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PunchyHamster 6 hours ago

I feel that's more "US public transport being bad"

nervousvarun 5 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Right as an American this reads like "American who's never been to large Asian cities like Tokyo, Seoul, Beijing etc..

esseph 7 minutes ago | parent | next [-]

[delayed]

christophilus 5 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

I'm with you. Tokyo is incredible. It's the only large city I've ever been to where I left thinking, "I'd love to live there."

Transportation in Japan is a whole other level compared to my experiences in Germany and Austria.

I've never been to England, though, so can't make that comparison.

dasil003 4 hours ago | parent | next [-]

London and Berlin felt pretty comparable to me, with the airport situation better in London but the biking situation better in Berlin (marginally).

Tokyo is just on another level entirely.

adastra22 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

You should visit Taipei.

s_dev 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

A big problem in America is the entrenchment that is happening. People are becoming so polarised there is no common ground left for discussions and people aren't open to new ideas or thinking.

I genuinely feel I can't even discuss this with many Americans. They stalwartly believe car culture is superior in every single aspect, any deviation from this narrative is simply met with 'you don't understand'.

I recall in Ireland they asked an American on public TV what he thought of one of the few pedestrians only streets in Dublin (Liffey Street). He pointed out that he would be sorry for the loss of the trade on that street for the business involved compared to if cars were allowed to drive on it. It's then pointed out they make way more money since the transition as it's a city centre location with enormous footfall.

He just counters that's not possible and cited some example in the US.

wat10000 2 minutes ago | parent | next [-]

There was a big argument on my local (American) Nextdoor recently because someone encountered a line of cars on a road that had recently had a bike lane added to it. People were outraged about bike lanes. And not just in the sense that they had to pay (via taxes) for something they didn't feel was useful. The fact that the lane even existed was an affront. They seemed to actually believe that the bike lane caused delays for cars merely by existing.

DrScientist 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

As I understand it the US car lobby had a big hand in designing modern America, in such a way that for most cities it really isn't possible to use anything else.

On the other hand a lot of European cities were laid out in the time of horse and cart.