I agree, a more likely solution is just to keep incrementally increasing transaction costs for car ownership (insurance, gas tax, accident liability) until people choose to give them up and switch to Robot Lyft voluntarily. The problem is that's the n**l*b*r*l solution, so then only rich people will own cars.
For this reason, to circle back to the original topic of the thread, I support literally any increase in gas tax no matter how large. Although since our goal is to extinguish private ownership we then also need to come up with an actual mechanism for funding roads.
Banning cars is an even bigger nonstarter than banning guns. They might be the only thing people like more. That's not to say that we also shouldn't invest in public transportation, but at this point a car is more than just a way to get around. It's a status symbol and a major part of the culture.
Not to mention that, in some parts of the country, going from town to town without a car can be a serious pain.
I absolutely love driving. It's one of my favorite things to do. But the minute there's a feasible movement on banning human-driven cars (in the cities, at least), I'm on board.
Also, raising the price of fuel affects the price of anything that gets transported by something that runs on fuel.
Wonderful.
Look at him trotting out a fact he learned today. So cute.
I mean, public transportation is way more ecofriendly than cars and I'm pretty sure rail is too.
No one is saying "ban all cars" (well maybe pigeon is) but reducing the number of people driving would be a great thing for public health and the environment.
Obviously not, was just referencing something interesting I heard. No one here thinks we can get the number of people who drive down to like 15% or whatever overnight.
Banning cars is an even bigger nonstarter than banning guns. They might be the only thing people like more. That's not to say that we also shouldn't invest in public transportation, but at this point a car is more than just a way to get around. It's a status symbol and a major part of the culture.
The major downsides to high car ownership are a problem with a real-world technological solution that's going to happen inside of like 10 years. Cheap, efficient EVs will decimate internal combustion cars for daily commuters, which neuters the climate impact, and improvements in self-driving and computer assisted driving will help reduce accidents. Trying to legislate the outcome is just asking for pushback and misery.
I've been comparing car culture and gun culture for a while (the illusion of control people build around them, the culture of independence, and so on), and I hadn't even considered the argument about rural areas some of you made here.
I absolutely love driving. It's one of my favorite things to do. But the minute there's a feasible movement on banning human-driven cars (in the cities, at least), I'm on board.
I'm open to the arguments about it affecting the poor adversely, though. That should have occurred to me already, bleh.
I don't know how many movies you watch but gas isn't that volatile. You can shoot that shit with a machine gun and have it not even light up.
There's also the fucking over of lots of rural poor people that kinda need cars to get around (no form of public transport is coming to my hometown for example) and rely economically on cars being mass produced to cut costs on their end.
Banning cars is an even bigger nonstarter than banning guns. They might be the only thing people like more. That's not to say that we also shouldn't invest in public transportation, but at this point a car is more than just a way to get around. It's a status symbol and a major part of the culture.
The major downsides to high car ownership are a problem with a real-world technological solution that's going to happen inside of like 10 years. Cheap, efficient EVs will decimate internal combustion cars for daily commuters, which neuters the climate impact, and improvements in self-driving and computer assisted driving will help reduce accidents. Trying to legislate the outcome is just asking for pushback and misery.
If we do away with personally owned cars and just have taxis, what do we do with car seats? They aren't exactly the kind of thing you want to install and uninstall every car ride, but you don't want to do without them.
Again, this is a horrible plan since many parts of the US have to rely on cars for transportation with no alternative.
except its not a fact. he was a slaver owner.
he's conflating the nullification crisis with the reasons for the civil war
Wonderful.
I mean, I feel like the solution is pretty obvious. Invest heavily in developing self-driving cars, issue commercial licenses for them to transit without drivers, then ban private car ownership entirely and force everybody to get memberships with self-driving taxi companies.
If necessary we can actually just set one up under the government but I bet the free market can work this one out.
I just don't think we'll ban private car ownership any time soon because of people with the bad, life-endangering opinions on display in this thread. But it's not like nobody can figure out what to do!
I dont know if Trump tweeted this. The grammar, including punctuation is above 5th grade pass.
Can I assume you're from the densely-populated Atlantic Northeast?
Because in the Pacific Northwest, that idea makes no sense. It's fine for metropolitan areas, sure, but our major cities are hundreds of miles apart from each other, with a lot of nature in the middle that is one of the major perks of living here. How do people access areas off the beaten path in a market-driven system where those areas aren't profitable to provide access to? "No more hikes kids, suddenly it costs $10,000 to drive to the wilderness."
And, as someone else suggested, kids. Kids are a pretty major pain in the ass when traveling now; carting around a car seat to install on every single vehicle you get into is a completely non-viable solution. I mean, unless you had a single company producing every car and car seat so everything was universal and it was literally a 3 second "snap into place" operation... but monopolies are bad. And even then, you're still carting around a car seat with you.
And would this be Federal or State driven? Because I live in one state and work in another (border town). How do I handle competing regulations on allowable transportation? These states weren't willing to work together to get a new bridge built between them, I don't trust them to drive sustainable transport options between them.
The logistics of phasing out cars in densely-populated urban areas make sense (I live in one and I'm mostly in favor of increased mass transit options). But you will never, ever, ever see the banning of private automobiles. And the market wouldn't want it. The auto industry is not going to voluntarily forego thousands or millions of private sales because other things are slightly more convenient for day-to-day commuting. You focus on making cars more efficient, promoting alternative and renewable energy sources as opposed to gasoline, and building up the mass transit infrastructure where it makes sense. But don't approach things with the elitist view of "the way I live is the way that everyone else should live regardless of their specific situation being completely different than mine." Because that just comes across as remarkably arrogant.
Wonderful.
No way in hell he wrote it.
I'm also wondering, since Trump has publicly shown his admiration for Andrew Jackson many times, has anyone ever asked him how opinion on the Trail of Tears or just anything about Jackson's borderline inhumane treatment of non-whites?
Currently, car manufactures are required to support cars for 7 years. Generally that's been about replacement parts and such. That was why GM refused to sell EV1s to anyone and instead destroyed them, because they'd already lost a lot of money and didn't want to have to keep supply lines open.A question I have about this idealized self-driving car utopia some people have.
Have you at all considered the security concerns with the cars themselves? I mean, haven't there been numerous reports of how various smart/internet appliances have had glaring security flaws and turned into parts of botnets or into listening devices and the like? Wouldn't that be a problem for these cars?
Companies already stop supporting software of devices only a few years old. Like, look at Nest, they dropped support of and disabled their home hub thing, screwing users of it. I can't honestly see a car company supporting software in cars for ages. So does that mean we'd have to start replacing a car as often one does a cellphone?
Whenever I see people talk glowingly of a smartcar future, I never see talk of these problems. They seem like major, major hurdles to me. So what's the proposed idea to this? Legislation that forces companies to support them? That may help a bit but given how often there are problems and holes in programming, I still don't like the idea of leaving driving to all the cars and taking humans out of the equation.
(I'm just really curious about this, as I said above, I have never seen talk about it. I feel like its ignored. Maybe I've just not seen it?)
Currently, car manufactures are required to support cars for 7 years. Generally that's been about replacement parts and such. That was why GM refused to sell EV1s to anyone and instead destroyed them, because they'd already lost a lot of money and didn't want to have to keep supply lines open.
I need more presidential revisionist histories.
Would Garfield have allowed Pearl Harbor to happen?
Would Carter have stopped New Coke?
A question I have about this idealized self-driving car utopia some people have.
Have you at all considered the security concerns with the cars themselves? I mean, haven't there been numerous reports of how various smart/internet appliances have had glaring security flaws and turned into parts of botnets or into listening devices and the like? Wouldn't that be a problem for these cars?
Companies already stop supporting software of devices only a few years old. Like, look at Nest, they dropped support of and disabled their home hub thing, screwing users of it. I can't honestly see a car company supporting software in cars for ages. So does that mean we'd have to start replacing a car as often one does a cellphone?
Whenever I see people talk glowingly of a smartcar future, I never see talk of these problems. They seem like major, major hurdles to me. So what's the proposed idea to this? Legislation that forces companies to support them? That may help a bit but given how often there are problems and holes in programming, I still don't like the idea of leaving driving to all the cars and taking humans out of the equation.
(I'm just really curious about this, as I said above, I have never seen talk about it. I feel like its ignored. Maybe I've just not seen it?)
I love car discussions because they bring up amazing phrases like "isn't that volatile."
Ideally I would like my transportation to be zero percent volatile. Just because you made an engine literally powered by hitting stuff until it explodes doesn't mean it's like a marvel of safety. Be real, it hits stuff until that stuff explodes. We can probably come up with safer things than manually exploding gasoline.
Commercial self-driving taxi systems would save rural poor people a ton of money because they'd no longer have to pay full price for a vehicle they use approximately 1% of the time and keep parked the other 99% of the time, assuming all liability and maintenance but getting no benefit.
It's even better for rural poor people because pickup trucks are even more subject to this problem. It's rarely the ideal vehicle but in the circumstances in which it is ideal nothing else will do, so everybody needs access to one, which means a huge number of people own them and plenty of people own them as a second vehicle. Robot Lyft can eliminate this necessity.
People don't replace their cars that often. Even if we had an EV self-driving Honda Civic by 2020 there would be heavily polluting, dangerous cars on the road for like 30 more years after that without legislative interference. That's a lot of unnecessary dead people and pollution!
Plus, as you yourself observed, people have weird destructive obsessions with their red convertible death machines, so it's probably unwise to assume that they will just rationally choose to phase out their car use and switch to more sustainable cars for economic reasons.
In a universe in which most cars are self-driving taxis, cars don't have to be designed agnostically. They can be designed with specialized roles like "taking somebody to the supermarket and coming back with groceries" or "going to work, carrying only one small bag" or, in this case, "taking a car-seat-bound child to a designated location."
Then they can just send the appropriate car for the situation.
Before car designs evolve they can just fake it by letting you request a car seat in your robot taxi.
It would be a typical Trump non answer defense that will blow up on twitter the following day.No way in hell he wrote it.
I'm also wondering, since Trump has publicly shown his admiration for Andrew Jackson many times, has anyone ever asked him how opinion on the Trail of Tears or just anything about Jackson's borderline inhumane treatment of non-whites?
As you point out, there are already plenty of stories about car hacking now. If a hacker wanted to kill you by hacking into your car today, they probably could do it. Increasing the automation probably doesn't change that. Similarly, plenty of vital infrastructure is vulnerable to hackers now but they rarely actually get hacked.
Software support is an interesting point but in robot taxi world the robot taxi companies will just have to solve it.
In terms of human participation, even at our current level of development, robots are way way better drivers than humans. They have LIDAR, for example, which evolution failed to provide us.
This is essentially fan-fiction. Rural areas already don't really have the population to have fleets of cars driving around them just waiting to quickly take people to other places. They're not going to have 10 different kinds of cars on the chance someone needs that particular one. According to the FHWA, the average American drives 13K miles per year. In my hometown, this translates to roughly 5K miles that my hometown drives per day (about 4 miles a day on average times 1200 people). You're going to need to back up the idea that you can guarantee the roving cars to immediately drive these 5K miles whenever the people in that town decide they want to go somewhere.
Software support is an interesting point but in robot taxi world the robot taxi companies will just have to solve it.
New GA6 poll (Anzalone)
https://twitter.com/ossoff/status/859229421412257792
Ossoff (D): 48
Handel (R): 47
Undecided: 5
It's a runoff so Ossoff and Handel are the only options. Besides a write in.I assume they're only counting votes between Ossoff and Handel to force someone over 50?
It's a runoff so Ossoff and Handel are the only options. Besides a write in.
Or those shitty foot powered kid scooter things.ban all cars
replace with motorcycles
And I'll go with human intuition over driving AI every time.
It's a runoff so Ossoff and Handel are the only options. Besides a write in.
Don't take this the wrong way, but this sentence sums up why I believe we'll eventually need to ban or heavily restrict car ownership.
Economic forces can't arbitrage someone out of a position that economic forces didn't arbitrage them into.
I'm honestly surprised that you are so willing to accept the Silicon Valley technolibertarian future. I would never trust those chuckle fucks to create a safe and fair system. You might as well put the Tobacco industry in charge of healthcare.
Also, if you are primarily focused on banning shit to save human lives, we're going to need to have a talk about sugar.
Ban private car ownership.
Technolibertarian.
Can't fucking win!
It's a hard thing to win at!
It's a hard thing to win at!
But seriously, do you trust those tech companies to do this right? Companies like Uber and Google are stampeding over each other to win the ability to refashion American infrastructure in their own image. It's not something I would trust to go particularly well.