@sinabhfuil I think we could do better if our politicians tried to lead, rather than seeing which way the wind is blowing and working out how to upset the smallest number of people. Unfortunately 100 years of our system is going to be hard to unwind and I don’t have a good answer for how to do that.
It’s frustrating - we are in an existential crisis and delayed action is no good. The climate won’t wait for us to reach consensus, it will just kill us while we hold consultations.
@sinabhfuil
In Paris they achieved about 7 minutes faster times to action due to more and better bike lanes.
I think in Berlin the cyclists would have blocked the bike lane, to stand for their right to be there... 😂
That seems a rather silly and insincere concern.
In the US (where I'm from) it's the law that your must pull over for emergency vehicles. In SE Asia (where I live now) the culture is slowly changing to pull over.
Like the video you showed, most cyclists I've seen readily pull over.
@sinabhfuil @skolima @karlstanley Aside: Railways then were symbolic of Imperialist Capitalism - the arteries of capital, and not as an enabling social good. So tearing through a neighbourhood was only for the good of the few. I wonder if that coloured the view of the early Irish State in how it saw railways.
Also: I grew up in a small flat in one of the biggest terraced old houses in Monkstown/Seapoint overlooking the railway and coast.
Well said, I live in a NA capital and our city is a urban sprawl. Unfortunately this means we've far extended suburbs whose citizens (based on voting patterns) seem to favour driving and usually end up tanking public transportation issues for those that actually live in the city core
@karlstanley @sinabhfuil The problem is not with democracy, it is with this version of democracy.
If you look at citizen assemblies output for example, it's a very different democratic process, with a very different outcome.
With the end of abundant/free energy, democratic processes will be under huge pressure with increasingly difficult choices on the horizon, and will have to adapt.
@karlstanley So Switzerland has one of the best public transport systems in the world (it's rail system is probably the best, outside maybe Japan). It's also been built on a terrain that anyone would consider challenging.
On top of that, their rather unique political system offloads a lot of decision making into direct referendums (both on county, cantonal and federation level).
And yet... they still somehow managed.
@sinabhfuil @feijoa Part of it is probably with China’s particular brand of capitalism you always try to meet growth targets by just having extreme amounts of economic activity by doing infrastructure projects, often regardless of if that infrastructure is truly needed.
Anyway, between US infrastructure neglect and China’s overbuilding the middle ground of building railway that is actually needed exists (and is probably better demonstrated by some other countries).
@torb @sinabhfuil @feijoa We actually have a word for the phenomenon: 基建狂魔 (lit. "infrastructure monster"). Also, local officials attract these projects to show off (though I suppose that's similar to the rest of the world).
Of course, how the labour for building these infrastructure is treated remains to be discussed...
Japan is probably the middle ground here (at least in terms of railways).