Sorry everyone for the hjeg2-style interleaving.
weepej wrote:
bombus wrote:
As PeterE said on another thread, new towns have lots of roads, and they haven't filled up. ...
Yet.
Some "new" towns have been around for several decades (e.g. Milton Keynes) and their roads are still relatively uncongested. Can you provide an example of a new town with a decent road system which has "filled up"?
Presumably you also subscribe to the idea that when roadspace is deliberately removed, traffic just melts away?
weepej wrote:
bombus wrote:
There is only a finite number of cars and drivers.
More than could fit on ours roads if everybody decided to go out for a drive at the same time.
I don't think that's strictly true. But even if it was, if you built enough roads, it wouldn't be. Therefore it is nonsense to say that new roadspace will automatically fill up no matter what and no matter how much you build. Agreed? (I'll take silence as a "yes".)
weepej wrote:
bombus wrote:
I expect I won't get a reply to this since once again I've just destroyed your argument. (A "You're right" would be nice in such situations.)
Nice, but wrong.
It's happened countless other times, and not just with me. When you're beaten, or you're asked a difficult question, you slink off and sulk, only to make the same incorrect assertions again later on in other threads. If I hadn't said the above then I don't think you would have replied.
If you disagree, then if you want I'll start a thread with some previously unanswered questions that I'd like you to answer. If you'd like to do the same with me then feel free (not that I purposely avoid answering difficult questions).
weepej wrote:
bombus wrote:
I don't know and I don't care.
Do you know that'd it'd be 35 miles wide as well?
Yes, it wasn't some kind of trick. I can't remember whether it was circular or square, but 35 miles was the maximum width/length anywhere. I saw it on the "Environmental Hysteria" episode of
Penn & Teller: Bullshit!, which is an excellent programme where they are very good at debunking, well, bullshit. They do their research thoroughly and they don't lie, so I believe the 35 mile thing.
That particular episode is one of the very best IMHO. At one point they interviewed the organiser of some large "environmental" convention, and it was glaringly, squirmingly obvious just how little she actually knew. Unlike so many politicians she unfortunately didn't even have the knack of
sounding like she was talking sense. Even the most hardline "environmentalist" would have to admit that she didn't have a clue.
They also got people at the convention to
sign a petition to ban DHMO (water). A large percentage of those asked just signed it without looking into the matter at all. The whole programme made it incredibly obvious that most "environmentalists" are either thinly-veiled communists, or people who just want to be seen to be "green" and don't do any of their own research. I recommend it to anyone here. The whole 23-minute episode is on Youtube in three parts
here,
here and
here. Well worth it, I promise.
They haven't done a speed camera episode yet, presumably because the wretched devices aren't yet a national problem in the US. The Rush may be fed up where he is, but at least he can move if it gets too bad. I suppose we could all move to North Yorkshire and Durham, but that may change their unspoilt character somewhat.
_________________
Paul Smith: a legend.
"The freedom provided by the motor vehicle is not universally applauded, however: there are those who resent the loss of state control over individual choice that the car represents. Such people rarely admit their prejudices openly; instead, they make false or exaggerated claims about the adverse effects of road transport in order to justify calls for higher taxation or restrictions on mobility." (
Conservative Way Forward:
Stop The War Against Drivers)