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Smart Romance by Rena Rani's avatar

I think what is most frustrating about this set of arguments re cars is how much I want to agree with it but have seen firsthand that it is impossible, at least where I live.

In the Lincoln Park neighborhood of Chicago it has become downright dangerous to be a pedestrian post covid. Yes, of course, we still do it - but every single day cars run stop signs and red lights. This year the city passed a law that allows bike riders and motorized scooter riders to legally treat red lights as yield signs. I routinely see cars go 60 and even 70 miles an hour down my neighborhood streets if there is no traffic preventing the speed.

And giving traffic tickets or speeding tickets seems to have fallen completely out of favor. The common understanding is that cops no longer do that so you might as well drive as you please, screw the general populace.

It has made urban living materially less compelling and ensures it will be many years before my children have the freedom to move around the city independently.

In general this seems to encapsulate much of my experience with the general attitude towards children and society that has played out in recent years - the individual should never have to subsume their desires, however minute, to what might be best for others or society collectively. And the wants or needs of children no longer matter more than grown adults.

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Andie's avatar

It’s cars all the way down, man.

Safetyism is in an arms race with ever faster, bigger cars which pose a real risk to children. Vehicle crashes cause the second-most deaths in children (second only recently to guns). I think parents are correctly gauging the risk that drivers pose to unattended children and thus keeping them either inside, in back yards, or under supervision at all times. It sucks for everyone!

And of course it’s the car that gave rise to our sprawling suburbs, the fenced-off, spread-out opposite of a village.

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