Urbanist and car enthusiasts are not mutually exclusive: car can be a hobby, but hobbies belong on tracks or in garages.
I have met a vintage car enthusiast living happily in Amsterdam, he restores small early japanese cars and collect them, but that doesn't mean he need to drive them every day to work. His car is in a garage near Amsterdam, and he still bikes when he travel within the city.
Like I enjoy starcraft, but I'm not asking my government to spend interstate money to keep starcraft alive or host tournaments; nor will I defend it if it interfere with other people's need, right, and life.
Starcraft also don't kill 1.3 million people a year BTW, so if anything is getting foundings, starcraft should have more priority over cars...
I have a state issued non driver Real ID. I guess if you're outside the US there may be different ID laws, but the Real ID works for everything, including flying.
I'm not the creator of the video (I used the video's title when posting it here), I just thought it was interesting that even a dude who loves cars can't look past the downsides of them, It's almost, but not quite like seeing a car magazine shit on cars.
It was a good watch and nice to see a YouTuber speak their mind about downsides of car culture, even if there's a huge risk of annoying their audience.
You'd get your point across a lot better if you tried some actual journalism, not some shitty YouTube vid with a ghastly thumbnail. You can't expect anyone to take that seriously, surely?
"Actual journalism" what does that even mean? Youtube IS a medium of communication that legitimate news outlets and journalist depend on to talk about various aspects of life.