jalopurbanist
jalopurbanist
jalopurbanist

A lot of our transit, a public resource frequently used by poor/middle class Americans, is funded by the gas tax. Cheap gas encourages further expansion of our unsustainable car-dependent society. How else are we going to change?

But not a debate any politician would dare begin. Which is why I feel it’s important to bring up as much as possible.

Most Jalopnik readers are secretly 25% slack-jawed hillbilly, at least in political views/desire to hoon (woooo!!).

I think even most Jalopnik readers will agree it’s better for the environment, but the real gain here is in quality of life. I know it’s a very vague statement and a wishy-washy metric, but it’s been shown that quality of life is much higher in less car dependent societies.

Wat. You think we have high gas taxes in the US? Far from it buddy.

The car-centric urban planning is what failed you there. Americans like driving, so we design cities that can only be traversed by cars, and now that we can’t easily reach destinations by walking/mass transit, we are forced to use cars and build more car infrastructure and car-based destinations. So the cycle

Easy. Just ask anybody living in any other first world country. They have great mass transit systems and a great quality of life, and in small cities too. But most importantly, they’ve learned that for most people (read: not Jalops), living without a car is just plain better.

Just for comparison’s sake, us vs every other civilized country in the world.

Does this get-over-it attitude apply to all decade-old traumatic events? Now-adult child abuse victims? Cosby victims? He obviously would benefit from some therapy, but I guess my question is, is this something that he should be blamed/shamed for? Therapy isn’t always easy; sometimes it can be really hard to talk

The fact that this comment doesn’t have more likes is one of my biggest issues with Jalopnik/Jalopnik readers. Like I’m just like you (cis/het male), but holy sexism batman, can we stop with the booth babes already? It’s less about letting the bikes speak for themselves and more about stopping the objectification of

“Get in loser, we’re going shopping.”

Couldn’t find my favorite version of those “Like a Rock” commercials, the one with a shot of a shirtless dude dumping water on himself from a huge bucket. All the redneck commentators on youtube were so uncomfortable with the homoeroticism of that shot. If somebody could find it and post it here, that would be cool...

Uhh, did you even read the article you posted? “Speeding kills more New Yorkers than drunk driving and cellphone use at the wheel put together.”