I was talking to a coworker about how I thought public transit was superior to individual cars, and so we should put a lot more investment into it, and his response was, “You’ll have to pry my car keys out of my cold dead hands.”
Like, dude, I wasn’t even talking about that.
Anyways, my point is that a big thing missing from this is how people often build their identities around their stupid fucking cars.
There’s such a stupid mentality around “Everyone must <X>”.
Lacrosse exists. I don’t care for it. I’m not going to dictate no one else play it. I imagine if the government mandated everyone play Lacrosse it would become hard to find the equipment for it because it would be in such high demand.
And yet, whether it’s meat, cars, guns, as soon as we suggest “I know this stuff has a place but we should use it a little less” they process it as an effort to completely ban the item in question.
My best commute was once when I lived within walking distance of my work. The only downside was that they one time figured I could make it into the office when nobody else could due to snow.
My second best commute was via a bus.
By far my worst commute was one time when I moved in with a friend who liked cars and lived far away. With zero traffic, the commute was 45 minutes, but there was always traffic.
Yeah! That and the fact that our society has erased several or most of our ways to communally build identity and shifted us to build identity based on consumption items
When my grandmother got too old to drive, she became confined because of cars. There was no public transit in walking distance. There was nothing in walking distance except houses.
She just sat at home by herself and waited for the end. Hoping someone would come to visit her. It was insulting and inhumane.
For so many, everything is black and white. They don’t understand that when we want better public transport we aren’t saying to get rid of the roads. We’re just saying that if people have more options maybe those roads won’t constantly be under construction, traffic won’t be as bad, and maybe the roads won’t have to be as big so we can build more cool stuff instead.
I saw a study once that you only need to take 20% of the cars off the road to cut congestion by half. So every person who takes public transit equates to more than one person off the road, for those still driving. Which is just to say these people should be extra grateful instead of constantly defunding it.
Motorcycling would be so much more fun with less traffic so I fully support more public transportation options. For now I mostly stick to off-road motorcycling because the chances of getting turned into road pizza by a texting driver are so much lower.
I miss bombing around on my little Indian motor scooter. I had a Bajaj Legend. It was such a rubbish scooter, but I loved it. If cars were more scarce I’d be rocking something like that. Totally car free though, these last 5 years and no regrets
I was talking to a coworker about how I thought public transit was superior to individual cars, and so we should put a lot more investment into it, and his response was, “You’ll have to pry my car keys out of my cold dead hands.”
Like, dude, I wasn’t even talking about that.
Anyways, my point is that a big thing missing from this is how people often build their identities around their stupid fucking cars.
There’s such a stupid mentality around “Everyone must <X>”.
Lacrosse exists. I don’t care for it. I’m not going to dictate no one else play it. I imagine if the government mandated everyone play Lacrosse it would become hard to find the equipment for it because it would be in such high demand.
And yet, whether it’s meat, cars, guns, as soon as we suggest “I know this stuff has a place but we should use it a little less” they process it as an effort to completely ban the item in question.
I’d like to use public transit but due to my work it’s just not an option
My best commute was once when I lived within walking distance of my work. The only downside was that they one time figured I could make it into the office when nobody else could due to snow.
My second best commute was via a bus.
By far my worst commute was one time when I moved in with a friend who liked cars and lived far away. With zero traffic, the commute was 45 minutes, but there was always traffic.
Being walking distance from work is fantastic!
You, a minute later:
I would like to clarify that I did not actually murder him in response to that comment.
People build their identities around their cars because society is making sure that you feel confined without a car.
Yeah! That and the fact that our society has erased several or most of our ways to communally build identity and shifted us to build identity based on consumption items
When my grandmother got too old to drive, she became confined because of cars. There was no public transit in walking distance. There was nothing in walking distance except houses.
She just sat at home by herself and waited for the end. Hoping someone would come to visit her. It was insulting and inhumane.
For so many, everything is black and white. They don’t understand that when we want better public transport we aren’t saying to get rid of the roads. We’re just saying that if people have more options maybe those roads won’t constantly be under construction, traffic won’t be as bad, and maybe the roads won’t have to be as big so we can build more cool stuff instead.
That’s kinda what makes them carbrains. If they had an ideology around it that would imply some amount of thinking.
Even if I was pro-car for myself, I would love to see more public transit funding. It would take cars off the road and make my time driving nicer.
I saw a study once that you only need to take 20% of the cars off the road to cut congestion by half. So every person who takes public transit equates to more than one person off the road, for those still driving. Which is just to say these people should be extra grateful instead of constantly defunding it.
Well I mean they’re dumb, so
Motorcycling would be so much more fun with less traffic so I fully support more public transportation options. For now I mostly stick to off-road motorcycling because the chances of getting turned into road pizza by a texting driver are so much lower.
I miss bombing around on my little Indian motor scooter. I had a Bajaj Legend. It was such a rubbish scooter, but I loved it. If cars were more scarce I’d be rocking something like that. Totally car free though, these last 5 years and no regrets