• @turnip@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    Why should the poor fund the rich to replace their 3 year old Lexus with an EV, surely funding mass transit makes far more sense?

    Why do we even want to push car centric urban sprawl in the first place during a massive housing shortage where everything should be being rezoned for density, or the fact we are borrowing public money that we then pay perpetual interest on to gift to for-profit corporations. This whole thing is messed up, and its no wonder Canada has so many problems when our politicians are this corrupt.

    • @BreadOven@lemmy.world
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      82 months ago

      Publicly funded mass transit sounds amazing. I’m in a suburb and hate that I have to use a car to get to most places.

    • @BlameThePeacock@lemmy.ca
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      72 months ago

      Mostly because voters don’t prioritize mass transit at all.

      Politicians are not corrupt, they just follow the whims of the voters who aren’t rational.

      Affordable housing is the same problem, voters don’t want it yet because it would crash existing house prices.

    • @humanspiral@lemmy.ca
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      42 months ago

      Canada has yet to tariff ebikes/emobility from China. That is a massive personal freedom for Urban/near Urban locations where most of Canadians live, and provide great car replacements at huge energy/mile efficiency gains, and often faster trip times, and lower cost, than personal cars (including parking) or transit.

        • @NarrativeBear@lemmy.world
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          12 months ago

          They did talk a little about zoning amd density. Though without a way for people or goods to get around there is no economy.

          Street car suburbs is a coined term that is basically at its heart a transit oriented community. Though street car suburbs require the expressed knowledge that density is needed.

          The video simply shows that these types of communities already exist and a perfect example is that Toronto already has them.

          Though many people, even the ones that live in these areas are not even aware of the distinction, but that might not necessarily be a bad thing? To them it feels like any other suburb, but has three times the density of what’s legally allowed to be built with current zoning laws.