness

    Self insecurity

    Here you go with a few

    Cannacheques,

    Nah those things are too wishy washy, bank account I can kinda understand but there’s a lot of rich dumb cunts, just look at Trump

    trolololol,

    Yep inherited wealth lasts just as long

    Anyway he’s not my problem I live somewhere else. I still cringe though when he opens his mouth.

    BarterClub, in insane infrastructure needed

    Just go in, jeez

    Mr_Fish, in Parents Of Baby In Carjacked Vehicle Are Suing VW For Refusing To Assist Police

    As a programmer, I will very mildly defend VW here. Not at all defending the payment structure (that’s shit and has no excuse other than rent seeking), but the person who had to tell the police they needed to pay likely didn’t have an override button. Something like this just isn’t an edge case that you often think of in development, so not having the option of getting that data out for free is reasonable if this is the first incident.

    Sudo_Fail,

    That’s a huge, glaring edge case to ignore for a company as large as VAG. Shouldn’t be acceptable.

    LemmyIsFantastic,

    Not really. I’m not sure when it became auto makers responsibility to protect you from the world and car hijackings. The tech is primarily an ad on to protect you in crashes and shitty weather.

    4am,

    Silicon Valley brainworms

    LemmyIsFantastic,

    👌

    Xbeam,

    Overriding or adjusting payment isn’t an edge case. The article says the reason they refused was company policy. They had the option and said no.

    4am,

    No one thought that theft deterrence might be a use case for a fucking remotely-accessible car GPS?

    Management doesn’t have an override button (which tracks their actions) to activate someone’s unit without payment?

    I call 1000% bullshit.

    scrubbles,
    @scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech avatar

    I don’t think they’re saying that no one thought of it, but he’s right as a programmer those edge cases are always pushed out, kicking the can down the road. That doesn’t mean VW isn’t liable - it’s their fault still - they should have been able to help. But we can understand how it happened.

    They probably called some guy on the 24/7 help line making minimum wage who will get fired if he ever gave out a free service and probably gets dinged if a call gets escalated. Those processes probably don’t exist. They sure as hell will now.

    uriel238,
    @uriel238@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

    Then a fat settlement / fine will do well to reshape VW’s Priorities.

    Since VW has no sense of social obligation it’ll need to be enough to sting. Say half of the net earnings of 2022.

    That won’t happen, of course, but then the edge case of unlocking GPS in an emergency won’t be fixed either.

    FederatedSaint, in Electric cars: The equivalent of switching from binge drinking whiskey to binge drinking wine.

    Like, I get your overall point, but the whiskey to wine comparison doesn’t quite work lol.

    For starters, you’d have to drink a LOT more wine comparatively, which doesn’t translate when going from ICE to electric.

    rockSlayer, (edited )

    It does, because the batteries for electric cars have a reliance on rare earth metals.

    Lol the downvotes are hilarious. We will not solve climate change with electric cars. Public transit in walkable communities with niche uses for cars and trucks are the only way forward.

    hperrin,

    Hopefully there is a solution to that problem right around the corner.

    rockSlayer, (edited )

    As seen in the Wikipedia article, sodium ion batteries also require rare earth metal anodes, or toxic materials like mercury which is also bad. Better than lithium ion, but still generally not great. The best option would be aluminum air batteries, which should be easily accessible and are extremely recyclable

    ThunderclapSasquatch,

    For you who live in the cities maybe. Personal vehicles will never be something rural people can function without.

    rockSlayer,

    perhaps you’d be interested in the fact that I grew up in a very rural area. The nearest city was Rochester, MN, roughly 30 minutes away if you were going 70 in the 55 on US 52. I agree that rural areas will need cars to go from their houses to towns and cities, but I’ve thought extensively about public transit in rural areas, and I think it’s far easier than folks think.

    vividspecter,

    The battery tech is starting to move away from rare earth, with LFP not using cobalt and sodium-ion not using lithium. And in any case, emissions are by far our most pressing problem compared to issues with rare earth extraction.

    AdamEatsAss, (edited ) in ... and you feel nothing.

    Plus you can’t leave it parked anywhere. Anyone who sees it will want to recreate the famous steel ball test. Dude will spend a fortune at the tesla dealership getting his “bulletproof” windows replaced every week.

    yA3xAKQMbq,

    It’s definitely going to be very popular with some crews groups…

    youtube.com/watch?v=Q_Sxq5LPtPM

    HiddenLayer5, (edited )
    @HiddenLayer5@lemmy.ml avatar

    Honestly this just seems like the best way to have both sides of the relevant conversation hate you. The urbanists will hate you because you bought a Cybertruck which exemplifies all the problems with large cars in urban areas and car dependency in general, not to mention techbro dependency. And the truck people will hate you because you bought a liberal socialist soy boy electric truck instead of a noble, God-anointed, by your bootstraps diesel truck.

    Wouldn’t be surprised if someone comes back to the parking lot to see a line of alternating rednecks and railfans all taking turns keying their truck.

    grue, (edited ) in same bed length

    Note how the kei truck is still taking up a parking space, and that the “need” to provide such spaces makes the entire street wider than it otherwise could be.

    I say that not to excuse the “full size” monstrosity in any way whatsoever, but to remind us all that this is “fuck cars,” not just “fuck big trucks.” ALL cars ruin cities, not only the big ones!

    Mr_Blott,

    I would argue that the guy with the small truck is there to do a job for someone, and you’d be utterly fucked if you had a burst pipe and he wasn’t allowed to drive in the city. They are the one exception to the rule

    The guy with the big truck most likely just uses it to make up for his micropenis, right enough

    grue, (edited )

    you’d be utterly fucked if you had a burst pipe and he wasn’t allowed to drive in the city.

    Who said anything about not being allowed to drive? He can drive wherever he likes; I’m just saying we shouldn’t fuck up the street building the parking spaces. Where he parks the thing should be his own problem (or his client’s landlord’s problem, as the case may be), not imposed on the public.

    It may seem like I’m nitpicking, but that distinction is really important. There is an oddly pervasive issue in urbanism debates where the car-brains and the NIMBYs make a habit of trying to frame the issues precisely ass-backwards. For example, you suggest abolishing restrictions on zoning – literally removing government regulations – and they call you a “big government communist.” Or you talk about adding extra ways to get around by improving bike and ped infrastructure, and they accuse you of trying to take away their freedom to drive.

    Or, as in this case, you talk about simply not bending over backwards to make special extra accommodations for cars (i.e. not spending public resources – both money and space – to build parking spaces), and it gets misconstrued as proposing banning driving. I’m not saying you’re a car-brain or a NIMBY, but I’m just saying it’s apparently real easy for people to slip into that Bizarro-World mindset and it needs to be called out when it happens.

    sexy_peach,

    Of course. Fuck cars

    wrinkletip, in Yes, also Teslas

    As much as I agree, these are different things. EVs are fixing greenhouse gases. While the others are also bad things, they aren’t really global climate changers.

    Tvkan,

    But alternatives we have and know to work solve both greenhouse gasses and local porblems.

    We’ll have to stop driving gas cars specifically, but we’ll also just have to drive less in general.

    Mars,
    @Mars@beehaw.org avatar

    Are they? Because unless you live in some green energy paradise, most EV are charged using coal plants.

    CurtAdams,
    @CurtAdams@urbanists.social avatar

    @Mars @wrinkletip Hello, what century are you living in? The US gets only 20% of its electricity from coal and dropping fast. In CA it's 0%.

    Aside from that, EVs are so much more energy efficient that an EV using electricity from a coal plant still produces less CO2 than an ICE car.

    The_Sasswagon,

    Not op, but the material gathering and building of EVs is far more energy intensive and resource intensive than gas cars. They do even out but it takes a number of years on the road depending on the vehicle.

    Additionally they are very heavy which requires more infrastructure maintenance and therefore more emissions.

    That is to say EVs are not a sure fire improvement and it depends on the car, the place you are, the supply chain producing your car, where it’s going to end up, and your own driving habits.

    Or we could just invest in rail instead of doubling down on private vehicles. Then we can be sure.

    Rookeh,

    Doesn’t need to be a “green energy paradise”, just a reasonably well connected first world country.

    Take a look at Electricity Maps. Unless you live somewhere isolated or with very poorly developed grid infrastructure (or some central US states, apparently), you should see a non-trivial amount of electricity being generated by non-fossil fuels. For example, at the time of typing this 77% of the electricity I’m using is low-carbon and 50% of it is renewable.

    That’s the kicker. EVs don’t have to rely on fossil fuels to operate (but they can make use of them depending on the grid infrastructure). ICE cars on the other hand are burning fuel wherever they go.

    Walking or cycling will always be the least polluting means of getting around, but if you really need a car then you could do a lot worse than getting an electric one.

    SolarMech,

    The problem is, the way I see it, all energy use is connected. Basically the problem we have is energy consumption grows faster than clean energy production. So requiring more green energy in this context still sucks. Even where I live where all of our energy is green (at least in the grid), extra energy can be sold either via selling it to other provinces/states, or by making deals with companies to do their production here where energy is cheap and green.

    Energy is a commodity on a market. If you use it to inefficiently move people, you can’t use it for other things. Remember that to move a 150 lbs person in a car, you have to move about a ton and a half of car…

    Mars,
    @Mars@beehaw.org avatar

    I’m really sceptic about that kind of metrics because many of them take carbon offsets into account, and carbon offsets are mostly greenwashing.

    Power mix in the world right now is over 50% coal and gas, and only hydro is over a 10%. This is worldwide, so mix varies depending on where you are.

    In the end EVs are no making a dent in power demand. They are increasing it. The percentage of fossil fuels is maybe going down but total fossil fuel consumption is increasing as our demand does. Green energy is only taking some of the slack from the increase.

    EVs will be remembered as the thing we did to keep using cars and feeling good about it.

    HiddenLayer5, (edited )
    @HiddenLayer5@lemmy.ml avatar

    Except EVs still have a significant carbon footprint from their manufacture. So do train cars and buses, but to transport everyone in cars instead of public transportation would require orders of magnitude more materials, and therefore a much higher carbon footprint. Not to mention the poor land use that car dependency causes, which both leads to deforestation and impedes reforestation, which is a further climate change contributor.

    shasta,

    EVs also have the ability to live longer. If an average EV is usable for twice as long as an ICE vehicle, its carbon footprint from manufacturing is already down to 50%.

    HiddenLayer5, (edited )
    @HiddenLayer5@lemmy.ml avatar

    So can transit vehicles, in fact they last even longer so I don’t see this as an advantage for EVs. In Vancouver, Canada for example, there are fully self-driving electric trains from the 80s that are still running perfectly fine today, and the only reason they’re getting scrapped soon is because they’re loud and uncomfortable compared to newer trains, which even then I personally don’t like the transit agency’s decision to scrap them because that’s super wasteful, they could probably run another 40 years with good maintenance.

    shasta, (edited )

    Alright well that’s good. When the US shrinks down to the size of Vancouver maybe that will be a good option.

    Hildegarde,

    US can’t have good transit because it’s so much bigger than a single city.

    The US doesn’t have cities the size of Vancouver, or municipal governments that can solve transit locally.

    The country is simply to big for that.

    HiddenLayer5, (edited )
    @HiddenLayer5@lemmy.ml avatar

    The US has in fact shrunk down to the size of Europe which has excellent public transportation.

    thantik, in Yes, also Teslas

    I always have felt like blaming cars, of all things, misses the bigger picture. 1 crude oil shipping vessel produces more pollution than the entirety of cars in America will for a year. Cars are one of the things that actually empowers individuals to live their individualized lives. Hell, some people live in their cars/rv/campers and it allows people to escape the rigors of daily life.

    I agree we should take aim at making them more environmentally friendly, and take a harder focus on replacing plastic components with metal and/or other recyclable alternatives. If we could sequester carbon into them somehow that would be even better; but things like carbon fiber require nasty epoxies that are difficult to break down again once they need to be recycled.

    Sneptaur,
    @Sneptaur@pawb.social avatar

    The position of most people in this community is usually “Cars should cease to be the primary means of transportation for North Americans as soon as possible”. There are cases where cars and trucks are the only logical option, like rural communities, but in cities we should be aggressively against cars as a primary means of transportation. Nothing solves the the problems cars cause like replacing them with a train or bus or cycling

    cestvrai,

    Even living in a European city with good bike and public transit options, I run into cases where a car is the only logical option.

    Which is why I rent them a few times and year which basically comes down to sharing a handful of cars between a few hundred neighbours. Every single person having one or multiple cars is insanity, especially when you consider traffic conditions.

    squaresinger,

    Part of the issue here is that if you own a car, it’s often cheaper to take the car than public transport, because most of the car expenses are paid independent of the immediate usage.

    Car value deprecation, taxes, maintainance, all of that cost you money no matter whether you drive into town today or use some other means of transport.

    I think it would be much better to put all taxes onto the fuel price. If you pay €5 for a litre of fuel, instead of the ~€1.5/l that we are currently paying, it would make more sense to take public transport some times.

    thantik,

    I think this is the huge balancing point at which cars rely on. You saw a lot more small cars and less of these huge monster trucks roaming around North America back when gas had hit $5/gallon. Now gas is $3 but accounting for inflation, it’s probably at one of the cheapest points it’s ever been.

    Even though I argue many times for cars in these posts, I long for a day when gas is $10/gallon so that these 3-5 ton behemoths aren’t on the road carrying a single person. I’m fine with this causing an artificial limitation on people to pick and choose when they use their personal transportation. Granted, we’ve also seen that this results in the economy slowing down overall as people choose to go fewer places and thus spend less money overall.

    echo64, (edited )

    i feel like you probably didn’t realize what community you are posting in. this is the anti-car community. not the better car community, the anti-car community.

    thantik, (edited )

    No I realized damn well what community I was posting in. That’s the great thing about intellectual discourse, is the ability to argue a cause based on its merits in order to refine an opinion or idea to its ultimate ends. Without dissenting opinions being allowed, all you do is isolate yourself into an echo chamber where your opinions are never challenged and get ever-more extreme to the point of comedic proportions. You need your ideas challenged so that you can make an educated and refined argument. Additionally, my arguments allow me to be open to correction and I can update my own opinions based on arguments made against my statements as well. I know the internet has taught many people that argument = bad, but true discourse invites other opinions that may not necessarily agree. I, in my propensity to wish for the best in humanity, am of the hopes that I can achieve that here on a platform where I assume that people are slightly more intelligent because they had the foresight to leave the previous platform which has been overrun with anti-intellectualism.

    mondoman712,

    Cars are one of the things that actually empowers individuals to live their individualized lives.

    Only those who are able to afford to, and can safely drive a car. Cars, and especially car dependant places, suck for anyone that can’t.

    thantik,

    But this argument basically implies that we should gut the majority of people’s benefit because of a minority’s inconvenience. Certainly we should accommodate the minority who can’t, especially if it means living a fulfilling life, but not at the expense of everyone else.

    dustyData, (edited )

    Making life easier for those who can’t or doesn’t want to drive detracts nothing from those who can. In fact it is beneficial for those who want to drive to have denser cities, and better public transport. It means safer streets, less traffic and lower insurance premiums. Yours is a false dichotomy.

    thantik, (edited )

    You lack reading comprehension. I did not give you a false dichotomy, because a false dichotomy requires that I present to you two options, with the stipulation that you can only choose one or the other. Nowhere in my previous post did I do any such thing.

    I merely reiterated what I understood your stance to be, and offered an alternative; which would be not unduly hampering other people’s experience because of a minority.

    You’re so focused on being “right”, that you’ve lost sight of the actual discussion in an effort to portray my argument as some sort of argumentative fallacy. Which ironically enough, is in itself, another fallacy – called the fallacy fallacy.

    dustyData,

    You’re not arguing with the original poster. Someone definitely lacks reading comprehension skills and is irrationally fixated on proving themselves right at all times, but it ain’t me. You created a straw men and presented it at “either this or that”, false dichotomy. Again, supporting those who don’t want or can’t drive doesn’t infringe upon the rights of car owners and those who do want to drive. This is not an oppressor-oprressed dynamic. That’s classic victimization. We can help and accommodate to the needs of minorities without having to disregard the needs of the majority. At least learn your moral arguments right.

    mondoman712,

    I find the language you use interesting. Those who take their living room with them to save a few minutes “benefit”, whereas those who have to breathe in the fumes and be victims of traffic violence are “inconvenienced”.

    bstix,

    The thing is that the 1 container ship transports a hell of lot more actual cargo from one place to the other than personal cars, which are mostly used for commuting lazy buttchecks back to where they came from in the morning.

    grue, (edited )

    I always have felt like blaming cars, of all things, misses the bigger picture.

    On the contrary, doing anything other than blaming cars misses the bigger picture that car-dependent development is what drives, directly or indirectly, almost all the pollution except for industry and agriculture:

    1. The emissions of the cars themselves, of course.
    2. The emissions associated with producing all the extra concrete you need to build places to store the cars, as well as wider roads to fit all the traffic. (EDIT: and longer roads, for that matter, because inserting all the space for car storage forces your destinations to be further apart!)
    3. The emissions associated with restrictive low-density zoning codes forcing 90% of the population to live in single-family homes exposed to the environment on all six sides, instead of giving them the freedom to choose to live in denser housing where shared walls increase thermal efficiency.
    squaresinger,

    Don’t forget that even if you have a lawn and a few trees/flowers on your single-family home backyard, that area is mostly dead to nature.

    So spreading the suburbs out that much means that much more nature will be destroyed.

    GBU_28,

    You even said it.

    Car dependent development. There’s your actual enemy.

    Susie buying a car to get to work every day because cycling is not feasible is not your enemy.

    grue,

    Why are you trying to rebut an argument I didn’t make?

    GBU_28,

    “doing anything other than blaming cars”

    “Car dependent society”.

    Blame the dependent society, not the vehicle within it

    ltxrtquq, (edited )

    I know you’re being hyperbolic to try and make a point, but according to the International Maritime Organization:

    The greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions — including carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4) and nitrous oxide (N2O), expressed in CO2e — of total shipping (international, domestic and fishing) have increased from 977 million tonnes in 2012 to 1,076 million tonnes in 2018 (9.6% increase).

    Whereas in a pdf from the EPA at the bottom of this page says passenger cars and light-duty trucks produced 1,046 million metric tons of CO2 in 2021.

    So to recap, all maritime shipping in the world produced only slightly more CO2 than the passenger cars and light trucks only in the United States.

    thantik,

    Damn, thanks for the rebuttal – Do you have any other sources that are closer to 2022? Covid REALLY did a fucking number on everything from shipping to travel, both reducing travel and increasing shipping - so I’m concerned that those numbers may be a little different in a post-covid world. Still, very enlightening facts!

    ltxrtquq,

    I do not. The previous study of its kind from the IMO was from 2014 and looked at the years 2007-2012, so it seems to take a few years for them to be able to put all the information together.

    Poggervania,
    @Poggervania@kbin.social avatar

    Cars are one of the things that actually empowers individuals to live their individualized lives.

    So if I’m forced to live in my car or forced to use it because I would otherwise most likely be run over if I was riding a bike or the distance is too far for walking and I can’t catch public transit to my destination, am I empowered? Having a choice of how I want to get to places is empowering, not “oh I’ll guess I’ll go in my car”. I can see the argument for living in a car, but I also know that people sometimes make that choice because it is literally cheaper to buy and re-do a car so they can live in it rather than renting in some areas.

    Cars are, and honestly should be treated as, a luxury good. It’s fun to drive around some routes form time-to-time, but I’d much rather bike or ride public transit to places rather than drive.

    squaresinger,

    If a significant amount of people live in their cars, it means that the housing market and the wages are seriously out of whack, and the government has not been doing their job for the last decades.

    dustyData, (edited )

    This is one of the main cores behind the anti car and fifteen minutes city concepts. I’m currently facing the choice. Should I buy a car? Because, though I currently move and live without, using a car for commute would be a net personal gain. Biking is not an option, there is no infrastructure nor protections for moving on a bicycle in my city. I have to commute 50km each way, my job is not possible to be done from home, moving closer to work is financially prohibitive. Any new job would be near the same exact geographic area. A car would reclaim almost 3 hours of my day and multiply my options for leisure 10 fold for relatively cheaper. I hate to have to face that dilemma.

    cestvrai, (edited )

    When you talk about “pollution” (compared to a shipping vessel) you are only talking about greenhouse gas emissions. This is the exact fallacy that the comic is addressing.

    Localised particulate matter pollution will have a much more severe and direct impact on human health. Whether widespread individual car ownership is worth the cancer and microplastic pollution in our bodies is certainly still open for debate. However, this “environmentally friendly car” that you are imagining is a pipe dream.

    Humans living fulfilling, individualised lives has been happening for more than just the last century.

    Buffaloaf,

    Cargo ships also emit a shit ton of particulate, NOx, and SO2 since they aren’t required to have the same emissions controls as on road vehicles. It’s a serious problem for both climate change and immediate health impacts.

    SkepticalButOpenMinded,

    But those cargo ships exist whether we’re also driving a bunch of cars or not. It’s just totally orthogonal.

    If anything, switching to heavy EVs will increase the amount of pollution caused by cargo ships. Bringing up cargo ships makes no sense as a defense of EVs

    thoughts3rased,

    Plus, short of putting nuclear reactors on every ship, they can only really function on oil based fuels. Nothing compares in terms of energy density. If you somehow managed to put god knows how many battery packs on a ship without it sinking, it would probably take months to charge and suck tens of megawatts from the grid whilst doing it.

    xmunk, in “15-Minute City” Conspiracies Have It Backwards

    Yea, the people who fear 15 minute cities are absolutely bizarre. Running across one of these is a clear sign that the person has steeped themselves in all sorts of bullshit.

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