Carsharing with electric cars to help people transition to “car-free” please.
swap the 2nd and 3rd text and remove the “please don’t buy an ev” because they of course are fine as a transition measure and this is a good post
but this is a bad post otherwise
Electric cars are cool and all but you can’t have walkable cities and simultaneously store one vehicle per person on their streets
As with a lot of my responses here, you’re only responding within the context of cities, and even more narrowly you’re referring to downtown/commercial/recreational areas that need to be walkable.
You’re right to say we should have more walkable cities, however it’s not a valid argument against electrifying vehicles.
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70% of eu residents live in ”urban clusters”. So I am ”only responding” for 70% of people, a number that will probably rise over time too.
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Not only downtown/commercial/recreational areas need to be walkable. Walkability is good in all areas if possible. It makes everything simpler for everybody.
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I am not arguing against the elcrification of cars, I am arguing for decreasing the number of cars over time simultaneously with elecrification.
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Eh. ICE cars < Electric cars < Good public transit and bike infra / walkable cities. I don’t see them as mutually exclusive, but swapping ICE cars for EVs alone won’t get us where we need to be.
exactly.
This is the take.
True, but good public transit is only really feasible at suburban population densities or higher.
High speed rail would work for linking rural communities together, but half of the people in those areas don’t live within walking/biking distance of town (especially when needing to transport goods) so the adoption of EVs should still be encouraged.
Okay, so, here’s the thing: car-centric design is the reason our cities suck. You’re 100% right that suburban sprawl in the enemy of good public transit, and that’s just one part of why it’s going to be critical to push for good urbanism in our city designs. Bad urban design that enforces car dependency is the enemy of so many of our goals, including climate change. Here’s just a short list of the stuff it fucks up:
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City Finances. Ever wonder why North American cities uniquely seem to sprawl out, with rich suburbs on the rims, and then rot from the center outward? It’s because the sprawled out car dependent suburbs don’t pay for themselves in taxes, and the more of them you build, the more you erode the ability of the city to stay solvent and pay for basic things, let alone nice things.
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Temperature: parking lots and wide ass roads basically work as giant heat batteries. Also related: they make your area more prone to flooding by reducing the permeable surfaces in your city.
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Public transit: basically, by setting a ceiling on the possible number of riders in a given catchment area for transit, you permanently kneecap your transit system and keep it broke and struggling forever. That means that your transit system will have fewer useful stops and lower frequency schedules, which make it even less useful to use, which means less riders, and so on and so forth.
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traffic: look, twenty people riding a bus takes up the space of a bus, which is, at a guess, about three realistically spaced cars (which at an average of 1.5 occupants per car, means 4.5 riders). To meet just the twenty people on a bus (NOT the bus’ capacity!), you need 20/1.5= ~13 cars / 3 car spaces per bus = the equivalent space of four busses. That is, not even with the bus at capacity, you need four times as much space to move the same amount of people in cars. If it comes to walking, bikes, and trains, it’s a total fucking laugh-out. There’s no way around it, cars ARE traffic. If you want a better driving experience, you need fewer cars on the road, not more. More lanes does not fix the problem.
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finances pt2: the city also has to spend a lot more money constantly rebuilding roads due to how quickly cars demolish the infrastructure they use. This is actually going to be MORE true with EVs, since they’re heavier. Yes, that also means busses cause a lot of damage too, but you can prevent a lot of damage by just making your city walkable and bikeable (or building the damn trains). Because you need a place to keep the car when you’re not using it, cities also end up losing a lot of space that would otherwise be used to host people or businesses to host idle cars sometimes (and just sit empty the rest of the time).
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public health: yeah, smog, okay, everybody knows that. Car centric infrastructure also contributes meaningfully to our obesity epidemic by ensuring that people never really have a reason to walk or bike anywhere. It’s bad for our mental health because you lose out on opportunities to run into and converse with other people, like your neighbors, because you’re driving instead of walking, biking, or taking the bus. It’s bad for everything alive because car tires, even from EVs, are responsible for 40% of oceanic microplastics. You know that 99% of samples seafoods are contaminated with microplastics? There’s a pretty good chance you’re eating a side of tire dust with your Camerones a la diabla. You’re also breathing it in and just kind of existing in a cloud of microplastics tire dust.
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Climate: duh
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Economic opportunities and housing: car centric urban development doesn’t necessarily require that single family homes are the only thing that gets built, but it certainly seems to encourage it. Even if you are building apartments, it means that at least the same amount of space (usually more) that people are living in gets set aside to store their cars. That makes it more expensive for everyone, and inhibits the number of housing units that can get built. Car centric infrastructure also means that the bulk of the economic development in your city is going to be big box marts and drive throughs that are culturally bankrupt and extract wealth from your community. When cities allow more mixed use development, neighborhood commercial development, and walkability, there’s many, many, many more opportunities for small and medium businesses that generate and keep wealth in your community.
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cost of living: it’s really hard to beat the value of good public transit or a $200 uninsured vehicle being your primary mode of transport. Instead, we all end up paying an order of magnitude more to buy, maintain, fuel, and insure our own private vehicles. Oh boy, I sure do love being free to pay $700 a month to pay for my car and keep it safe and legal instead of $70 for all the train rides I could ever ask for, because that would be communism. (That’s not directed at you, btw)
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safety: look, it’s probably not great getting hit by a bike, but I’d rather my kid get hit by a bike than a Ford F-MINIVAN-IN-A-TRENCHCOAT-50. The more people we get out of cars and into public transit or bikes, the safer our streets will be to use.
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equity: look, not everyone can drive. Some people can’t afford it, others are prevented by physical or mental ability, and still others are shut out by government safety requirements. I’ve personally seen it two or three times where an old person living in a suburb with no access to services in walking distance gets their license pulled for safety reasons, and it’s basically a guarantee for a premature death. They either go to a home and lose their independence, or they suffer and stress until they die. Likewise, it means that our medically disabled people are functionally second class citizens in our transit system; people who are the MOST dependent on being able to make government and medical appointments, mind you. That’s fucked up.
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Misrepresentating talking points does not really help you in starting a good faith discussion or n swaying the opinion of (mis)informed people.
Both are good but one is considerably better than the other.
We (people in general, across the globe) need to reduce the number of cars, regardless of what fuels them. In rural zones for example I do think that public transportation could work way better than it does. (…although coming from a Latin American “X could work better” is always true. Nothing works properly in Latin America.) Then in cities it’s the same as above plus making things more walkable, bikeable, etc. Reduce the infrastructure needed for cars and you’ll reduce their demand, in a virtuous cycle.
If the leftover is fuelled by greener energy, so the better. But once you reduced the need for cars, the pressure for this is considerably smaller.
Let us not forget that electric cars do have a fair impact on the environment, through lithium mining. Although recent Chinese developments make sodium batteries more viable. And the source of the electricity is also a concern, if you’re simply burning coal for electricity you aren’t solving the problem, only moving it elsewhere.
Also it’s relevant to note that the fuel in combustible cars does not need to be petrol. For example where I live ethanol cars are a thing - sure, they’re a wee bit annoying in winter, but they work.
The big problem is that many people are buying into “electric cars are environmentally friendly” instead of “they’re not quite as bad as ICE cars”
Not quite as bad for the environment, and often just worse when it comes to all of the other reasons why cars are terrible.
Buy an EV only if your current car is shitting the bed. We cannot fight climate change through consumption. Lithium mining is awful for the environment and the individualization of transport is making it worse. EVs are absolutely an improvement but they are only a solution for the auto industry
Yeah, not spewing CO2 everytime we wanna go somewhere is great, but it doesn’t fix the tires spraying particles everywhere, plastic being used, the mining and refinement of materials, transport, or the waste when one breaks down or catches fire. Cars should be a luxury, not a necessity.
its not the cars that are bad, its the way you are forced to do stupid earth destroying work for billionares to have higher numbers on their account. if you limit driving to what you would need without the rich ripping you off, how much would you need to drive then? would you have the time to use slower public transport?
“People drive cars because of billionares.” - © Lemmy 2025
most people drive daily to work and back, and way too many who could do homeoffice have to do this only because of the corporation just “wanting” it, who’s the owner of the corporation? other corporations, funds, banks, following the money, guess what you’ll find? more malicious money.
How do you propose to solve these issues? Find a new job for everyone that can be done at a computer? Bring down multinational corporations?
Or make the situation slightly better by removing those daily emissions?
No, yes, and yes
there hasn’t been a single solution for all problems since humans sort of know that solutions can exist. a bit of every step towards a better situation, and a bit more and more until it fits. i cannot say when it will fit, but destroying the future of whole generations is more like the definition of unfit than an achievement. it might be seen as glory by some confused and rich, but its filthyness in reality.
reduce demand-producers, reduce overall irrelevant work, that is i.e. all work done solely for increasing numbers on bank accounts that don’t even change anything for that account owner any longer. we do ship things around the world that really should get processed locally. there are many things that are wrong only for keeping the pyramid schemes of the rich active.
Yeah, so in the context of cars, a small step in the right direction is the introduction of electric cars to replace ICE cars. It’s a feasible and available step. I’m not hearing any other currently feasible ideas, and saying “just use public transport/bikes” is not a solution for every human who currently has a car.
And what about all the power needed to manage those systems and networks? Should we just go back to hunting and gathering?
Daddy musk says I haven’t hit my mileage quota for the day
The last generation of billionaires. The ones that ripped up trolley tracks.
'Member those trolly tracks that served all the rural communities in the world until they were ripped up? Hey I 'member!
This is literally right-wing propaganda. The anti-car movement is about cities where most of the population lives. No one is saying people shouldn’t drive around rural areas, until a better system becomes practical.
You didn’t state that in your response though, right? Your response was general.
And how is it right wing propaganda if I’ve pointed out a reality? Public transport is not available or viable for all rural communities. Propaganda?
It’s right wing propaganda to distort the conversation to be about rural people when it never was about that.
It would be like arguing against vaccines because they don’t work against heart attacks. Like… OK? No one claimed they do.
I also want to say our usernames are very apt for this debate
Explain how the meme excludes rural areas, because it seems pretty general and not city-specific to me.
Are you trying to argue that rural populations are not included in the full set of populations who use cars? Of course you’re not, because that would be silly.
“Right wing propaganda” - what a ridiculous claim to make
Electric bikes are p cool tho 👍
Hell yeah they are, thank you chad
Electric cars do more harm than good long-term. They are green washing at it’s finest: legitimising the most harmful form of transportation and postpone the much needed implementation of a car free society
So what should people in areas not serviced by public transport do?
It’s not an individual problem so you can’t solve it individually. It’a a systemic issue
Drive? No one’s out here saying rural folks need to stop driving or else. The anti car stance is about reducing driving – recognizing our over reliance on cars is big problem, more cars is not a solution, and that electric cars placate people into thinking theyre doing something good for the environment ie greenwashing, like what you’re doing now.
They’re better. They’re not good.
They’re better! We agree.