Not Just Bikes / r/fuckcars / Urbanists / New Urbanism / Car-Free / Anti-Car - People and grifters who hate personal transport, freedom, cars, roads, suburbs, and are obsessed with city planning and urban design

His 'argument' in the mancave video rests on the idea that at home you don't have exposed red brickereino walls and your kids will be loud, so instead go to a trendy millennial soypub (he doesn't actually mean divebar because most dives don't serve food and the ones that do suck because you know people go there to drink). What he's really upset over is other people being able to have private social events (i.e., ones without obnoxious redditors like him) that he can't insert himself into. The only people who make these kinds of arguments are socially retarded individuals who don't have the social skills to make friends.
Imagine being so lonely you seethe over other people who have friend groups that invite each other for house/apartment parties lol.
I like hunkering down at home and staying in my cave as much as anyone (more than most, probably, seeing as I'm an introvert), but I would rather have family and friends over than to meet outside if it's a regular thing. Dealing with transportation, parking, getting a table, and the inevitable consequences if someone goes hard on the alcohol is a lot easier in someone's house, and while it's nice to go out and try new things, it's also a surefire way to having to deal with all that stresses
$10 is an extremely conservative estimate for what I'm getting at. Heavy drinkers and hipster bars definitely more (average price in New York is $18-$20 in non-hipster establishments). I was going after the drink price at a moderately priced (mains $10-$20) local seafood restaurant.

Which only proves my point, it's not twice as much for liquor and other essentials, meaning your cost savings are even greater in urban areas. They'll never compare the price of a cheap car to a cargo bike (these things usually start at $1000) when a car is infinitely more useful. They rarely talk about transit prices at non-student subsidies, and often they use the most outrageous strawmen (payments on an $80k pickup truck). If money is no object, you'll enjoy almost all of the suburban amenities in an urban environment but that requires something like >$300k a year, wagies need not apply. The idea of suburbs was that they were cheaper to enjoy a better lifestyle with the small tradeoff of slightly increased commute times.
The urbanists never compare price-to-price, most bikes are a lot cheaper than cars, and this is why: you get what you pay for.

In addition, you'd think a YouTuber of all things would understand cost-of-living arbitrage because he works from home and can move as they please as long as they have a computer setup, fiber optic, and reliable electricity. The suburbs just trade off lower COL for larger lots, or something like that.
If you don't have that beefy of an engine than most modern trucks get surprisingly decent mileage, about similar to most sedans still on the road that I bet a lot of these people drive. But that's why a lot of people get those big trucks. They're hauling something. A trailer with landscaping supplies, a horse trailer, a toy hauler, loading up on hay, moving around farm equipment, or a camper. A beefy truck is the safest and the more headroom you have the less stressed the engine will be when hauling which equals longevity. You then have to use it as a daily driver unless you have the money to pay for insurance and maintenance and payments/registration on two cars. Most people don't. Or don't want to.
Yep, most modern trucks (especially the smaller ones with the 2.4L diesels with a turbo) can get pretty comparable mileage to a similar SUV or sedan and still load up on things. While if you're not using it for work or DIY you won't usually need it, it's probably not a huge sacrifice to have one compared to a smaller car if you do have needs like that.
 
Yep, most modern trucks (especially the smaller ones with the 2.4L diesels with a turbo) can get pretty comparable mileage to a similar SUV or sedan and still load up on things. While if you're not using it for work or DIY you won't usually need it, it's probably not a huge sacrifice to have one compared to a smaller car if you do have needs like that.
That's the talking point of most of these "trucks are bad now" videos make is that trucks "aren't work horses anymore" when showing an old F-150 single cab with a longer bed. The demands and needs of a blue collar worker have changed along with time. Before a truck could be a single serving machine when the owner might have had a second vehicle like a sedan to do family stuff with. A lot of families I see have just the truck now having to serve as a family transporter and a work vehicle that has to transport coworkers.

I don't understand their obsession with wanting trucks to be as utilitarian and shitty as possible. Even if you buy a Civic theses days it's going to come with basic luxuries. It makes life nicer if when you're driving your daughter around she can watch Paw Patrol in the back or your adult friends in the back don't have to have their legs crushed by the front seat.

Screenshot_20250330_091024_Brave.png
Whenever I see a comment like this I'm reminded of a quote by Brandon Herrera about people who think the SKS is better and didnt need to be replaced. "Yeah it's so much better you can tell this by the amount of countries who aren't using it".
 
That's the talking talking point of most of these "trucks are bad now" videos is they "aren't work horses anymore" when showing an old F-150 single cab with a longer bed. The demands and needs of a blue collar worker have changed along with time. Before a truck could be a single serving machine when the owner might have had a second vehicle like a sedan to do family stuff with. A lot of families I see have just the truck now having to serve as a family transporter or has to drive coworkers to work.
Every guy I know who has said he wants a single cab truck has immediately followed it up with "my wife will kill me if I bring home a truck that doesn't fit our kids".
 
Where I live a $10 mixed drink would get you lynched, unless it was a Bloody Mary where they literally put three entire sliders on the stick and serve it in a big glass (and yes a local bar near me does that). Around here tap beers are typically about five bucks and mixers are about seven, and that's not during Happy Hour where you can spend as little as $4 on mixers and $3 on beers.

That's similar to what I could expect to pay at bars, but people really need to get out into the country more. I've bought rounds a small town bars that come to a little over $10. If the hipster douches are paying $10 or more per beer (which probably explains why they all like to drink 7% IPAs or stronger) it's little wonder they can't afford a car.
 
That's similar to what I could expect to pay at bars, but people really need to get out into the country more. I've bought rounds a small town bars that come to a little over $10. If the hipster douches are paying $10 or more per beer (which probably explains why they all like to drink 7% IPAs or stronger) it's little wonder they can't afford a car.
These aren't even the country bars, country dive bars around here will charge you about $3.50 for a beer. It's just that I live in literally the drunkest state in the union and we have a shit ton of local brewers and distillers. Plus cost of living here is generally low.
 
Jason promoted a video from a Dutch channel about how to prevent your bike from getting stolen in the Netherlands.

1743355314210.png


Except the bait and switch is the video (which is spoken in Dutch but has English subtitles) says it's gonna happen, bikes are cheap, deal with it.

1743355407957.png

1743355432121.png

1743355540040.png


Her actual solution at the end is to make your bike so ugly that no one wants it.

1743355604644.png


This is a new level of owning nothing and being happy.
 
Jason promoted a video from a Dutch channel about how to prevent your bike from getting stolen in the Netherlands.

View attachment 7155712

Except the bait and switch is the video (which is spoken in Dutch but has English subtitles) says it's gonna happen, bikes are cheap, deal with it.

View attachment 7155718
View attachment 7155719
View attachment 7155725

Her actual solution at the end is to make your bike so ugly that no one wants it.

View attachment 7155729

This is a new level of owning nothing and being happy.
c1a-1755583404.jpg
 
Trains are good because you can play video games while riding them:
I once rode in a friend's 90s conversion van as a kid that had a n64.

It's interesting they never bring up Mackinac. It's an island where cars are banned and everyone uses either bikes or horses for transport. Emergency vehicles like ambulances are of course available though.
Apparently in winter you can snowmobile around and drive them from the mainland to the island when the ice is thick enough.
58955f17e23b997157b020a19b650363--mackinac-island-snowmobiles.jpg


Most of those trucks get about 20mpg nowadays.
Was driving a newish silverado recently, it was reading 23 when doing mostly highway driving. On the city it was 18. That's more than my current smaller and older truck gets. Not a fan of the giant LED screens on the dash though. It took me far too long to figure out how to change the radio station.
 
I like my double cab pickup, it helps that it has a flip-down midgate so I can choose to put long stuff in the bed or use the back seat for storage or a little of both. I do wish the thing was smaller though.

The only true pickup has an 8 foot bed and a bench seat.
 
Was driving a newish silverado recently, it was reading 23 when doing mostly highway driving. On the city it was 18. That's more than my current smaller and older truck gets. Not a fan of the giant LED screens on the dash though. It took me far too long to figure out how to change the radio station.
At work our shop pickups are a 2500 Silverado HD and a 2500 Denali HD, both with the Duramax diesel and the tow package. Even towing five tons those trucks both get about 15mpg highway at 70ish mph.

@DavidS877 Only fags complain about 6 foot beds, they're plenty big enough to fit things in. Even full sheets of plywood and full length boards. It won't kill you to angle them on the tailgate or drop the gate and tie them down. Quit being a little bitch. You can also fit three wheelbarrows plus tools or a Dingo in the bed if it's six foot.
 
Jason promoted a video from a Dutch channel about how to prevent your bike from getting stolen in the Netherlands.

Very telling because it says three things that urbanists never talk about:
- If bike theft can happen in the Netherlands, a supposedly-enlightened high-trust society, how on earth can one function with a bicycle in an average American city, even one that isn't a corrupt deep-blue shithole?
- Anyone who promotes cycling, whether urbanists or spandex warriors, hate cheap bicycles. Of course they're going to be elitist.
- An ugly bike brings more problems than it's worth. When I was in college, there was someone with a bicycle spray-painted gold. Out of thousands of bicycles it made it extremely visible, but it still makes you look like a retard riding it and criminals do not give a shit of what color it is because it can be re-painted. If it's cheaper AND locked more securely than other bicycles near it that's the key to avoid getting it stolen.

None of this changes the perception that bicycles (as everyday "vehicles") are used overwhelmingly by children, college students, and the poor.
 
The funny thing about this comic. If I recall this is incorrect, the net amount of happiness does not go up. The trauma/negative emotions someone experiences having something stolen from them is stronger than whatever positive feelings someone experiences from stealing it.

This is a new level of owning nothing and being happy.
This is another level of hippy nonsense that makes me ironically identify with North American cyclists more than this person. At least they still give you pragmatic tips to prevent theft such as putting a metal cable tie around parts you don't want stolen and which locks to use. If you own anything you care about, you'll worry about it getting stolen.

Her actual solution at the end is to make your bike so ugly that no one wants it.
Living that sort of existence sounds sad. I don't mean in the way that you can't be happy with less, but in the way that you'd intentionally own things that even you consider undesirable just to purposely aim low in life so other people wont take it. Sounds like a sort of bad way to live.
 
Before a truck could be a single serving machine when the owner might have had a second vehicle like a sedan to do family stuff with. A lot of families I see have just the truck now having to serve as a family transporter and a work vehicle that has to transport coworkers.
And you can still roll around with people sitting in the bed with the stuff if you really need to move that many people. A dual-purpose vehicle saves you a second car!

Though really, if you need that much hauling, you usually get a big van or small truck.
Jason promoted a video from a Dutch channel about how to prevent your bike from getting stolen in the Netherlands.

View attachment 7155712

Except the bait and switch is the video (which is spoken in Dutch but has English subtitles) says it's gonna happen, bikes are cheap, deal with it.

View attachment 7155718
View attachment 7155719
View attachment 7155725

Her actual solution at the end is to make your bike so ugly that no one wants it.

View attachment 7155729

This is a new level of owning nothing and being happy.
Take off the back wheel, lock the front wheel, and bring it with you as a security measure. Sure, Jan. That'll get people to bike.
The funny thing about this comic. If I recall this is incorrect, the net amount of happiness does not go up. The trauma/negative emotions someone experiences having something stolen from them is stronger than whatever positive feelings someone experiences from stealing it.
Negativity bias I think.
 
I remember going to Indiana years ago and tried to buy alcohol from a convenience store. They wouldn't let me buy the stupid thing "because it's a Sunday." Is that just some weird law enforced by a city or county, rather than the state? I couldn't believe the ridiculousness of it.
Even as Cucked as Ontario is on Alcohol sales you can still buy from the LCBO on a Sunday. Albeit hours on Sundays are only 11 am to 7pm.
 
Jason promoted a video from a Dutch channel about how to prevent your bike from getting stolen in the Netherlands.
Look at how tiny her apartment is:
1743386239158.png1743386368620.png

I hope that's a dorm room because if not, that's a literal pod.

No closet, kitchen, or bathroom. Just a shelf, mini-fridge, and sink.

This is what urbanists want you to live in.
 
Look at how tiny her apartment is:
View attachment 7157144View attachment 7157151

I hope that's a dorm room because if not, that's a literal pod.

No closet, kitchen, or bathroom. Just a shelf, mini-fridge, and sink.

This is what urbanists want you to live in.
She probably rents a room in a row house and that's her room. So yeah, essentially a dorm.
 
She probably rents a room in a row house and that's her room. So yeah, essentially a dorm.
I believe in Europe, non-college "dormitories" actually exist. If I had to share a shower and toilet amongst strangers I would hope I'm incarcerated, at least there they don't expect you to pay rent.
 
Back