by komputodo ➕follow (1) 💰tip ignore
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Learn some fucking economics. $1/mile transportation fuel costs are NOT cheap. NOT a bargain. Esp when they were just 50 cents or so a few years ago.
$20 gasoline would effectively kill large cities. I can't remember exactly where I came across the article (probably hacker news), but the gist was that cities can only grow as large as it takes to traverse them within a given amount of time.
What did people do before they had automobiles with affordable liquid fuels?
What they did, is they did without. That is, rural folks rarely left the farm or the hollar. City folks only went places they could walk to, and any travel between cities was done by rail.
Seems to me that large cities would be the eventual beneficiary of very high gasoline prices. The largest cities in the world are in China and India, two places where only a small percentage of people have personal automobiles. High fuel costs will push almost everyone to abandon their cars, especially in large cities. Without cars, residents will be more open to public transportation, especially rail transportation. With everyone using public transportation, those modes of travel will be safer and better — unlike many systems in the US where only the poor are forced onto public transportation. So: fewer cars -> better public transportation -> still fewer cars -> even better public transportation. That positive feedback loop could rapidly transform US cities and make them more livable and more dense than ever.
$20 gasoline would effectively kill large cities. I can't remember exactly where I came across the article (probably hacker news), but the gist was that cities can only grow as large as it takes to traverse them within a given amount of time. Absent automobiles, and without massive public infrastructure like trollies, buses, and light rail, the cities must shrink. It could be enough to undo the global urbanization trend.
Not only that, but DooDah was commenting on my post about increased taxes affecting the accuracy of comparisons between price of gasoline in 2008 verses 2022 verses the price of oil at those times. Stating the use of the tax revenue or effect of taxes on the public has nothing to do with my point.
DooDahMan saysAnd soon thereafter the public will be outraged over the condition of their roads, highways etc. when tax revenues for such things disappear.
I see that it is Ignorance Celebration Day on PatNet.
The FUCKING gas taxes did not go to road repair. Congress and the State legislatures RAIDED those revenues for decades. Had they not, we'd have enough money in those funds to pay for entire replacement of the interstate highways 3 - 4 times over.
Instead, we get ever increasing gas taxes and ever increasing pot holes.
What did people do before they had automobiles with affordable liquid fuels? That's a quite recent phenomenon in the history of urban civilization.
(Sorry, bubbas).
I kind of want to see a starvation event so you can see your own ignorance.
Which part of my post was ignorance?
I have ZERO contempt of "country bumpkins", I hate a lot of contempt for the "top of society".
Going to force people then to use this if it gets that cold instead of expensive electric heating and inefficient heat pump/ air condition system...
can run this if have just enough leaks or draft into the house, though it has some safety features like oxygen meter ... it connects to standard propane tank for a barbecue grill..
https://www.amazon.com/Dyna-Glo-RA18LPDG-000-Cabinet-Heater/dp/B0041OEB7E
..
Surprisingly cheap.
Eric Holder says
Surprisingly cheap.
it says runs 64 hours on one 20 lb propane tank.. about $18 for the propane in this tank or $4 per pound ...
conservatively figure it runs 8 hours per day to heat 500 square feet during very cold winter .. so about 8 days of heating from one 20 lb propane tank
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