• renlok@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      But how else can you ensure a 100% fatality rate of everything you run over.

    • M0oP0o@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      The issue is not so much size but height. These things are all over where I am as fleet vehicles and even the good ol’ type will comment that they can not see anything in front. Just look at the door or normal car in the background of that picture and you get an idea. These hoods are no joke 1.7 meters high for no other reason then to look mean.

    • grue@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      So it would’ve been fine and dandy if the cyclist had been killed by someone driving a Prius?

      'Cause that’s what you imply by placing this bullshit emphasis trying to single out big trucks in particular. Comments like yours reek of implied small-car apologism, and I, for one, am getting sick and hired of it!

      There’s a reason this community is called “fuck cars,” and not “fuck big trucks” or something. it’s because the problem is cars — all of them!

      Any car, even the smallest, can turn a pedestrian or cyclist into a red smear when driven negligently.

      Every car, even the smallest, takes up an entire lane on the street and an entire parking space.

      Every car, even the smallest, contributes to car-dependent urban design.

      Singling out big trucks as if they’re materially worse than all the other death machines is nothing but a distraction from the real problem at best, and an active disinformation campaign at worst. Our goals should be to get people out of cars entirely, not just into smaller ones!

      • verdigris@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        The thing is, they are materially worse than other consumer vehicles. They do all the bad things but more, and their normalization makes it all worse for everyone – have you seen the size of parking spaces in Europe?

        • grue@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          they are materially worse than other consumer vehicles

          Not in the way that actually matters, which is their effect on low-density zoning and minimum parking requirements. A parking space is a parking space is a parking space — they’re all (roughly) the same size!

      • RagingNerdoholic@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        No, it probably wouldn’t have happened in the first place, because the driver of a sensibly-sized car can see things that are less than fifty fucking feet ahead of the dash.

        Monstrous behemoths like this should be prohibitively expensive to own for personal use and/or be restricted to industrial/ag use only. Fuck your camping or hauling one chair or whatever the fuck you do twice a year. You can rent for something that seldom.

        • grue@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          No, it probably wouldn’t have happened in the first place, because the driver of a sensibly-sized car can see things that are less than fifty fucking feet ahead of the dash.

          [X] doubt

          If big trucks were banned, muderous MAGA psychopaths would just mow down cyclists using Dodge Chargers or whatever instead.

        • grue@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          Yes, it is funny that folks here apparently just want to circlejerk scapegoating big trucks while downvoting any actual urbanist who dares to point out that they’re focusing on the wrong problem.

  • some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 year ago

    Just after 7 p.m. Saturday, police say they responded to the collision in Marion County on Hwy 64 near milepost 5. According to investigators, the bicyclist, Harley Austin, 42, was riding south in the bike lane on Hwy 164 through the intersection of Talbot Rd SE when Hammons, who was driving a Dodge Ram 3500, turned onto the highway and collided with Austin.

    Why is there a bike lane on a highway?

    To be clear, I’m not taking the side of the driver. Fuck people with unnecessarily huge vehicles. I side with cyclists almost 100% of the time. But this just sounds unsafe.

    To me, a highway means speeds in excess of 50mph. That isn’t a place where we should have a body unprotected sharing the road.

      • some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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        1 year ago

        Huh. I use “highway” and “freeway” interchangeably. Just did a search and found the following, so thanks for enlightening me:

        Highways have controlled areas, and traffic lights, tend to be placed in rural areas and always allow you to drive off. Freeways have higher speed limits and are, in essence, a faster way to get from one city to the other with minimal traffic control.

        I guess maybe this is a result of my having grown up in a midwestern state where both could exist without distinction. TIL.