by gg3 » Fri 19 May 2006, 04:35:35
Yes, there are all kinds of emotional investments going on... on one hand, excessive convenience (SUVs), and on the other hand, punitiveness (the righteousness of being cold and wet).
None of this is necessary.
Once you allow for bicycles, you can add a wheel and have a trike. Once you allow for a little electric motor, you can add a 50-cc internal combustion engine to keep the batteries charged so you don't run out of juice on the road. At that point, only a hair-shirt puritan would demand that the occupants be wet and cold. For the rest of us, an enclosure made of tough recycled plastics will do nicely, and the resulting contraption will get us around on local errands at three-digit mileage. It might even have a radio.
So, about trucks.
The onus is on the anti-truck crowd to come up with replacements. I've already figured out a decent amount of this but I'm going to keep my moose shut for the moment and let some of the anti-truckers have a go at it. Try your hand at designing for a few of the following types of loads & duties:
Fresh produce.
Milk, eggs, cheese, meat, fish, ice cream, and the like.
Postal mail.
Parcels & packages.
Building materials: structural timber, concrete, plywood, brick, stone, steel.
Manufactured goods such as furniture and appliances.
Utility maintenance such as street lights, and electric and telephone lines.
Water & sewer maintenance.
Refuse & recycling collection.
Street sweeping, fallen-leaf removal, snow clearance.
Road maintenance e.g. fixing holes in streets & bike/trike paths.
And last but by no means least, police, fire, and paramedic.
Here are a few specific cases to think about:
You live in a rural area. You have to buy a bed, consisting of a frame, a box spring, and a mattress, of sufficient size that two people can sleep together comfortably (e.g. queen or king size mattress). And you also have to buy some bookcases. How do those things get from the store to your house?
You live in an apartment in the city. What happens to your garbage (food waste), refuse (non food, non recyclable waste), and recyclables?
In the city, horses have become a popular mode of transport again. What happens to all of their urine and manure?
You live in a condominium or cohousing development. Someone falls asleep with a candle burning and the next thing you know their place is on fire. Your place is two units away, separated only by wood-frame walls. What next...?