- Joined
- Dec 16, 2019
First, the double @ sign in mastadon things looks gay as hell
Second, he should rebrand to notjustcarbon - fucker flies around more than Al Gore.
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First, the double @ sign in mastadon things looks gay as hell
If Jason was more famous he could be a South Park character.First, the double @ sign in mastadon things looks gay as hell
Second, he should rebrand to notjustcarbon - fucker flies around more than Al Gore.
Didn't go far enough; his whole methodology (what a suburb is, his "example article" in Ferguson which is accidentally or deliberately wrong) is flat-out and fundamentally wrong.Someone wrote a good article debunking Strong Towns:
Gosh, what will "I hate America and I don't talk about America" have to say about America's biggest city?Jason is visiting New York City:
Good vid, I’d say the tldr is that cars are bigger and heavier now. The US also has flawed road-design philosophies that would be hard for them to correct now due to population size and cost, namely the favouring of intersections over roundabouts.https://youtube.com/watch?v=we58Yl2WU5kDecent explanation as to why vehicle fatalities are on the up, TLDR it's all the EPA's fault.
a tunnel that took nearly 100 years to dig, no lessAs for the Eurostar, I'd like to see how they'd "add one more rail" there. They're aware it's a 50 km tunnel under the English Channel, right? They're not just gonna add a few more lines through there, and there's an upper limit to the frequency.
When we treat infrastructure spending like it's consumption spending, something like having a police department or maintaining a park, we tend to make stupid infrastructure decisions.
Someone said this in an analysis of the movie "Falling Down". The main character at the start of the movie gets initially set off his rampage because he was stuck in traffic. The reason for it is road work due to trying to expand infrastructure for a growing population past what it was originally intended to handle.The US also has flawed road-design philosophies that would be hard for them to correct now due to population size and cost, namely the favouring of intersections over roundabouts.
I don't know why fuckcars thinks if people were allowed to walk in the roads people will suddenly start socializing more. I guess they think it will be like a giant college campus like when they were growing up, but in reality it will be more like New York or Chicago. Have you ever walked around New York before? If you have you know it's weird to randomly approach people and impossible to make friends from these interactions. Everyone is physically close but still locked into their own worlds.Gosh, what will "I hate America and I don't talk about America" have to say about America's biggest city?
Roundabouts have advantages and disadvantages. I've used roundabouts in a few residential areas and they're great because most of the time you don't have to stop, just go clockwise and you're there. When you put them in busier roads and/or have multiple lanes trying to merge onto the roundabout they start becoming problems. If you have to wait behind cars regularly trying to enter the roundabout with stop 'n' go traffic it becomes about as useless as a four-way stop, and stopping and starting is really bad for efficiency/congestion reasons. (They're also not that great for pedestrians either).Good vid, I’d say the tldr is that cars are bigger and heavier now. The US also has flawed road-design philosophies that would be hard for them to correct now due to population size and cost, namely the favouring of intersections over roundabouts.
I don't know why fuckcars thinks if people were allowed to walk in the roads people will suddenly start socializing more.
The suburbs foster a friendlier environment for socialization as well. People are generally friendlier and less on edge than in the city, for the most part.The funny thing is that you could argue that a street that receives so little traffic, like a suburban cul-de-sac, has neighbors that socialize and interact more, but that undermines most of their arguments about suburbia.
Speaking of based comments in surprising places, I saw this comment in /r/urbanplanning:I was watching a random video (not about urbanism or anti-urbanism mind you) about the prices of new and used cars when this came up
Glad to see people are starting to recognize the end goal of all this for what it is. Of course in the comment chain you still get a lot of the usual motte and bailey arguments that fuckcars would spout, but I'm happy there's finally more discourse on it.
You also see your neighbors more often. I currently live in a high-rise and despite living in building with hundreds of people I don't really know anyone. Meanwhile in suburbia I know most of my neighbors because I see them constantly when they are:The suburbs foster a friendlier environment for socialization as well. People are generally friendlier and less on edge than in the city, for the most part.
I used to live in a house with like 9 or so apartments. Moved there for a new job, and it took several months to notice from the doorbells that a coworker was also living there. Never actually saw her. In a big high rise you probably just know the really notorious people.You also see your neighbors more often. I currently live in a high-rise and despite living in building with hundreds of people I don't really know anyone.
Fair enough. The problems are because people aren’t used to them. Busier intersections are more dangerous than a busy roundabout, their design means when accidents do happen the impact is less severe, and with larger cars being normalised that’s quite necessary. I drive them almost everyday so I’m biased by being familiar.When you put them in busier roads and/or have multiple lanes trying to merge onto the roundabout they start becoming problems.
Tourist-oriented sections are always going to be better than the main city. They design it that way so that people feel safe and want to come and spend money.Not entirely related to the thread but the cope was so intense I had to share it:
The other thing you'll find is that as a tourist, you take tourist paths; as a resident you quickly start taking the fastest path, e'en if it takes you right through niggertown. Because ain't nobody got time for waiting for nothing.Tourist-oriented sections are always going to be better than the main city. They design it that way so that people feel safe and want to come and spend money.
Las Vegas is a great example of this. LV Strip and a bit of downtown, nice, clean(ish), walkable if you like 110F, etc.Tourist-oriented sections are always going to be better than the main city. They design it that way so that people feel safe and want to come and spend money.