by dolanbaker » Mon 16 Mar 2015, 17:46:33
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ennui2', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dolanbaker', '
')If people stop aspiring to live in large suburban houses and prefer to live in cities, then the requirements for millions of individual journeys that require personal transport reduces.
This is the kind of prescriptive thinking that is a dead-end.
People do not change their behavior lock-step in sync.
If anything, they respond to the invisible hand of cost of living and job availability. But they do not, generally speaking, follow a prescription for sustainability. They just don't give a rat's ass.
Whether the prescription is to abandon the suburbs and urbanize or go back to the land, you won't see everyone get in sync and follow along.
Now, if the way to get through the bottleneck requires that the vast majority of us indeed march in time, then you can write off humanity right now, because it won't happen without some sort of global dictatorship. People will not have some huge epiphany where they see the light and start riding bikes and erecting solar panels and no longer craving strawberries in the winter-time.
But again, I am tired of the "if we all do X, then we're saved!" argument. That ship sailed a long long time ago.
It is that invisible hand that will "guide" them in this direction, along with planning laws and the like that will make suburban
living increasingly difficult in the longer term future.
Governments usually have a way to "encourage" their citizens into doing "the right thing".
After all, we're a long way away from one of the original reasons for having a suburban/dispersed population, that is one that is less likely to be wiped out by a nuclear strike. Don't forget that modern suburbs appeared at the start of the cold war.