https://twitter.com/johnrobertsFox/status/1422996114593259521

Personally don't think this is the right path at all and is going to effect rural, poor and anyone without proper public transit (soooo a ton of people) unfairly. I understand the idea behind it but there are so many better ways to deal with the driving problem they've created.

  • regul [any]
    ·
    edit-2
    3 years ago

    How do you think we're going to deal with water shortages?

    Climate change necessarily demands a reduction in "quality of life" for the first world.

    And there is literally no way to serve the massively spread out rural and suburban American population with mass transit. It is not feasible.

    You do not get to continue to live in an exurb and commute into the city in the era of climate change, even if you're poor. I'm sorry. The least sustainable lifestyles will feel the pain the most, that is unavoidable. We should not be investing money into sustaining unsustainable lifestyles. The answer to "the exurban and rural poor will suffer under increased driving costs" is not to expand mass transit to cover the farming town. That is lighting money (and the planet) on fire. The answer is to make land usage in cities (where sustainable living is possible due to economies of scale) more intensive.

    • Nagarjuna [he/him]
      ·
      3 years ago

      You do not get to continue to live in an exurb and commute into the city in the era of climate change, even if you’re poor.

      There's no housing in the city. There's no jobs in the burbs. You've got to fix that problem before you start punishing people for getting priced out of the city. If you pass this tax before fixing that issue like Biden is doing that doesn't move us towards sustainability, it just turns the ratchet.

      • regul [any]
        ·
        3 years ago

        Every mile you drive a car is already turning the ratchet. The ratchet is already turning. We really have no time to delay taking any action on climate change.