• Dkarma@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    No most ppl can’t, obviously. What we can stop doing is proposing no alternative when we tell ppl to stop doing something…you know. Like you just did.

    There is no viable alternative to a car when it is 20 below and you have to drive 30 min to get to work.

    • SkepticalButOpenMinded@lemmy.ca
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      10 months ago

      You might notice I said we should “move away from cars” which obviously includes building alternatives not just abandoning cars.

      If you’re responding in good faith and genuinely wanting to learn about this topic, you might try looking into how other countries (I presume you’re American or Canadian?) manage with fewer cars. For example, other cold countries like Finland and northern Japan walk, bike, and use public transportation all year round, even in -20 weather. Check out this video. Totally possible. Obviously, the US and Canada had big cities before the invention of cars, so I’m not sure why you think there are no possible alternatives to cars.

      • Dr_pepper_spray@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Am I wrong, or does Japan not have at least one car per household (obviously less in the cities, but the same is true with New York). I know this is less than the average American, but I’d suggest the reason for this has more to do with economics and space than public transportation options. In New York City, I can take the bus (why THE FUCK would I?) The rickety subway (which is quite good, despite its obvious age and lack of maintenance) The Railroads, or peddle down a hot, or frozen street on a Citibike. When all else fails, I can walk, which most for most places (in Manhattan at least) is a great option…

        …Yet, traffic in New York City is still horrendous, and I still have a car – Because I need a car to get to places those other options can’t reach, and I’ll bet that’s true for a lot of people. I don’t have TWO cars like those in rural areas because of the expense, the difficulty of parking, and I have a decent public transit system.

        The second point being you can’t get rid of cars. They’re required for too many people to live and work. That’s true for NYC. That’s true for Japan and I’ll bet it’s even true for everyone’s Darling Finland, which it doesn’t take much googling to discover is true. The best you can hope for is 1 car per household … unless we’re going to start raising cities and completely redesigning them and even then I’m skeptical.

        • SkepticalButOpenMinded@lemmy.ca
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          10 months ago

          Indeed, it’s not a question of cars vs. no cars. It’s about the extent of car dependence. We will always have some cars, even Tokyo and Amsterdam has cars, but right now, in the US and Canada, we are often forced to travel by car because we have no other options.

          It’s also not just about whether one owns a car, but how much we use cars. The fact that most Japanese or Finnish families own one car doesn’t mean much on its own. A lot of those families only use their car a few times a month. Most commute by train or bus, or just walk to the grocery store. As bad as New York city traffic is, it would be much worse if you didn’t have options like subways and good sidewalks. It’s a spectrum, not black and white. But, right now, we are FAR on the car-centric extreme.

          • Dr_pepper_spray@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            I will say that for most trips into Manhattan I’ll use public transportation (Train or Subway) just because it’s easier and less subject to traffic jams. It’s also just nice to read a book while traveling to work. Overall it’s a less stressful experience. Almost anything in the outer boroughs I need a car to get to (Parts of Brooklyn might as well be on the moon) However Manhattan is very different then anywhere in San Francisco, whose public transportation I found mind numbingly slow and less frequent.

            One place that could use some major improvement is cross-country train travel. My wife and I took a train to Montreal about five years ago and I swore never to do this again. It was painful how slow and shitty that experience was. It really wouldn’t take a whole lot to improve this, the bar is that low. I would have paid more money! High speed rail will never get you to the West Coast as fast as an airplane, but if the experience and ease is worth it you can get more customers. However it doesn’t seem like Amtrak gives a single good God damn. They might as well be carrying freight.

      • Psythik@lemm.ee
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        10 months ago

        You can build all the infrastructure you want but none of that matters if people won’t take public transport. I don’t do it because only the sketchiest, creepiest people take public transport in the US. You can’t get on a train/bus/subway/whatever in this country without fear of getting stabbed.

        Until that problem is addressed, cars aren’t going away.

        • SkepticalButOpenMinded@lemmy.ca
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          10 months ago

          I know what you mean, but that turns out to be empirically untrue. Good transportation infrastructure encourages use in measurable ways (economists and urban planners call this “induced demand”). When you build out a train of bus network so that it’s actually useful, people start using it.

          When it comes to safety and public transportation, I think the causality works the other way. In places with excellent public transportation, like New York and Toronto, everyone, including the middle class, uses public transportation. Not coincidentally, these places also have very low crime: New York is in the bottom 20% of US cities for crime severity, and Toronto is the safest city in North America. Under investing in the well-being of poor people, including public infrastructure, causes crime.

        • zalgotext@sh.itjust.works
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          10 months ago

          I’ve used the public transportation in several large US cities, and have never felt threatened by or fearful of the other passengers.

      • Unforeseen@sh.itjust.works
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        10 months ago

        Finland and northern Japan are microscopic compared to Canada (or the USA). The reason it’s feasible there does not make it feasible here.

        • SkepticalButOpenMinded@lemmy.ca
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          10 months ago

          I hear this argument a lot but it doesn’t make any sense. The size of the country doesn’t matter for your daily commute.

          It’s also nonsensical because living without cars was feasible in Canada and the US 100 years ago, and remains feasible in many small towns and big cities. Winnipeg, Calgary, Minneapolis, Los Angeles, Kansas City… they all had efficient and extensive tram and bus systems in the pre-war era. The walkable neighborhoods made before cars remain some of the most valuable and sought after real estate in North America.

          • Dr_pepper_spray@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            Maybe in the cities. However in the 20s, for rural areas, Horse and carts were still in use. Automobiles replaced them.

            • SkepticalButOpenMinded@lemmy.ca
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              10 months ago

              A lot of rural areas built walkable town centres which still exist today. But sure, some areas will always need cars. That said, over 80% of the population of US and Canada today lives in urban areas, so let’s at least work on that 80%. It doesn’t have to be all or nothing.

        • Blubton@feddit.nl
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          10 months ago

          Most of the people in both Finland and Japan live in cities, while most North Americans live in cities. Moving away from cars in rural areas may not be easy, but there is no reason why it would not be possible in the cities. The things that are needed are: denser cities (less tight zoning laws) and more alternatives to driving, like bike lanes or trams. These things are achievable by policy change. Also, the USA has around five times as much population density across the country as Finland, so while it may be big, it is not too big for decent alternatives to driving

        • Dr_pepper_spray@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          Quick googling says Finland has 3.6 Million passenger vehicles for about 5.5 Million people. You want to hold up a shining example of a carless culture? try North Korea.

    • yetAnotherUser@feddit.de
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      10 months ago

      Have you ever heard of buses and trains? Almost every town over here with 10.000 inhabitants has trains running every 15 minutes in either direction.

      • Pyr_Pressure@lemmy.ca
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        10 months ago

        The town I lived in with 90,000 residents had buses that didn’t run after 6pm or before 6am, so if you worked part time at a retail store that opened earlier or closed later at night buses were not an option.

        Yes I believe we should be expanding and funding out public transportation, but until that happens we can’t just get rid of cars.

        Stop shaming people for driving and instead shame politicians for not making it easier to ditch cars. It’s simply not possible for everyone everywhere.

        • SkepticalButOpenMinded@lemmy.ca
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          10 months ago

          Ah I think I finally see the misunderstanding. I don’t see anyone in this thread shaming anyone for using cars. What you say about pressuring politicians is totally compatible with the person you’re responding to. So it’s confusing why you think you’re on opposing sides?

          I don’t think using cars is a personal moral failing. But if people are so fragile that we can’t criticize car dependence without it being taken personally, then progress is literally impossible.

        • yetAnotherUser@feddit.de
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          10 months ago

          That’s my point. Cars can easily be replaced, not abandoned. In my example, trains are sufficient to get to most cities with comparable speed. With enough funding for public transport - which isn’t even that much compared to maintaining roads and bridges - you could remove 95+% of cars.

          Yet even here public transport is too unreliable too little service (note that I didn’t mention buses) and apparently people will use cars as long as there is a minor time benefit.

          To illustrate my point: even though the bus service is mediocre regardless of where you live in my town, you are within one mile of everything you’d need on the daily basis (supermarket, pharmacy, bank…). However, there is a roughly 50 : 1 difference in parking spaces to bicycle racks because for some reason you either walk or drive a car.

        • Dr_pepper_spray@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          Even in New York, that bus is either a completely miserable experience, require strict departure times, and might make your commute a lot longer.

          I can’t imagine how awful they are in other places.

          • mondoman712@lemmy.ml
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            10 months ago

            New York isn’t a bastion of excellent public transport. Other places do it better and buses can be good.

              • mondoman712@lemmy.ml
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                10 months ago

                Most cities in Europe & Asia. I live in Zurich and the buses are pretty much just as good as the trains and trams (which are top notch).

            • mayo@lemmy.today
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              10 months ago

              Bussing during rush hour sucks no matter what city it is. I’d rather bike, or if I could, I’d drive.

              Well actually… driving during rush hour also sucks so I’m not sure between the two. During non-peak hours it’s not bad, kind of expensive though.

    • Girru00@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      “There is no viable alternative to a car when it is 20 below and you have to drive 30 min to get to work.”

      Perhaps theres a solution buried in there. Organize society so were not burning our lifespan and the planet unecessarily commuting.

      "There is no viable alternative to a car when it is 20 below and you have to drive 30 min to get to work.

      Bus, train.

      “What we can stop doing is proposing no alternative

      Bus, train, walkable cities, remote work, increased automation and reduced labour reducing commute requirements, production near consumption to reduce freight, tackling international economic inequities so it isnt cheaper to make a widget accross the world at poverty wages and ship it to those who live on the other side to buy within the means of their poverty wages - purchasing low quality quickly broken widgets that need consistent replacement and therefore further freight for that consistent supply.

    • neanderthal@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      In the US, moving away from cars is a decade+ project. The alternatives are bicycles, trams, ebikes, walking, trains, busses, and subways.

      All of them require substantial zoning changes and a change in focus from transportation departments from car capacity to people capacity and safety.

      Most people in the US can’t feasibly not drive. A good start are things like my neighborhood. I live 1.5 from a shopping center with grocery store and other essentials, but have to drive there. It would be a minimal change and cost to connect a few neighborhood streets to the back of the shopping center or finish the sidewalk/bike trail that abruptly ends half way there.

      Another good start is giving tax breaks for employers that do 32 hour work weeks or even 4 10 hour days to reduce driving.

      Another idea is allow for small general stores in residential areas.

      Another idea is HSR on easy routes like LA to Las Vegas.

      Another idea is trams along long strips with lots of foot traffic like public beaches and Las Vegas boulevard.

      Another is to add bollards in cities with bike lanes that are just painted lines on the road so people feel safer using them.

      • Nyssa@slrpnk.net
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        10 months ago

        Plus China is repeating our mistakes and building out a massive amount of car-centric infrastructure. Huge disappointment given the amount of resources and wonderful transit they have in major cities

    • UsernameIsTooLon@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Idk, maybe public transportation? We’re not getting rid of cars, but one bus full of people is better than if every individual had their own cars. It’s not about elimination, it’s about reduction.

      • Nyssa@slrpnk.net
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        10 months ago

        Exactly. I grew up on a farm and there’s no way a regular bus route would efficiently service us. Cars are still necessary but their usage can be greatly reduced.

        For instance, in Europe most suburban/rural households can get by with one car. And in urban areas no car lifestyle is very easy to pull off

    • Malfeasant@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      There is no viable alternative to a car when it is 20 below and you have to drive 30 min to get to work.

      Funny you bring that up… bicycling in extreme cold is very similar to skiing, I’ve done it… no skin exposed, breathable layers, you have to worry more about getting too warm than too cold