- Joined
- Mar 6, 2024
They're always looking for a soundbite, but the follow-through is always lacking. The urbanist crowd is the same way - plenty of noise about walkable and carless (not even the more reasonable less-car) transport, very little talking about the density requirements of transit and the difficulties of right-of-way and large-scale construction.But then stuff happened like rapid inflation (and a bunch of poultry farm fires) and decided to pull the plug on their "commitment" in the early 2020s.
In other cases, they don't decide to make changes and prices shoot up. Ironically, these progressive policies just end up fucking over the lower-income brackets anyway.
Old, correct quote: "Politics is the art of the possible."Of course they will, eventually. At least here in Europe they're openly saying they will - "Don't worry about the new insane emission standards/mandatory EVs etc., if it turns out to be implausible they'll just revise the laws!" Well except, I or anyone who isn't insane could tell you were implausible years ago when they were first proposed, and carmakers are still having to spend eye-watering amounts of money trying to meet them, it's not something you do at once. All that money is being wasted, and the costs are obviously being passed on to customers.
Modern, incorrect interpretation: "Policies demand the impossible."