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Originally Posted by PepsiFree
He’s very clearly not doing that, and instead acknowledging that transit/ride shares are expensive, inconvenient, or both, which does nothing to help situations with poor decision-makers.
I wouldn’t be surprise if drunk-driving was less common in cities with great transit and inexpensive ride sharing options. And I don’t think the lesson we should take from that is “sleep on the street.”
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The problem is, the city/province can't improve the transit network overnight. It takes time.
Rideshare apps work on a supply and demand model, also known as capitalism. Are you also suggesting we pivot from capitalism?
Individual responsibility is still a thing. Try telling the mother of the 15-year-old kid you just mowed down that uber prices were surging.