T3G
Senior Member
And how long ago was that? Because I can count on one hand the number of times I've had a GO bus bypass the Gardiner in the last 5 years.Pfft. When I decided I was no longer going to drive every day, I took the GO bus. The GO drivers bypassed as much of the Gardiner as they could to take the Lakeshore or other routes, and almost invariably still got in on schedule.
Again, why do you think that is?Drivers always try and appeal using people other than themselves, whether it's transit, commercial vehicles, emergency vehicles. Yet undeniably, the problem of the overwhelming amount of traffic exists because far too many people choose to drive by themselves in a car. Every last one of them contributes, yet every last one of them thinks they're special and don't.
Because our transit system is a flaming pile of garbage!
Imagine if Manhattan had the same population it currently does, but only a few subway lines. What do you think would happen then? People would know they can't rely on the transit system, and so they wouldn't take it, and the modal share would be much higher. Trying to kill an expressway before any meaningful changes have been made to the transit network is putting the cart before the horse.
Fascinating. Why do you think this argument wouldn't also apply if it was a different sort of infrastructure we were talking about? If we were New York in the 1980s, all of these things could be said about the subway."Excluding all the money that's been explicitly stated by the city and province rebuild the Gardiner to a state of good repair, maintenance is cheap!"
Not sure what that leaves other than street cleaning and line painting.
Proper maintenance has been put off for decades. Don't kid yourself that it's only $16m. The Gardiner has also had several waves of extensive repairs since the 1990s. It's not "once in a generation" by any stretch of the imagination.
If you neglect maintaining a critical piece of infrastructure, it will wear out and then we'll have to pay out the ass to repair it. Doesn't matter whether it's a highway, whether it's a subway tunnel, whether it's a rail line, it's all the same.
As I said already, you have been relieved of that burden, and thank God for that. Now you don't get to decide whether other people in the region get any benefits, and it will be your provincial taxes instead that go to something you don't benefit from.If you live in a different tax region, why should you get a say as to where my taxes as a Torontonian get spent?
Maybe Torontonians who hate 905ers coming in and using "their" infrastructure should build a wall around the city and keep them out.
I didn't vote for Zee Hamid, but I should be punished for whatever things he doesn't do? I reject your notion of collective responsibility.Because ironically, the areas that would benefit most from GO expansion vote in the people least likely to want to meaningfully expand the system. This isn't rocket science.
Milton just voted in Zee Hamid, unsurprisingly. Toronto has never had the power to stop the GTA from voting conservative.
No, you're right, there is no need for diplomacy. You can be as belligerent and unpleasant as you want. But then don't act shocked when you don't win other people over to your side.Sorry, the time for diplomacy with drivers has long passed. Drivers have held all the card for a very, very long time.
Entitlement and selfishness has nothing to do with the form of transportation that person has elected to use. It's a widespread aspect of human nature. If you go to the comments on any TTC post on Facebook, you can find just as many snotty, entitled TTC riders. You'll find even more of them when the drivers go on strike on June 7.Commuter driving comes with huge portions of added entitlement and selfishness.
You mean the thing that has now happened?Are the GTA cities and their taxpayers willing to shoulder the burden of that cost out of respect for the decades that the City of Toronto paid for the expressway that made their lives easier?
For someone who so often rails against right wing talking points, this sure sounds like a pull yourself up by the bootstraps post to me. I was 11 years old when I moved to Milton, so I can't imagine what kind of responsibility I'm supposed to take for that, and as for moving closer to where the action is, well, if it was so easy, why are there scores and scores of stories of people on the internet who are struggling to do just that? Our housing market is in the toilet, our transit is a complete joke, and you want to take away the highway. Absolutely excellent.For someone so bent on lecturing about free will and democracy, you don't seem overly willing to take responsibility for your own personal choices.
Luckily, in due course I will be moving away, but it's not going to be to Toronto, because it is patently obvious the city, and the whole of the GTA, has no vision and no future. This is just the circling of the drain. Good riddance to bad rubbish.




