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|    rec.autos.driving    |    Automobile discussion (general)    |    162,178 messages    |
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|    Message 161,282 of 162,178    |
|    Wise TibetanMonkey, Most Humble Phi to Alan Baker    |
|    Re: Daylight Running Lights    |
|    18 Dec 14 01:26:27    |
      From: thetibetanmonkey@gmail.com              On Thursday, December 18, 2014 12:48:13 AM UTC-5, Alan Baker wrote:       > On 2014-12-18 02:27:53 +0000, Wise TibetanMonkey, Most Humble Philosopher       said:       >       > > On Wednesday, December 17, 2014 2:37:08 PM UTC-5, Alan Baker wrote:       > >> On 2014-12-17 19:30:50 +0000, Free Spirit, Chief of Quixotic Enterprises       said:       > >       > >>> In the process they have killed many communities, giving rise to the       > >>> infamous gated communities. Are you willing to pay to live in a       > >>> community where the kids can play? Then go to a gated communities.       > >>       > >> I'm sorry, but what evidence do you have that cars have "killed many       > >> communities"?       > >       > > You can't have communities without pedestrians/cyclists.       >       > 1. That's unsupported.       >       > 2. You can't support that cars have removed the ability for people to       > walk and bicycle.              Well, make the distances impossible to walk and make riding a bike grinding       and suicidal, and you get cities without people. That would probably be life       outside of NYC and a few downtown areas.       >       > > What you get is sprawl where nobody meets anyone. You must drive       > > everywhere, and public transportation is nearly dysfunctional.       >       > You might get NEW areas like that, but that wouldn't change old areas.              The old areas become ghettoes, where crime and squalor take over once vibrant       areas.       >       > >       > > It's a desert with an oasis here and there. And you must drive from       > > here to there.       >       > Examples?              Anywhere in America where the sprawl became prevalent. It's better to say       where it did NOT take place.       >       > >>       > >>>       > >>> I believe there's a medium ground between unleashed traffic and       > >>> controlled traffic, where the pedestrians feel safer. It may be argued       > >>> that the SUV (the American supersized SUV) has no place in civilized       > >>> cities.       > >>>       > >>> In many ways, I think the trend is toward feudalism. The knights and       > >>> lords rule over the land. We just need to get rid of the terminology of       > >>> "democracy." The lords rule from gated communities and castles. They       > >>> don't live with the commoners, whose concerns are always ignored.       > >>>       > >>> I don't think the "freedom of movement" is negotiable. It's not that       > >>> you don't accept certain risks involved with walking/riding a bike,       > >>> just that many solutions are really common sense. Speed cameras are       > >>> just one example.       > >>       > >> Speed cameras are simply a revenue grab. One can tell this because       > >> they're typically placed where almost everyone is exceeding the posted       > >> limit, and as has been studied and revealed, where that is happening,       > >> it is almost always the limit that is wrong and not the drivers.       > >       > > They are but they may accomplish something worthwhile. DUIs are also a       > > revenue grab but they somewhat mitigate the problem of drunk drivers.       >       > No. DUIs are NOT a revenue grab.       >       > You can tell this because the penalties for DUI...       >       > ...aren't monetary.              I hear it costs you around $8000 to get past such ticket. If that's not about       money, then what is.              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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