• @notaviking
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    34 months ago

    Some cities this can work, but some cities have been engineered to keep certain people out, we call it a tax on the poor, they cannot afford to live in the city, so they must stay outside like 30km minimum, and travel everyday in and out, about 1.5h a shot, so 3 hours total, plus 9 hours work. And for a salary if the employer is generous and pays above minimum wage we are talking US$250/month. 20-30% of this goes to transport (thank the taxi mafia which government does nothing against). When the government did put cycle lanes in our economic hub of a city, the poor decried since it took their public transport lane and gave the rich a nice cycle line to avoid all the traffic since they live close to work. Also, rampant crime makes it so that if you are poor and cannot afford security, good luck keeping your bike that won’t be stolen for scrap metal or whatever for a Nyaope hit (heroin with HIV anti retrovirals that have hallucinogenic properties as a side effect)

    South Africa and referring to Johannesburg, CBD to be specific. Yeah and our piss poor unemployment of 33% officially, closer to 50% unofficially, makes sure that if you are dissatisfied you can be easily replaced. Entrenched oppression is fucking hectic.

  • @[email protected]
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    fedilink
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    34 months ago

    I like how the last road made a lane just for buses as well. “The train of the street”

  • @nucleative
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    24 months ago

    The video argues that where bike lanes have been installed, there has never been a decrease in the level of service for cars on the same road.

    But I was having a hard time understanding why exactly that is and only heard one main point - the protected turn lane for cars that uses the parking area before an intersection.

    Is that really it? Or has the article uncovered that lanes in NY were just way too wide to begin with and bike lanes have just managed to recover some of that wasted space?