this post was submitted on 24 Oct 2023
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No, people at universities typically understand that a better solution would be to use public transportation, however they also understand that doing so is a pipe dream and you have to fight against trillions of dollars to do so. Otherwise they wouldn't spend the time and effort to try and develop the technology in the first place. Seriously, what is the point of developing an electric car if you believe cars shouldn't exist? In that situation you're developing a technological dead-end.
In the meantime, our world is still burning and cars are shitting out more greenhouses gases.
Yes, because tearing up millions of square miles of suburban housing while displacing millions of people to compress it into a smaller space so that public transportation becomes feasible is definitely a realitic solution. New developments should be higher density and should have public transportation systems, however existing areas are kinda fucked from that standpoint.
The ones who were realistic did. You know people can believe something is bad, yet still engage in it or use it because the alternative isn't feasible, right? How many people still use plastic containers? How many people still drive cars? How many people still use social media? How many people still consume food with high-fructose corn syrup? How many people still call the cops in an emergency? How many people still use Amazon and/or Google? There are so many things that are bad for us, yet we still do them anyway, either because there's no alternative or because we lack the time, money and/or energy to cut them out of our lives.
Ideals are great, but they aren't grounded in reality and compromises have to be made. If you can't understand this, then you're dead weight for the people who are actually trying to make a difference.
I know you're trying to get a rise out of me, but c'mon, you can do better.
Well hallelujah, friends... the right-wingers have finally found a pretext that none of us can beat - they messed things up so badly that none of it can be fixed, and nobody should even try. I don't know why they just don't go public with that - they already have one believer right here.
You do understand that there are more uses for batteries than cars, right?
Plastic containers did't fall out of the sky - neither did cars. The people who benefit from their production doesn't live on Mount Olympus - we can strip them (and the political structures that enables them) of their power and fix these things. It's not some pipe dream or an ideal - it's literally the only way to guarantee humanity's continued survival on this planet.
The only thing you seem to have "grounded in reality" is that the destruction of literally everything should be "compromised" with. It seems the only thing you are willing to do is compromise - but I guess that's where the money is, huh?