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2 yr. ago

  • The newer technology at that time was cars and roads, and many European countries did try the American system of roads and suburbs.

    Its just that most of them realized it wad a bad idea around 20 years ago and started rethinking their cities.

    Many city centers were even turned into parking lots like American ones.

    Again cities arent supposed to be static, and normally they grow denser, rather than sprawling.

    The problem with American cities is partly zoning, and partly nimbyism, where people don't want their places to change.

    And sprawl sucks for pretty much everyone. Less arable land for farming, poorer anmeties, longer travel times, and finally huge transportation costs. Cars are by far the most costly method of travel, both personally and for governments.

  • The stupid thing is that fixing it isn't even that hard.

    Step one Get rid stupid zoning laws like single family housing and reduce parking minimums.

    Step 2 Modify existing roads piece by piece to include alternative transit methods. Add bike lanes, if you can't slow down roads and people will bike.

    Actually run decent buses where peoole want to go, not oversized 50 person buses on 3 routes that nobody uses becasue it doesn't go anywhere, and has an hour between the next bus.

    That's it, the market will build more housing in areas that need it if its profitable, then use that new tax money to drive transit infrastructure.

    There's a lot of fine details, but we're bankrupting cities with cars right now.

  • It's a good point that cities aren't built anymore, and that's part of the problem. Our population has grown drastically, but we don't build hardly any new infrastructure for them outside of roads. So traffic is terrible despite enormous amounts of money from both government and people.

    Cities aren't supposed to be static, they're supposed to grow and adapt to the needs of those that live there. There is a large need for non-car transport that is either ignored or sidelined for cars.

    I'm not talking about 90% empty land, that's not where people are.

    When the car was invented, governments had little issue buildozing entire neighborhoods for highways, but now that some places are realizing that's a bad decision, its really hard to undo.

  • We have reactor designs that use already spent fuel, we just aren't building them. We have enough spent fuel for centuries, and afterwards the reprocessed fuel is much less radioactive, and only for a few decades.

  • But it's text, an entire persons message history can be stored very cheaply.

    A million words is only 2MB.

    Most people are expexted to text less than 10 millions words in a lifetime.

    An entire persons lifetime message history is only 20MB, that's trivial to store.

    If they want to charge to save media, thats fine, but text backups should be free

  • Marriage is the ultimate sign of commitment, making your relationship legal and/or spiritual while declaring it in front family and friends.

    Men who are against marriage are seemingly against commitment, but I think that comes out of a strong desire for commitment and stability.

    Children are whole different issue from marriage admittedly.

  • I'm not on beehaw, but I ran into similar problem when I joined lemmy.

    My solution was to filter communities and users where I felt I was getting apammed with content at a frequency I didn't enjoy.

    You might get some milage out if that approach.

  • While the free market should be able to correct the problem, it can't.

    I can't talk specifically about the uk, but in the US many locales have strict zoning regualtions that hamper building medium density cheap housing, perfect for all these people that can't afford to live where there's work.

    Examples are things like minimum parking requiements, driveway setbacks, and limitations on multifamily homes.