West Coast baby

  • Umbrias@beehaw.org
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    9 months ago

    Anybody claiming one general solution will fix every single grievance they have sounds a step away from buying essential oils.

    Don’t get me wrong, it will help, but no every pet problem will not be magically solved by waving hands and going “just do better urban panning, duh”

    Just don’t romanticize your proposed solution to a degree where you think you can slap it in and problems solve themselves.

    • spiderplant@lemm.ee
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      9 months ago

      I mean the overarching problem being talked about here is not having well planned cities (ie 15 min cities) that provide housing for everyone.

      The solution mentioned would absolutely solve or go a long way to solve all the problems mentioned in the meme.

      • Umbrias@beehaw.org
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        9 months ago

        I don’t disagree that it would improve things. But don’t just expect something to fix all the problems magically, especially not when it’s basically waving your hands and going “just city plan better this time around.” It won’t be magical, 40 years down the line when this movement of new planning strategies is finally finished, it will already have been outdated for 35 years. These problems are hilariously complicated.

        • spiderplant@lemm.ee
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          9 months ago

          Outdated? The things that people are now advocating for are things that used to be commonplace:

          • being close to shops, work, and third places
          • large areas of inner cities left for public parks
          • roads not yet dominated by cars
          • majority of people relying on decent affordable/free public transport or walking
          • Umbrias@beehaw.org
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            9 months ago

            Sure. And now we clearly know that it would’ve been better to develop things that way in the first place; instead of rapid relatively unplanned sprawling residential. At the time these developments were being mostly planned, zoned, and legislated, that was seen as the right strategy.

            That’s literally my point. We don’t know everything, don’t expect magic fixes. This will be better, it will need improvements.

            • spiderplant@lemm.ee
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              9 months ago

              I mean without researching I know that Tolkien was pro-car and then flipped to really anti car early on (I think either 10s or 20s). There was no doubt others that saw that car infrastructure was bad for society. I think you can probly blame a really strong car lobby for how bad we ended up.

              Its’s also not that crazy to undo, look at the Netherlands. There is at least one example where they got rid of canals for motorways, realised it was terrible and put the canals back. Amsterdam also was a mess of roads and it only took 20 years to get to what it is today.

              • Umbrias@beehaw.org
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                9 months ago

                Hindsight is 20/20 yadda yadda. It’s very easy to look back and see what the correct solution might’ve been (well, until you dig into it, normally, then it becomes much harder). It’s so so so much harder to have a solution in front of you and be justifiably confident you were on the right side of every issue for the rest of time, especially when it comes to engineering.

                We all wish we could wave a magic wand and fix every problem with all of our various solutions, but it’s simply unknowable and unfeasible.

                That point about the car lobby is one I see a lot. It’s of course true… But probably not in a way that makes it a boogeyman in the same way we’re aware of lobbying now. Let me put it this way, did automakers lobby hard for car centric transportation, downplaying downsides? Almost definitely. Did people generally feel cars may lead to greater social and economic prosperity than the alternatives? Yeah, probably so. There was push back, for sure, but there was pushback on the existence of electricity too. And what’s more, did we even have the modeling and research to be able to definitely say cars wouldn’t be worth their cost then? No we didn’t. We don’t even now, but on balance we have enough that people are generally favoring different urban panning priorities in certain spheres. We don’t even know that the science and engineering that went into vehicles wasn’t worth it. It’s unknowable.

                This is a long winded rant to say, we know better now, shame on us for not improving now, though we are. We will know even better in 20 years, 40 years, 100, shame on us then if we don’t improve then. But there are no magic bullets in life. We see one solution, but even what that solution looks like in the details can make or break it, and those details will need to be different for every community, both spatially and temporally. What we build now, even if it is a super perfect solution to everyone it effects, may not be right for people 50 years from now. Life is fundamentally chaotic and we can only ever hope to do the best we can with what we’ve got. And to that point, people are people, we will never be perfect, never be able to achieve even that temporarily perfect solution. There will be good and bad implementations, things won’t be implemented to anyone’s ideal, there will have to be compromises and time and knowledge constraints.

                No magic solutions.

                • spiderplant@lemm.ee
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                  9 months ago

                  Hindsight is 20/20 does not make a good argument here. Cars are bad for people, we have the studies and the research.

                  • they kill a higher number of people than other modes of transport.
                  • on average car drivers are more unhealthy and die earlier than people who self propel/use public transport
                  • fumes and particles from cars lower the air quality in cities and are responsible for more deaths than just collisions
                  • even if you go full electric particles from the tyres released at speed are terrible for people
                  • car parking is a massive waste of land in city centres
                  • commerce benefits more from cycle infrastructure than car infrastructure because more people are likely to get off their bike to go in to a shop they didn’t intend to go to than car drivers who have to find a parking space

                  There are definitely more examples of why cars are bad in urban settings. Banning cars in city centres is the very easy solution that would make everyone’s lives in the cities better today. It’s also not a super crazy solution, cars didn’t always occupy space in cities.

                  Also car drivers are not the majority in cities or even some contries but somehow the whole population is beholden to them.

                  • Umbrias@beehaw.org
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                    9 months ago

                    Yes… We have studies now which show many of these things… Okay so you’re just kind of repeating talking points here instead of holding conversation. Have a good one!

    • Franzia@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      9 months ago

      Yeah, this is not a “slap it in” solution. If indeed it does solve all of these problems. Traffic is gonna get worse before it gets better if you take away roads and lanes. Culture has to shift and people have to leave their cars at home, or really affordable housing and good transit? Thats just gonna supply the outsized demand to move to California’s densest areas. So you’ll have the same problem, but with lots of new people who don’t experience it. Planning has to find people who will change their lives to make all of society better, too.

      • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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        9 months ago

        Traffic was pretty damn good during covid when everyone was working from home. We could go back to that for starters.

        • Franzia@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          9 months ago

          Forming the international pajama workers union. 😋
          You’re right this is probably the biggest wedge issue in transportation for regular joe.