when services around specific events are this stupid i can only conclude it's actively malevolent, because surely any normal person would realize that services should run until demand is gone?
Swedneck
frequency, and actually being able to afford a fucking ticket, but mercifully the cost generally doesn't seem to be high in the rest of the world
but holy fuck here in sweden the cheapest ticket for my province is almost 4 dollars, they excuse this by saying that "oh it's valid for 90 minutes and on all public transport within the zone!!! you only need one ticket!!" as if that helps when people want to go to the grocery store..
much easier to control a president who is barely coherent
i think european malls/commercial areas are way less likely to be that horseshoe shape, it's almost always some rectangular-ish shape with shared corridors and parking around it, whereas the horseshoe kind where you have to cross the parking lot to get to the shops on the other side seems pretty normal in the US.
and biofuels can be significantly cheaper, a sane actual conservative who genuinely prefers combustion engines should be championing biodiesel cars.
riding the elon taxi straight into the gates of heaven
i think the key is when the thing in question is normalized and something most people do, then saying "we should do this less" means de-normalizing it and not having most people do it, which means they'll personally experience change in some way.
like if driving isn't the way to get around you'd eventually get rid of the oversized everpresent highways, which makes their personal travels require more thought and attention, and that's unacceptable and thus they just completely fucking make shit up to defend their lifestyle.
slowly driving through the countryside, or racing on a course, are fun
driving the same route day in and day out at high speeds should be left to bus and light rail drivers
fun fact: aphids are born pregnant (or at least they can be)
squeezes your buttcheek yeah they're human, carry on
yes that's why i take the bus