Why do some laws exist if everyone is expected to just break them?
Grappling7155 @ Grappling7155 @lemmy.ca Posts 124Comments 110Joined 2 yr. ago
Grappling7155 @ Grappling7155 @lemmy.ca
Posts
124
Comments
110
Joined
2 yr. ago
Deleted
Permanently Deleted
Deleted
Permanently Deleted
Canada’s equal funding to help Israeli and Palestinian victims of sexual violence draws Israeli fire.
Canada's carbon rebate is increasing. Here’s how much Ontarians can expect in their bank accounts
For the first time in decades, Alberta's electricity grid has gone without coal power
How Canada's study permit cap will change where international students are coming from
North American driving culture sucks. For the past 70 years cars have dominated at the expense of all other modes of travel. They’re deeply embedded into our culture, infrastructure, planning processes, transportation engineering, and daily lives. They have become synonymous with freedom of movement for a lot of people who can’t imagine any different way to get around. Speed limits and enforcement in their minds are seen as an infringement on their rights. It will be a long and uncertain process to enact change, ripe for disruption and setbacks, but the status quo isn’t working, we’ve hit the limits of cars’ ability to scale, and with the internet showing how things are in the rest of the world, some people are waking up to what’s possible when you aren’t dependent on cars to get around safely and reliably.