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NoPotatoes wrote

Oops I dropped a nail in the street. Will a commercial truck run over it, or will someone traveling to their work? If the latter, will their insurance replace the tire?

These questions become easier to answer when few, if any, normal people drive vehicles.

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AnarcheAmor wrote

But not only is that beside the point, you're asking for a change to the degree of millions of people. People are gonna drive cars where it's most convenient and sustainable for them and cities are designed to make cars the primary form of transportation for the majority of people. How are you gonna convince entire cities to restructure themselves to dissuade car use? It's easier, way easier, and more effective for all parties involved for those same cities to give the boot to their largest carbon emitters. They don't because those same emitters are a good source of productivity and money.

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Garbear104 wrote

You break the roads and make it not really much of a choice anymore.

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