Madison, Wisconsin rated the most walkable city in America
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These things matter because government, globalists, all of them, want people to be dependent on public transportation and dependent on government. If you can walk everywhere you need to go, that doesn't take into account groceries. No one is going to carry a gallon of milk, maybe a 24pk of soda, bulky packages of toilet paper, etc all while walking.
Globalists don't want you to be able to go to the supermarket and spend $100 or $200 on groceries while freely driving yourself there and back home. Being able to drive means you have the freedom to live outside of the city and once you live outside of the city limits then a lot of rules, regulations, laws no longer apply to you. The counties don't have the same stranglehold of control on people like the cities do.
If everyone was in big cities then everyone would be far more manageable by government and that's what they want. They don't like Americans that are able to live 15 miles outside of the city that also own lots of land, lots of guns, etc. These cities that are advertised as being friendly in regards to transportation are a major manipulation.
They want you in the cities where you either have no parking for your car or limited parking that limits you to 1 or 2 cars per household. They can then have parking garages that can be controlled with the potential of stopping someone from being able to get in their car and leave the parking garage. I know that never happens but it can happen as it's likely by design.
Out here we have 1 home on 5 acres and another home on 1/2 acre, 8 tractors, 3 trucks, 4 cars, lots of guns and lots of a lot of things. Most neighbors have similar things around here as well. None of the people around here are rich but more so just people that worked hard and lived smart lives. Government doesn't like that but there's nothing government can do about it yet.
High gas prices are not only part of a plan to further attempt to force people to switch to electric cars but also force people to consider selling everything they own to move into the city to be able to afford the cost of transportation. That falls into the great reset plan of owning nothing.
My nephew is going to trade school to become an electrician but it requires him driving about 75 miles each way to his classes. He has a truck with a V8 engine so he drives one of his mother's small cars that gets very good gas mileage. The great reset would rather him lose his truck and be forced to move 75 miles away into the bigger city and ride a city bus to where he needs to go.
I imagine all of the scum fucks that are wanting the great reset might hate people like me that grew up with an uncle that is a master mechanic and learned how to do all of my own mechanic work to my vehicles. I learned how to do my own repairs to most things, including plumbing, home repairs. I'm just finishing a pretty big remodel on the home I'm in now.
I know how to repair lawn mowers, weed eaters, and more. I'd definitely be in the category of those government, cabal, etc are against. I don't need government for anything and never liked government anyways. I like visiting big cities but definitely wouldn't want to live in a bigger city again, 2 years in Tampa FL was enough of that bullshit for me.
All of it boils down to government wanting more control over everyone's lives. If you are in a big city and have to settle for renting instead of owning then because of the massive increase in prices you pay renting vs owning, some people end up having to choose between their home and their car and typically will choose their home.
Then people could end up being dependent on public transportation to get to and from work. During the covid bullshit, I saw enough articles to know that public transportation forced people to wear masks so people were forced to risk damage to themselves to be allowed to earn money to buy food with to survive. What if government made use of things like this to force people to do other things in order to be able to earn money to live off of?
It's all about control and when we are free to drive where we want to and to work where we want to then we are free to live our lives the way we want to and government cannot hold anything over us. During the entire covid bullshit, I never once wore a mask, I never was tested for covid. I'm 43 and to my knowledge I've only been sick once in my life.
I believe it was the flu, it was nearly 20 years ago. I didn't see a doctor, I just went to work and dealt with it and as our immune system does, it fixed it all on its own in under a week. When I need to go places, it's typically 15 miles or more to the nearest city but aside from that I walk at least 5 miles per day, often well over 10 miles per day as the exercise feels good to me.
The push to make us dependent on government for transportation and food is not a new thing. This push has simply gotten much bigger in recent years to the point that more people are able to notice it.
This is wrong because sprawl means you're dependent on a private automobile to get around which meaning whoever controls the fuel supply controls your life. The average American spends something like $800 per month on their car which is a huge burden. Also the idea that people won't walk with groceries is wrong. I lived in a big European city and no one I knew owned a car. I walked 2 minutes from my apartment to the nearest grocery store and back with a bag of groceries, just like most people.
If people walk with bags of groceries then maybe I just never noticed before but I've always had a car and worked since I was 16 so I've never had to do any walking aside from 5+ miles I regularly walk for exercise. I also live about 15 miles from the nearest city but I did live in a big city for a couple of years unfortunately.
Only people that wants to keep a new car will pay upward of $800 per month to have a car. I learned a lot regarding auto mechanics going back to when I was a kid and I prefer buying vehicles in cash without payments. Sometimes I like a project vehicle to fix up as a hobby. The last one of those I had was a 1969 truck which I regret getting rid of but at the time, I didn't have time to work on it so instead of letting it sit and rot away I got rid of it.
I can't speak for anything in Europe though, I've never cared to travel over there. I prefer to do at least a full month's worth of grocery shopping at a time so there's no way I could do it without a vehicle. Surely though, anyone on this website would know that cities designed to be walkable or good for public transportation are going to be liberal shit holes in most cases which don't appeal to me personally but to each their own.