-3 points

EVs are basically cars, but more expensive.

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20 points

I remember saying it about 10 years ago:

You can see the culture shock in how progress works across different countries:

Japan, let’s build a shockingly fast and quiet train! USA, here’s an electric car that drives itself.

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1 point

Would have been great if stanley Meyer was still alive.

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4 points

Yes, we should tax ev owners so we can afford more sustainable infrastructure

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3 points

Gas vehicle owners too I hope?

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2 points

As a EV owner, I’m fine with that.

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31 points
*

Public transport is awesome…

It just doesnt always go where everyone needs to go

Bikes are great right until you have to do large grocery shopping or get to a place far away.

I cant do without a car where i live.

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1 point

My car is in the shop for some tricky troubleshooting.

I’ve been doing my weekly grocery shopping with my foldable bike and dog trailer. I live in a rural area, so it’s a bit of a trip. I don’t particularly enjoy it, especially the hauling the load home. It would probably be bearable with a bit of electric assist on the bike.

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2 points

Or it snows.

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2 points

Man I was gonna type something about how it’s because your city is designed around car centric infrastructure and density and cargo bikes and shit but honestly there ain’t no way I’m gonna say anything to you that hasn’t already been said.

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7 points

I think there’s this misconception that the US is basically NYC or dirt-road farmland, and the reality is that there’s a lot of in-between. I live <20 minutes from the closest mall by car, yet even transportation or food delivery apps (e.g. uber, uber eats) essentially don’t serve my area, so forget public transportation.

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1 point

Most of the in-between is closer to the dirt-road farmland. Even if you live “in a city,” there’s a big chance you’ll be living a long walk through some car-dependent wasteland to the nearest anything that isn’t a house, with near-zero care, effort and/or space given to anyone who’s not in a car.

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1 point

Tis the problem of car centric sprawl no?

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9 points
*

In my city public transport is free, anyone can get anywhere else via train or bus cheaper than via car, there is even bicycle dedicated road that goes trough city and connects dozens of neighboring towns and cities but I admit that car is just so much more convinient to use. It’s all about comfort or fear of loosing one, rether than it would be impossible to give people alternative to use.

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27 points
*

Bikes are great right until you have to do large grocery shopping

That’s only because we’re doing it wrong.

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2 points

I was expecting the bakfiets video, but the old Amsterdam grocery stores one is good as well.

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6 points

Here is an alternative Piped link(s):

Don’t do that, then!

Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.

I’m open-source, check me out at GitHub.

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38 points

You live in a place designed around cars, that’s the problem. Society worked fine without cars for a good long while. We could have adopted trains, bikes, and buses without the car and things would be going swimmingly. The idea is to fix our bad town planning so that it’s reasonable to get to any destination using any mode if transportation.

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4 points
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You live in a place designed around cars, that’s the problem.

Worse: they may live in a place bulldozed to make way for cars. Plenty of car-dependent places used to have good places for walking, good transit services, all that jazz, but it was all torn down to make room for cars.

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16 points

You live in a place designed around cars, that’s the problem.

Exactly. Then Europeans downvote people who say they need a car, because their country/city/state/whatever has terrible planning or public transit.

Not my fault I need a car. Stop blaming me. I didn’t design the city. I didn’t plan where the public transit will go.

Do you really think I love paying $1200+ per year for insurance, $120+ per week for fuel, and $20,000-80,000 for a new vehicle when mine borks itself?

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2 points
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Nobody is blaming the American people (I’m an American). It’s the car corporations that bought and dismantled light rail and train systems and lobbied the government to build cities around the car.

And now the American people are so brainwashed into thinking owning a car is freedom and public transit is “socialism” that they will fight tooth and nail against anything that is against their “freedom” to be forced to own and pay for a car.

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8 points
*

I partially agree but you forget that every country = its people and people can either not give a crap or start complaining. Politics are same everywhere, they want to secure their position, so they will follow those who are heard. Otherwise they will follow their own interests.

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1 point

Bikes also aren’t great for snow, heavy rain, or extreme temperatures.

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5 points

There’s no bad weather, only bad clothing

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8 points
*

Bikes are better than cars in snow, however. A fat bike’s tires ‘float’ across the surface of the snow, like snowshoes, and can handle any snow depth. Regular mountain bikes and commuter bikes with knobby tires handle a few inches of snow quite well, because the knobs capture snow between them, and snow sticks to snow. Cars, on the other hand, need a vast expenditure of effort to plow the snow off the road surface, so they don’t slide around in a few inches of snow, or get stuck in deeper snow.

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6 points

And then there’s the salt, which destroys the cars…

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5 points

WTF kind of public transport are you used to? 😂

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-2 points
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I don’t know about you guys, but I’m giving up on public transport and going for a driving license.

Reasons include constantly late buses and trains, constant errors in signal systems and track systems, people talking loudly on phones or playing games on full volume, completely packed trains so people have to stand within centimeters of eachother.

Just got sick of all of it and realized I had enough.

It’s like with everything - trying to make maximum profits means quality goes to the bottom. I rather pay for fuel and cars and have my own car then deal with that shit anymore. I want to be happy, not sad.

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4 points

That may be specific to your area, transit where I live is pretty dang consistent

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1 point

Yeah of course it is. But aren’t people loud and annoying on the public transport where you live?

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