triguyrn
TriguyRN
triguyrn

They’re saying the sun is causing global warming?

I can totally see why Democrats love this movement so much. The hypocrisy is hilarious.

Iron, magnesium, and volcanic material can’t be good for your paint job. How about they put their energy into something more constructive than tagging their beautiful city. All that extra sediment is washing to a stream or river somewhere.

I wonder how the people who drove through it feel about it?

So by trying to save the world they decided to dump chemicals all over the ground? Seems legit.

Hot takes and “disruption” overtook any kind of logic or common sense at Giz a long time ago.

Did you actually see what is classified as an urban area?

I drive about 30,000 miles a year, and am entirely comfortable with the choices I’ve made. Commuting is not only a fixed part of my human experience, I wouldn’t want to live without it. My commute is my sanctuary, my therapy, my 45 minutes, twice a day, where I can just relax and enjoy being alone. Just me and NPR. I

Everything about it reeks of a privileged girl sitting in a trendy hipster coffee shop in NYC, staring out the window at a line of cars, thinking “I know what will solve everything! Just ban cars! I don’t need a car, I walk to my vegan yogurt store! Why can’t everyone just live in NYC and not own cars!?”

Nuking LA and NYC would rid the rest of us of most of this harebrained asshattery.

Exactly. This article is the most myopic trash I’ve read all day.

Kill all people with under 100 IQ points. It’s ruthless but so good.

Alyssa,

Typical Gizmodo article.

Honestly, 1/3 person genocide may be easier than banning cars.

5) A lot of the reason people commute is they can’t afford to live by their workplace.

Even this I’m skeptical that it would reverse the CO2 levels. To me it seems the easiest method to solve climate change and keep the lifestyle we currently have is to kill off 1/3 of the earth’s population.

What about people that don’t live in cities? Are we going to invest in effective public transportation for towns of 500 or 1,000 people? What about actual rural areas? Or are we going to force everyone to move to cities and abandon rural areas (ya know, the places where all the food comes from?). This is seriously a

If the United States relied more on bicycles, it could help in five ways. (1) Emissions (2) Reliance on foreign oil (3) less credit debit per citizen (4) obesity reduction (5) more people living within cities where they work instead of commuting in, revitalizing neighborhoods.