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bhai i go every other day to places where there is no road even . i like to drive in desert/far away natural sandy beaches/jungles . i love it to do alone . how can i go there then ?
Govts not just have to buy public buses but will have to build paved roads to every small village and settlement. Additional expanses of running, maintaining them because they will have to work 24/7.But don't the hundreds of millions of private citizens in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh collectively have the money to buy personal cars and two-wheelers ? That money is at some level the nation's money. Compared to the military budgets of India and Pakistan it would be not a major thing for the governments to purchase a huge number of 40-seater buses and taxis.
I have often made this topic in posts so I thought why not create a thread for this for discussion and readership.
Privately-owned personal transport vehicles ( cars and two-wheelers ) are I believe the biggest form of pollution in the world, directly through their usage and secondarily through their production. This is multiplied by the many manufacturers producing multiple models per year. The hundreds of millions of middle class people in the world, especially in relatively newly "liberalized" and Capitalist India and China, are exhorted through media campaigns and word-of-mouth to buy the latest vehicle model. To purchase these vehicles the middle class and others indulge in a lifestyle that is polluting and not in harmony with Nature and idealized society. Even the supposedly Nature-friendly electric vehicles like Tesla are no good. So these vehicles not only lead to pollution but also to needless accidents, crime ( including "anti-social behavior" ), chaos and general disharmony. Ask me, who comes from India where all these factors are in extreme.
The simple solution for intra-city travel would be therefore to ban all privately-owned personal transports and replace them with 40-passenger buses and six-passenger taxis ( with sufficient luggage space ) that have been more in number and efficiency. Though privately-owned service vehicles ( food and grocery delivery vans, construction trucks etc ) can be owned. This idea itself is a fine idea and it has precedent too. The planned city called NEOM in Saudia will have no private cars and the planned district of Shezhen city in China called Net City will also have no private cars.
So what could be the form of the intra-city buses and taxis ? There is a good new development in vehicles called Cyclorotors which are aircraft that in modern form have electric motors attached to four hubs at the sides and the hubs have movable blades and when the hubs are spun the blades I think create a force that lift the aircraft and move it forward. The below vid was made known to me credit @Hamartia Antidote. It is a test vehicle from the Austrian company CycloTech and of course I think in full form the hubs will be enclosed with a mesh for safety :
Such a vehicle could not only be used for buses and taxis but also for police vehicles, ambulances and food and groceries delivery vehicles. The fuel for these vehicles can remain petrol which can power the electric motors until the time that new longlife battery technologies like the NDB or research into how the electric eel produces up to 860 volts with a power to stun or even kill crocodiles, do not come about. At 05:21 mins in the below vid there is a visualization of a Russian project called CycloCar which can carry six people or 600 kgs of cargo and has a range of 500 kms with a top speed of 250 kmph :
I think ground vehicles for most things are passe and the future is of the Cyclorotor. And there's no point holding two-yearly climate change conferences if the biggest source of pollution - privately-owned personal transport - is not banned.
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@fitpOsitive @Bilal9 @Indos @ps3linux others.
You have no idea what you're talking about. The DMRC, spl under Mr E.Sreedharan did a phenomenal job with that monster of a project and made sure people were not inconvenienced as this monster grew it's tentacles all over Delhi and it's a super cheap and convenient way to get around. Bombay and the rest have not been handled that well though.Well, the Delhi metro as also the other hurriedly constructed metro systems in India in the last decade are unnecessary and unscientific complications ( with separately built infrastructure and wastage of resources ) on top of the already existing chaos in the country.
lolThe government could very simply have abolished privately-owned personal cars and two-wheelers and increased the number and efficiency of of public buses and taxis which would be running on the same old roads. No need for the new, separate infrastructure like for metro. But unfortunately scientific thinking is not present in India whether for transport or for neighborhood construction or food production or employment.
Govts not just have to buy public buses but will have to build paved roads to every small village and settlement.
Additional expanses of running, maintaining them because they will have to work 24/7.
65-70% of South Asia population lives in villages. Unlike cities they don't have to commute to work or attend universities/colleges everyday. Their kids are already settled in cities for work or education. So these buses will travel empty most of the time.
Making this idea work in Saudia is a different thing considering $$
You have no idea what you're talking about. The DMRC, spl under Mr E.Sreedharan did a phenomenal job with that monster of a project and made sure people were not inconvenienced as this monster grew it's tentacles all over Delhi and it's a super cheap and convenient way to get around. Bombay and the rest have not been handled that well though.
lol
are you insane ? are you suggesting a notebandhi like carbandhi, overnight ? without any good infra in place ? do you have any idea how much money we'll lose if all private car manufacturers were suddenly shot in the head, how many tens of millions will lose employment ?
try and take you seriously, and then you sprout out gems like these.
There are two things which are going to happen ... maybe i will be see them, maybe not.
a. Vehicle ownership and the whole concept of transportation will be changed.
b. Currency will be made obsolete; and it will exist only electronically ( Not digital currency like Bitcoin).
Obviously, we need to fund the development of the Star Trek Transporter teleporter technology. It will make all the present day transportation devices totally obsolete.
WFH, and use online e-commerce. Never step out of your house again.
On the other hand, we shouldn't be tied to low fares. Let the fares be realistic and self sustaining. It will cause initial hardship for poorer people, but eventually things adjust.
It is sick that CEOs/VPs/Directors take home millions in salaries and then want to deny Rs 1000 increase in transport allowance to their receptionist.
bhai i go every other day to places where there is no road even . i like to drive in desert/far away natural sandy beaches/jungles . i love it to do alone . how can i go there then ?
Brother i am being mean here. I am crazy about these machines. This is my only hobby left.
Riding specially biking is way much fun and helps u to keep a good active social life.
Agree. Total ban is neither possible nor desirable. In smaller towns and semi rural areas, places are far apart and buses are infrequent. One can't keep waiting at a desolate place on the road for hours for a bus to arrive or to even be stranded late at night. Rural areas do not suffer from so much congestion either. It is the cities which have the biggest problem.
Moreover we can't kill an entire industry that employs so many people directly and indirectly.
Solutions to congestion and pollution can co-exist with private vehicle ownership IMHO
Delusional and non realistic imaginations. Its a dumb idea that will do more harm then good.
Can u imagine the sheer size of public transport required for a country like india if u ban private owned vehicles? The manufacturing and operations of such a massive fleet wont affect environment? Also what about 24/7 service and what about far flung areas? Commies are mostly delusional and no wonder they failed miserably.
You might be able to do this in small countries where public transport is good. But here in America we have huge open spaces between cities. Making a good public transport system for the entire country would be impossible.
Also if you ban private transport you would have to reimburse everyone for their vehicles.
And it goes against our right to commute however we want.
Until a teleporter comes about there is the new development of the cyclorotor aircraft for passengers and conventional winged aircraft for cargo.
Right. People who cannot even drive or ride properly will be able to fly cyclorotors properly and there will be no crashes over populated areas.
Additionally, most times the cyclorotor 30-passenger buses and six-passenger taxis should fly only about ten feet off the ground.You have a good point so that is why I suggest [ cyclorotor] buses and taxis that are piloted by trained people just like now public bus drivers are now. They would need just more training. And of course there would be rules governing flying lanes for safety and privacy. And computerized vehicle-to-vehicle communication and control which will further enable safety.
I'd rather not sit with strangers in a car or bus these days.
But when things are settled public transport should be encouraged without any radical ideas like "BAN".
Or we can talk about decongesting cities. We don't need more metro rails and buses, we need more cities.
In India up North, there are hardly many cities that could absorb the population and the result is we have congested and polluted Delhi. There are no Major cities in Bihar, West Bengal and UP despite the population. All cities are around NCR if any. At least a Chandigarh model planned city is viable in UP.
I am also of the Idea that cities only have Public transport while Private cars should only be allowed to those persons who
1. Belong to an important trade that require quick reaction e.g Doctor, Professors, rescue etc.
2. Pay heavy taxes on car, fuel, road tax, Heavy Parking fees and carbon tax. While annually check car health.
3. Need to increase fines atleast 10x from current ones. Not wearing Helmet only get you Rs 500 fine. This is 3 dollars. This should be atleast 5000 PKR.
We should not be banning private cars, we need to 1) give people good alternative which require huge investments in public transport. 2) make it expensive like hell for people to own a car.
1. The main objective of the OP is to call for a ban on privately-owned personal transport vehicles so right there we have a situation where only a few will be allowed to pilot the cyclorotors.
Isn't it ironic that communist ideals always create a select cadre of elites exempt from what they impose on the proletariat?