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by zolbrek
596 days ago
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The risk of deadly collisions, particularly when most people are going 30-50 km/h in the city and driving modern cars, is already low. Modern cars are also quiet with emissions nothing like the cars of our grandparents. Can you elaborate on what you mean by trips per hour and how one is supposed to conveniently commute outside of one's neighborhood, particularly with small children and shopping? |
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The probability of a pedestrian being killed when a motorist strikes them with their vehicle depends very strongly on the speed of the vehicle. At 30kph the risk is less nearly 0%, but it rises rapidly to 50% when the impact happens at 50kph[0]. Would you take those odds? I wouldn't. Especially given that motorists tend to interpret speed limits as minimums rather than maximums.
> Modern cars are also quiet with emissions nothing like the cars of our grandparents.
I live next to seven lanes of traffic. Modern cars are not remotely quiet. Their emissions are not limited to what comes out of their tailpipe, either. You must include the microparticles that are emitted from the tires, the asphalt and the brake pads [1].
> Can you elaborate on what you mean by trips per hour and how one is supposed to conveniently commute outside of one's neighborhood, particularly with small children and shopping?
Public transit. Bicycles. Living in a neighborhood with mixed use buildings. I have never had a driving license and my family with two small kids has somehow figured it out with a combination of the above. Many others do the same. It is not rocket science. The first step is ditching the car.
[0] https://nacto.org/docs/usdg/relationship_between_speed_risk_...
[1] https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4315878/