Trying to counter and understand them, anything to counter especially the doomer-baiting
Ah, okay, because my response would've been phrased very differently depending on the arguments. Let me prepare for that for you.
Sorry for double-posting but it is an hour later and I wanted to get this out there:
Has this already been asked or explained (especially over the 480+ pages on this thread)? The argument is that since the 40s or 50s, entire buildings and urban centers were demolished in favor of huge sprawling highways, and that republicunts actively insist on keeping commute distances as long as possible and population densities as low as possible, or else it's an Orwellian Stasi-like project to make surveillance and movement control effortless and also that it's another rat utopia experiment with plummeting birth rates and skyrocketing crime and drug overdoses.
Any argument about commute times is entirely bullshit.
There's numbers tossed around how much time it takes to commute with some numbers stretching to "two hours each way"; I suspect that's accidentally multiplying the commute times. Globohomo art aside,
this site does a good job at visualizing how long commute times take, especially driving from the suburbs.
Note for Houston a "one hour time" is driving from some place as far northwest as Navasota, as far west as Columbus, and almost as far east as Beaumont. As
@quaawaa has done you can also plug in addresses to destinations (also not everyone works downtown, a common misconception).
Most "muh downtowns demolished for highways" pictures were taken decades and decades apart, usually comparing the 1930s or 1940s to the 1970s or even modern day. These don't account for vacancies downtown either, and usually the old aerial photos are just enough to tell if something was there or not.
For fun you can point out that "downtown before and after freeways" and "downtown before and after Civil Rights Act" is just as accurate.
Jason Slaughter moving to the Netherlands to escape car-dependent hell is as absurd and lulzy
Jason lies through his teeth all the time. It was
revealed that Jason does not live in Amsterdam-Centrum, the tourist district of Amsterdam with narrow streets and canals, but rather Amsterdam-Zuid, a wealthy part of Amsterdam with a number of detached housing units with cars. There was a post more recently that suggested he goes shopping in common European hypermarkets rather than the "small shops" that he talks about. (In Amsterdam-Centrum, due to its touristy nature, has very few "real" grocery stores and are all convenience stores for tourists).
Republicunts say that public transport should be defunded or abolished because its users disproportionately consist of unsympathetically impoverished lowlife violent criminals or pickpockets who never made the right decisions growing up, had an absymal academic performance and lengthy disciplinary record in school, and forever stuck at the bottom at their own fault and are either unemployable or only allowed minimum wage labor. Therefore, by making life complete hell for such people by not letting them go anywhere as they can't afford a car and are bad drivers, the city will be sunshine and rainbows again and safer than Tokyo and Singapore (two cities with a reputation of satisfying urbanists).
Nobody on the right is seriously talking about "defunding transit", even their hated Trump talked about improving the NY subway.
The actual friction (not "muh Project 2025" fearmongering) usually comes in different forms:
- State Republicans who hesitate on feeding the endless money-gobbling of certain transit systems.
- State Republicans who don't like the idea of a big taxpayer-funded HSR program.
- Suburbanites who are part of a mass transit program and vote against transit expansion.
The latter is important because most "metro tax" areas are much larger than the area where most of where mass transit actually goes and feeds into regularly. Because they ARE taxed, suburban interests hold places on the board and will vote against big transit plans that don't do anything from them since they still pay into the system and receive almost nothing in return.
The transit boards can't cut the suburban areas out because they're where a lot of the funding comes from. You can point out how massive the MTA tax area and how tiny the subway system is compared to it.
Republicunts also say that commuting by bike is sluggish and doesn't have any carrying capacity for groceries or kids, which immediately contradicts all arguments for making commuting (especially by car) way longer.
When it comes to carrying capacity and they trot out the bike trailers argument, notice how in pictures they're always showing them empty. They also argue for dimensions, not for carrying capacity.
Quote-unquote "100 years ago", our cities used to be designed like western European cities today until conservative-led zoning laws came in and made huge sprawling highways plow down entire square miles worth of urbanization, as per the following posters down below. Wasn't the car-centric revolution pushed by only progressives and liberals, and the entire opposition being trad-family conservatives? And what's the reality of the difference between the same cities of the two different eras if it wasn't simply retrofitting horse carriage roads with modern asphalt and sidewalks? And there were also new safety standards like the ban on asbestos, which demolishing and building from scratch might've been cheaper and more practical than refactoring the same buildings.
The whole of "urbanist history" is extremely distorted. There are a few points to make:
- Comparing them to western European cities isn't really accurate since "downtown" (or a "monocentric core") is a relatively recent concept in world history. There's really no "downtown" Rome or "downtown" Berlin.
- People have tried to get away from the downtown areas well before the car, with "streetcar suburbs" on the fringes of the cities (which would now be considered "urban" today).
- The idea of ride-sharing in an automobile dates back to almost the dawn of automobiles themselves ever since a car owner figured out that with a chauffeurs' license he could legally give another man a ride in his car for a nickel. It makes sense as horses and their drivers had done that since the 1600s. These were enough to cause streetcar systems to lose money.
- GM did not buy the streetcars to put them out of commission, either. The "conspiracy" was that when they switched to buses (which was the more profitable and flexible option) to use GM buses (and other companies' products). This was considered an anti-trust act. Notably, GM or its subsidiaries had any involvement in the Los Angeles "Red Cars".
There's a famous photo of a bunch of defunct Red Car streetcars stacked up in a junkyard from the 1950s. It should be noted that Pacific Electric Railway Company (always owned by Southern Pacific since 1911) had been shedding lines since the 1920s, and the real money-maker for the company was freight traffic.
Unsurprisingly, Pacific Electric sold off the passenger lines in the 1950s to focus on freight and was eventually fully absorbed into its parent company.
With the three points combined, it therefore means that both neighborhoods and cities in general will forever be car-dependent and inconvenient to go any other way, which therefore means more stress on the part of the especially big family, more frustration, and less incentive or emotional fitness to have children and fulfill the American dream, therefore being an unsustainable living model with shrinking birth rates and an increase in isolation and frustration-induced mental health problems besides the obvious irritability on the road. With this point, it's even easier to assume just how doomer that these urbanists are, especially the harder it is to prove it not happening.
But again, all of those "points" are wrong. It is actually quite convenient to go anywhere, even in the suburbs, a 15-minute car ride can get to a good number of destinations.
The rest is just correlation/causation navel-gazing, though if you want you could bring up a number of points about the court cases and laws in the 1960s that negatively affected society. Mass immigration, civil rights, women in the workforce, a lack of fathers in the household, turning away from organized religion, pick anything and you can make it work.
They also use something like these posters as an argument:
The first picture isn't really an argument since Amsterdam has much longer commute times than most American cities, especially given its compact size.
The second picture is 100% propaganda by a group that had a lot to lose if freeways were built (and they wouldn't look like that).
The third picture is just stating facts. Plus a lot of southeast Asian cities do have long commute times, too.