• Flying Squid
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    247 months ago

    My dream car: An EV version of the 1955 Nash Metropolitan, seen here in this silly ad photo:

    (Sorry, it’s hard to find pictures that give a true indication of the smallness of the car. Also, mine would be the red and white two tone variety.)

    • I just want a tiny electric hatchback, like, Honda fit sized, that has like 150+ mile range, and doesn’t use an outdated charging standard. I’ve considered a Nissan Leaf but they are still sticking with the chademo charger port, which is way less common.

    • @Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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      7 months ago

      Yes!

      Even that was in an era or needlessly ego-boosting giant cars, going utilitarian to get a better product, better lives on average, even save resources - amazing (but with the cardinal sin of not being expensive enough and thus not as financially profitable).

      For the same reason I would love to get a normally viable car of much smol.

      Like a bit more modern version of Figaro:

      Or a sexy mid-engine Autozam:

      Kei cars are qewl!

  • @Samvega@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    557 months ago

    Humans have quite literally invented cars that are better at killing people, especially children.

    “I don’t want children to die in accidents,” say people as they drive huge masses of metal that might do just that.

    • @ContrarianTrail@lemm.ee
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      07 months ago

      Driving a truck and not wanting children to die in accidents are in-fact not in conflict with each other. Or are you implying that truck drivers do want them to die?

      • @Samvega@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        107 months ago

        Driving a truck and not wanting children to die in accidents are in-fact not in conflict with each other.

        Then design trucks which are not as deadly to pedestrians on impact.

        • @ContrarianTrail@lemm.ee
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          17 months ago

          Large vehicles are inherently going to be more dangerous to pedestrians than cars. If you make a truck the size of a car then it no longer functions in the role it was intented for. Why is everyone so focused on trucks anyway? The nose height on most vans is compareable and on semi trucks it double the height of a pickup yet nobody seems to be complaining about those.

      • Krzd
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        47 months ago

        No, but it clearly isn’t important enough to them to influence their choice.

        • @ContrarianTrail@lemm.ee
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          07 months ago

          So you think people should not buy trucks because they might be in the 0.1% of truck drivers who end up killing a pedestrian with it? What about the people who have a legitimate use for the bed?

          • Krzd
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            7 months ago

            No, they shouldn’t because even in vehicle to vehicle collisions SUVs kill 4 times more people than cars. Source
            The people that have a legitimate use for such trucks should be required to apply for a exception and/or have a CDL.
            Because in fact almost no one actually needs those trucks. Source [1]
            Most people can use a trailer or rent a truck for the 1-2 times per year they need it.

            [1] I work at a hardware store, specifically in the construction materials department. In 2 years of working there I had literally 1 person use their truck bed to haul a pallet of concrete bags, everyone else either used vans or a trailer. And just 2 weeks ago I had the first customer that used a pickup truck (Mercedes X-Class) to tow a 2.5t trailer to transport paving slabs.
            So no, even trades people don’t need those trucks, so why the fuck should a normal “civilian” have those and be 4 times as likely to kill someone??

    • The Pantser
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      167 months ago

      I’ll keep driving my PEV Minivan that has 360 cameras and I can see in front of me easily. I care about children’s lives, unlike bubba in his lifted pickup truck. Why do you need a 4x4 lifted 3 feet and you live in the suburbs?

        • @cogman@lemmy.world
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          147 months ago

          Yes, but mini vans aren’t lifted 20 ft off the ground with absurdly huge hoods for no apparent reason.

          The reason trucks and SUVs are killing kids is because you can see a 4ft tall person that isn’t standing 100 yards in front. These are the only vehicles with this problem.

          • @niucllos@lemm.ee
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            107 months ago

            Additionally, the raised and blunt hood height makes a full-body impact with no force dissipation much more likely, particularly for shorter people, where a more traditional hood shape allows a struck pedestrian to roll over the top and avert some of the force of the strike

          • @thefartographer@lemm.ee
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            37 months ago

            20-foot lifted vehicles would probably be considerably safer:

            1. They’d easily have the clearance to safely navigate over most pedestrians in their path.
            2. Any attempts to balance them well would be incredibly expensive and you’d likely have many drivers whose cars would fall over from insufficiently sized tires or whatever.

            Hmmm… 🤔 Now that I think about it, maybe we should subsidize these lift kits to make this a self-solving problem

          • @dafo@lemmy.world
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            97 months ago

            But it’s still blocking the view for us in normal sizes cars.

            I don’t know how many times I’ve had to hope for the best and carefully inch forwards/backwards when being next to a minivan/SUV/pickup. I’ve been close to being in an accident a number of times because of, well mostly, SUVs.

      • Nougat
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        47 months ago

        Why do you need a 4x4 lifted 3 feet and you live in the suburbs?

        Penis issue

      • @skuzz@discuss.tchncs.de
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        117 months ago

        …you know what they say about guys with big lift…

        Funny thing is, the people I know with large vehicles around here always bemoan how difficult it is to park, yet don’t want to solve the obvious problem because twice a year they want to haul a fridge to the dump or pick up something from the home improvement store rather than have it delivered or rent a truck for an hour.

        • @socphoenix@midwest.social
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          87 months ago

          Counting the differences in cost (loan, gas, expected maintenance, insurance etc) it came out to where I would have to use the truck to haul something at least a very weekend possibly more to break even with a much newer car vs just renting a truck once or twice a year. Pickups are almost universally owned by people too stupid for middle school math imo.

        • Psychadelligoat
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          67 months ago

          always bemoan how difficult it is to park

          I’ve made multuple older men incredibly upset by laughing at them when they say this

          They get pissy and respond with “well you’re some skinny long haired hippie who drives an EV so what do you know?” Which, yeah, all of that is true

          But then I pull up the pictures of me 4x4ing in the rain and snow through fire smoke at work, pointing out that I drove a RAM3500 fully kitted out and lifted with a giant set of 4 110g tanks in the bed blocking anything other than my mirror and cam view, yet I only had issues parking when people didn’t know how to stay in their own lines, and that I regularly had to squeeze my truck into areas with an inch or less of clearance in order to do my fucking job on a construction site, and I never hit anything but a rock (downhill, someone left a fucking rug out on some dirt in the rain and when my truck hit it I just slid til I hit the rock, company deemed me blameless)

          They usually get flustered and change the subject p quick at that point

  • zeekaran
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    307 months ago

    Every time I see a movie from the 90s and older, and they show a parking lot, I get sad. Everyone used to drive reasonably sized sedans. Family vehicles were wagons. Fuck SUVs and trucks.

  • @demizerone@lemmy.world
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    127 months ago

    Yay we will have the return of small trucks. These behemoths are good for towing and work, but not everyday driving.

    • @ByteOnBikes@slrpnk.net
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      37 months ago

      Hey buddy! Without a Ford F150 that’s taller than the average elementary school student and a box that can barely fit an average grocery store trip, how else am I supposed to tell people I have a tiny penis?

    • @ITGuyLevi@programming.dev
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      17 months ago

      I want so much to ditch my Jeep Grand Cherokee for a truck (I drive to work once a week but pull a camper on the weekends), sadly a lot of them might not fit in my 1970’s garage.

    • @Shapillon@lemmy.world
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      117 months ago

      Most of the behemoths aren’t even good as utilitary vehicles…

      I’ve got a 15yo Renault Kangoo which could beat almost any oversized suburban pedestrian flattener in all metrics except price.

    • @tal@lemmy.today
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      7 months ago

      That’s not to mention the optics.

      https://www.quora.com/Where-does-the-M1-Abrams-have-the-optics-of-its-main-cannon-I-dont-know-anything-about-tanks

      #4 is the optic for the RWS. This cannot be used to aim the main gun, but it can be used as an alternate form of CITV, especially since it’s so damned high off the ground, it may be able to see over obstacles. Not as good as CITV in the thermal range, though.

      That being said, some civilian vehicles are gonna have their own camera systems too, so…

      • @Maggoty@lemmy.world
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        67 months ago

        Civilian vehicles should all have thermals and a night driving HUD. If I’m paying 30,000 dollars then they can damn well put some actual stuff in there. Headlights being weaponized isn’t something we have to tolerate.

        • Midnight Wolf
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          27 months ago

          Sorry, no can do, also cupholders are extra, best we can do is plastic hubcaps and a 10,000/6 month warranty.

      • @GraniteM@lemmy.world
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        67 months ago

        I’d be curious to see that chart for a Toyota Yaris. I drove one for a few years and it was almost unnerving how little hood it had.

        • Krzd
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          57 months ago

          Same here. Going from a 1990 VW Passat to a 2009 Yaris was wild.

      • @TownhouseGloryHole@lemmy.world
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        317 months ago

        Astounding. Hummer H2 beating the Sierra by 3m is incredible. A truck designed almost exclusively to express how selfish you are and it has better viability.

        • Cadeillac
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          57 months ago

          This chart is eye-opening…I always thought Hummers were made by…Hummer…

            • Cadeillac
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              17 months ago

              Now my mind is really blown. I’m aware of this happening, just not with the H2

          • @pemptago@lemmy.ml
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            97 months ago

            GM marketing. They purchased the hummer brand from AM General. OG Hummer (later renamed H1) was based on AM General’s military Humvee design, but released to the civilian market. H2 and H3 were designed by GM for mass marketing. Can be seen in the price. H1 nearly 10x more than H2 and H3.

            • snooggums
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              57 months ago

              Also, the H1 was 10x better for what it was designed for than the H2 and H3.

              The H1 was not designed for commuting to work.

              • @frezik@midwest.social
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                27 months ago

                I’m not sure what it was designed for. It doesn’t have a lot of space for hauling compared to its size. It’s not great for offroading. It’s a plastic money extraction machine.

                • snooggums
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                  17 months ago

                  The original was designed to play military at home.it was not a pickup truck or a dedicated and modded offroad machine, and yes it was a money pit. But it was perfect for pretending with a civilian version of the vehicle manufacturrd on the same line as the real thing.

                  H2 and H3 models were just mediocre rebranded SUVs with hints of the original hummer body lines.

    • @spyd3r@sh.itjust.works
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      7 months ago

      This is misleading because being higher up you can see much better further ahead, and over obstacles and barriers. Your special awareness is much better at distances that are relevant for avoiding collisions. If something is 1.5m away its too late anyway.

      The angle is also incorrect because they are putting the eyes of the driver straight in line with the hood, which is not how its been in any vehicle I’ve ever driven, the head should be higher or further forward.

      • @Voyajer@lemmy.world
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        527 months ago

        The origin of the line is at head height…

        Also these vehicles gain in distant visibility at the expense of everyone else on the road, blocking their views.

        • @bluewing@lemm.ee
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          -87 months ago

          The best way to avoid getting into an accident is to see it long before you get there. But situational awareness is not something the vast majority of drivers actually practice or have…

        • Jojo, Lady of the West
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          197 months ago

          Also, an astounding proportion of fatal pedestrian collisions happen at low-speed, close to home where these sightlines explicitly matter.

      • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️
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        157 months ago

        You don’t want to see “over” obstacles close to your vehicle when said obstacles are in fact human beings standing in front of your car.

        At parking lot speeds, 1.5 meters is also not “too late,” and it certainly isn’t when you are at a standstill but need to determine if it is safe to move or if there is a small person in front of your vehicle, i.e. in the school pickup line, or in a parking lot, or your own driveway.

        • @Maggoty@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Ooo ooo we can do it like buses do. We’ll put a bar on the front that folds out. 3 year olds totally know what that is right? They’ll just get out of the way!

          (/s)

  • @GaMEChld@lemmy.world
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    167 months ago

    Bumper height needs to be standardized so they match up properly. One of the biggest safety issues is how modern SUV bumpers don’t align with cars bumper bars.

    • @SynopsisTantilize@lemm.ee
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      37 months ago

      My Sequoia is like 2.5x the size of my Honda fit. If I ever hit my Honda while pulling into the driveway I’ll total it.

      I fully agree with your statement.

      • @Ragnarok314159@sopuli.xyz
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        27 months ago

        Do you like your Sequoia? I have been thinking about trading in my Explorer for one. Or an Expedition.

        Know this is a hate thread about SUV’s, but those of us with large families don’t have any other options.

    • @helopigs@lemmy.world
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      17 months ago

      Maybe this is the point, but that might cause SUVs to be prohibitively unsafe, because their center of momentum would be so high relative to impact height. For example, if an SUV with one of these low bumpers hit a barrier, it would probably perform a front flip over it 😂

    • @ghen@sh.itjust.works
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      147 months ago

      As was designed by the people who actually wrote those laws, the lobbyists. More profitable cars to sell as America moves farther and farther away from reality with car prices.

  • @aloeTGL@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    It’s like a negative feedback loop I want an SUV because of a truck or another SUV hit me. I feel like I might be able to survive that but if I’m in my geometro, or a small compact car. I don’t think I’m coming out of that alive if a giant trucker or suv hit me And I know that’s not gonna change. They’re not gonna suddenly recall thousands of oversized pick up trucks those trucks are gonna be on the road for the next 10 to 15 years to come, even if something changes soon. It would take a while to phase them out.

    I just want public high-speed rail everywhere 15 minutes cities please

  • @workerONE@lemmy.world
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    547 months ago

    Why do little cars have to withstand a collision with a huge truck but trucks just get bigger and bigger? The new Hummer is over 9,000lbs (4,090 kg)

    • NoSpiritAnimal
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      287 months ago

      At 60 MPH the Hummer EV has the same kinetic energy as a 1993 Honda Civic Hatchback going 120mph.

      • Jojo, Lady of the West
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        87 months ago

        I mean they’re getting heavier, but not, like, whole number multiples heavier. An electric might be some 60% heavier than a comparable gas car. But the aforementioned hummer is more than 5 times heavier than even a heavy electric “utility vehicle”. That’s more than 400% heavier.

        • @SupraMario@lemmy.world
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          47 months ago

          Huh? Are you saying heavy electric utility vehicles are less than 2k lbs? I think you’re math is a bit off, or I’m misunderstanding you. 9k lbs is heavy but it’s only around 2k lbs heavier than it’s gas counter parts (most SUVs are around 6.5-7k lbs). Most electric cars are 1-2k lbs heavier than their gas counterparts already. Batteries are not light.

          • Jojo, Lady of the West
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            I’m saying smaller cars are usually lighter than bigger cars, even when the smaller cars are electric. And the car I was comparing to was the Chevrolet bolt “electric utility vehicle” that’s trying to be an electric SUV. Which is 1600 kg.

            Where a Ford fiesta that’s almost the same size is still 1100 kg.

            Edit: corrected units to kg.

            • @ililiililiililiilili@lemm.ee
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              37 months ago

              Chevy Bolt (electric) is approx. 3,600 lbs. Ford Fiesta (gas) is approx. 2,500 lbs. I think your numbers are kilograms. Sorry to be pedantic, just trying to get correct numbers. But what you’re saying is basically correct. Most small EVs are still lighter than midsize and bigger ICE cars. If you want apples to apples: the 2024 Chevy Equinox EV is 5,000 lbs, whereas the 2024 gas version is approx. 3,400 lbs.

              • Jojo, Lady of the West
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                37 months ago

                Oh, shit, you’re right. I was looking at kilograms. Thank you.

                But yeah, the point stands that small cars are lighter and safer than big cars, especially for the things they hit.

      • snooggums
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        107 months ago

        Commercial license requirements for full sized trucks over a certain size and weight would be an excellent solution. In addition to the increased effort and cost to get one, commercial licenses are way easier to lose.

        • @frezik@midwest.social
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          37 months ago

          It depends on the state, but it usually is. It’s just very high, like a gvwr of 26k lbs.

          Thing is, a CDL covers a bunch of stuff you really don’t need to know for something smaller than that, like air brakes. That said, some kind of graduated licensing is called for, here.

          Motorcycles, too, while we’re at it. It’s insane that you can go through MSF and then immediately buy a literbike.

          • snooggums
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            17 months ago

            In ny US state motorcycles have a special motorcycle license. Maybe that would be a good starting point for a large vehicle permit that is more than a regilar license.

        • @Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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          27 months ago

          I agree. It’s felt weird each time I’ve rented a moving truck and was able to drive it myself. They are giant and I’m not used to driving something so big plus no visibility out of the rear of the vehicle. And on top of that, they are so massive that mistakes will hurt more and will be harder to notice while they are happening.

          Though even normal licenses are too easy IMO. I haven’t been tested or trained on driving in decades. Most people don’t know how 2 way stop signs work, I’ve even had a cop wave me through when it was their right of way. The bar should be higher for getting and keeping a license and lower for losing it. And “but people need cars to get to work and such” addressed with better mass transportation and city planning.

    • @HBK@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      57 months ago

      Regardless of truck size, I don’t think tractor trailers are going anywhere. Even if we made trucks smaller those would still be out there

      Smaller trucks would still get in accidents though, and I imagine they would be less deadly

      • @ayyy@sh.itjust.works
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        107 months ago

        Tractor trailers are heavily regulated with training, licensing, driving hours and sleep break logging etc. Are they really a significant source of pedestrian collisions?

        • @Maggoty@lemmy.world
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          27 months ago

          You should check out the safety stuff with them and cars. You’ll stay near one on the road again.

      • SaltySalamander
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        -17 months ago

        Even if we made trucks smaller those would still be out there

        If we made them smaller there’d just be more of them on the road. There’d also be higher prices for everything to compensate for the extra expense of having those extra trucks and bodies to pilot them.

      • @zalgotext@sh.itjust.works
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        227 months ago

        Man, if only we could separate freight from commuter traffic. Like, imagine if all those tractor trailers were on their own separate road, but make it out of, IDK, metal or something so it can withstand the weight better. You could even just have metal right under the wheels, to reduce costs. But what do I know, I’m just some pie in the sky nobody who doesn’t know what he’s talking about

        • @MasterMediasRes@lemmy.world
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          47 months ago

          That sounds like a neat idea—here’s a wild thought, what would happen if we tried the same thing with passengers? Eh, you’re right, sounds positively un-American.

        • @pemptago@lemmy.ml
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          7 months ago

          Not to mention it would reduce all the underride crashes.

          All these improved vehicle safety standards are generally for bumper-to-bumper collisions, not windshield-to-truck-bed. Frontline released a well-done 2023 episode on it. Highly recommend.

          Edit: md link

        • @ShepherdPie@midwest.social
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          17 months ago

          Unless you’re going to run train tracks to every business in existence, freight will need to be moved using a semi at some point.

          • @zalgotext@sh.itjust.works
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            27 months ago

            I think getting semis off the highway where they’re going 60-70 mph would make a big difference in highway safety though. And you could have less semis going from depots to stores if stores were smaller and more frequent, such that deliveries could be made via cargo vans rather than semis.

  • @DoucheBagMcSwag@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    7 months ago

    “MUH FREEDOM. FUCKIN COMMIES”

    I can just see the pavement princess brigade seething because their next emotional support penismobile won’t be exaggerated anymore and they will actually be able to see pedestrians and cyclists.

  • @OldWoodFrame@lemm.ee
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    177 months ago

    There should really be a redistribution gas tax, another dollar per gallon on gas which then goes back split evenly to every American. Incentivizes less gas usage while avoiding the regressive nature of a sales tax. Canada has something like this.

    Ruinous politically so it would never happen but it would be a good plan.

    • @Grappling7155@lemmy.ca
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      47 months ago

      It’s the carbon tax and carbon rebate in Canada. When paired with a carbon tariff, it’s a great market friendly solution to reduce emissions. Beware though, it really really triggers regressive petrosexual conservatives and the ones in Canada keep trying to trigger an election over it so they can get rid of it ASAP and pollute more.

    • @Lobreeze@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      I’m Canadian… avoiding tax??

      Hahahahahaha I want what you’re smoking.

      We literally get taxed on tax

  • rhythmisaprancer
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    137 months ago

    This seems like it could lead to significant innovation in vans in North America, or set least US/Canada. Van pickups, van sedans, van Goghs? After the initial temper tantrums, I think people will buy whatever comes out of the design phase. There used to be a lot of “beef” about emission control devices, but not so much anymore. Those folks moved on.