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20 hours agoHere in Europe it’s very hard to see hydrants though. There are no signs and they’re just little panel-covered holes.
Here in Europe it’s very hard to see hydrants though. There are no signs and they’re just little panel-covered holes.
It’s because your country makes so many cars. Same in the US. Cars are holy because so much money is made off them.
Where I’m from in Holland they are sacred also but it’s kinda a different reason, car ownership was a big symbol of economic progress in the 60s and people have become addicted to them.
Eh so these are official parking spots? That’s a bit weird yeah.
Whoa and that in Germany where people are pretty law-abiding.
It’s also better really.
I used to live in a place where I needed a car to go anywhere because the buses were so unreliable, infrequent and useless (all going through the town centre with lots of delays). I hated it, because everyone drove and was stuck in traffic. Driving is very stressful too.
And now I live in a big city, have really dense public transport for 20 bucks a month flat. No more finding and paying for parking spaces. Being able to go back from a different place than I arrived. No more parking meters timing out. No more maintenance. No more fuel costs. No more insurance. No more traffic fines. No more yearly inspections. No more people damaging my ride with shopping carts. I love it honestly. And to top it all off I can ride while playing with my phone and not having to pay any attention to the road. No need to be sober either for that matter.
Quality quickly drops off leaving the city unfortunately but that’s the thing with cities, you rarely need to leave them anyway.