Oversized SUVs and American style pickup trucks are starting to dominate Australia's streets - and this is causing huge environmental and safety problems. So...
Nonetheless, even if we conceded that one needs a car to get by in Australia, the cars don’t need to be as large, and with such lethally poor visibility as in the US. While the US is (outside of small pockets) a dog-eat-dog society where you either project dominance or are dominated, Australia still has some semblance of a social fabric, an existent if somewhat threadbare welfare safety net and the fabled ideal of “mateship”, meaning that we don’t need our cars to look preemptively threatening.
Yes, these trucks don’t do any job particularly well. They don’t have big bed capacity, they have terrible visibility, they’re extremely dangerous, and they’re not even particularly good offroad because they’re not built for that. They’re built to exceed certain weight limits in the US’s EPA regulations to reduce their cost. There’s no point doing that then adding a bunch of expensive suspension components. You’re much better off with a 20 year old Hilux in that regard. They only look like utes because you can’t sell a 4 tonne family sedan, because people would notice it was useless. The tiny bed in back is a fig leaf.
The vast majority of Australians live in a densely populated strip on the east coast. It should have high speed rail from Melbourne to Brisbane decades ago.
Though to be fair to Australia, there is no way to make an efficient public transit system for the whole country.
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If you can build a road you can build a railway
Nonetheless, even if we conceded that one needs a car to get by in Australia, the cars don’t need to be as large, and with such lethally poor visibility as in the US. While the US is (outside of small pockets) a dog-eat-dog society where you either project dominance or are dominated, Australia still has some semblance of a social fabric, an existent if somewhat threadbare welfare safety net and the fabled ideal of “mateship”, meaning that we don’t need our cars to look preemptively threatening.
Yes, these trucks don’t do any job particularly well. They don’t have big bed capacity, they have terrible visibility, they’re extremely dangerous, and they’re not even particularly good offroad because they’re not built for that. They’re built to exceed certain weight limits in the US’s EPA regulations to reduce their cost. There’s no point doing that then adding a bunch of expensive suspension components. You’re much better off with a 20 year old Hilux in that regard. They only look like utes because you can’t sell a 4 tonne family sedan, because people would notice it was useless. The tiny bed in back is a fig leaf.
Not Just Bikes covers this same misconception about the US thoroughly in a great video.
Its not about “size” its about population density. Cities can have public trasit and clustered rural areas can be contected by rail but when cities and towns are so spread out with nothing in between a rail system connecting them become more and more costly.
The vast majority of Australians live in a densely populated strip on the east coast. It should have high speed rail from Melbourne to Brisbane decades ago.