The Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, everyone š¤¦
The Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, everyone š¤¦
As someone who drives a car in the UK, Iād like to point out that this is a load of old bollocks designed to drum up votes from Boomers ahead of whatās looking to be an absolute embarrassment of an election for the Tories in the next year or so.
Almost none of these promises have any actual substance to them, and are largely just meaningless slogans designed to rile up the Boomers* who have spent their lives being taught that public transport and bikes are what poor lefties do.
If Labour have been quiet on these issues, itās because they know that their best election strategy at this point is to just let the Tories flap on, doling out enough rope with which to hang themselves.
*not all Boomers, obviously, but they really are the majority of Tory voters
Well Iām not a UK driver but all of those ideas sound good to me, because cars give people freedom to go wherever they want and help the economy keep going. Tons of people donāt have access to public transit and they do have cars, and they need them to get to work and the rest of the places they go to live their lives.
Sure, build more public transit to help out too, and create incentives for pollution reduction and all that. But if you want the regular people on your side you will have to stop trying to take their freedom to drive away.
I tell you what, Iāll go one better, that I hope illustrates my point. I told this to every American I ever met and, so far, only 1 learnt from it.
Itās OK to be hungry.
You have the āfreedom to eat whenever you wantā, but you can eat so much that you die. You can eat as little as you like, so little that you also die. Your freedom you eat whatever you want, whenever you want us an illustration, driven by outrageous commercialism.
You do not have the freedom to eat whatever you want, whenever you want. You think you do.
Way to dodge the question with a philosophical yarn. You probably just donāt have a real answer.
Everybody knows about the vices of excess consumption. That is not a useful metaphor relevant to individual freedom. Living a free life doing what you want does not require or even imply consuming an excess of anything.