Cars are great; that is, if you live in an environment suited to them. It's always wonderful to journey through the countryside, be it farmland or middle-of-nowhere roads. But dare to enter the city? Prepare for Satan's domain. A city built for cars is simply an oxymoron. Looking forward to this weeks writings.
Yep, definitely in America. There was once a time when that wasn't the case; interurbans, trams, and cable cars were once widespread across the nation until their systematic destruction. Most existed not to profit from transportation services but to supply electric power to new communities and develop and sell real estate. Fortunately, this now mythical suburb persists on in other countries.
And NormieCons (Morons for short) are baited into defending the automobile in a liberal from a liberal position, when this world you are describing is an authentically conservative/traditional world
Cars are great; that is, if you live in an environment suited to them. It's always wonderful to journey through the countryside, be it farmland or middle-of-nowhere roads. But dare to enter the city? Prepare for Satan's domain. A city built for cars is simply an oxymoron. Looking forward to this weeks writings.
A city built for cars: a suburb
Yep, definitely in America. There was once a time when that wasn't the case; interurbans, trams, and cable cars were once widespread across the nation until their systematic destruction. Most existed not to profit from transportation services but to supply electric power to new communities and develop and sell real estate. Fortunately, this now mythical suburb persists on in other countries.
And NormieCons (Morons for short) are baited into defending the automobile in a liberal from a liberal position, when this world you are describing is an authentically conservative/traditional world