(I mean to say that it is A factor, not THE singular cause)

Or rather it resembles a mythical beast, part of the hydra of American societal collapse. We're all alienated and isolated from each other, further and further removed from viewing each other as fellow human beings or fellow citizens in a nation. What causes someone to snap and arbitrarily decide to find a crowd of people (frequently schoolchildren) with the express purpose of committing mass murder? We know that entitlement and rage play huge parts, as does this alienation. If you view other people more as competition, as enemies, as obstacles or threats, you'll more likely find it easier to commit mass slaughter.

Capitalism splits us apart like this. As does car culture. Americans are so fucking car-brained, another cause/effect of this alienation. Waiting in a queue, already intolerable in a standing-and-waiting context, infuriates even the most patient person if they're "stuck in traffic". Fellow citizens become threatening obstacles by default. When driving, the only real means of communication are expressions of rage (horns, screaming, middle finger, et. all). You're not just waiting to place your order in a cheap restaurant or coffee shop, you're stuck in traffic that's backed up onto the street waiting for the drive-thru.

When driving, pedestrians are inconveniences to your personal space and entitlement. Other cars are even worse; barely recognizable as human-operated, they're metallic monsters rushing at lethal speeds around you, cutting you off, getting in the fucking way, going to slowly or too fast, and making your day that much worse. Bicyclists are demoted to literally subhuman in the driver's mind.

American society is rapidly innovating new and exciting ways to reduce face-to-face interactions between humans. Kids are packed off to school, leaving the adults to work remotely or in jobs whose main role is getting screamed at from a car window. We're preferring more and more to remain in our pod-homes, interfacing with our friends and coworkers and bosses and the world through a computer screen. It's easier than ever to shop for anything from the computer too, further reducing time spent outside with its distasteful human interaction.

When it's time to leave the home-pod, our default behavior is to seek the comfort of the familiar and travel in the mini pod. This pod will rocket around cities at high speeds, coming uncomfortably close to other such traveling pods which are concealing their own fetal occupants. These metallic wombs grow ever larger, more spacious, more luxurious and even decadent, at the expense of all life and environments around them. They may park at a store where an underpaid clerk will rush out goods to be loaded like ants shuttle crumbs to the nest, the drive-thru experience brought to groceries with equally minimal human interaction. Or perhaps they'll crawl through a fast-food line, delivering automatic orders on apps or chatbots and waiting for a hand to thrust a bag into a side orifice to deliver nutrients straight into the human's gullet. Maybe one car will smash into another, at which point other cars will arrive to deploy their own special symbiotic humans who may deploy even more depraved violence of their own.

Like a triple-headed ouroboros, the alienation and violence and cars all feed and birth each other.

  • Nagarjuna [he/him]
    ·
    2 年前

    Cars shouldn't even encourage individualistic thinking. Traffic flows so much better if you leave space, make space, and zipper. That means thinking as a collective. Americans are militant individualists before they even set foot in a car.

    Like. Let's put it this way: The Netherlands are rates the best country for driving in Europe and a lot of their "pedestrian friendly" infrastructure is also designed so cars have to stop less. They love cars and driving but have a less fucked approach to it.