LowerBay
Active Member
Wow -- everyone here is pro-subway. This must be the anti-matter universe to Steve Munro's blog. There, if you post a pro-subway comment, you get torn to shreds by the old coot and his loyal followers.
Wow -- everyone here is pro-subway. This must be the anti-matter universe to Steve Munro's blog. There, if you post a pro-subway comment, you get torn to shreds by the old coot and his loyal followers.
Haha that's true. I used to read his stuff religiously, but now I'm starting to just skim his articles and take it all with a grain of salt. I like his ideas and opinions, but sometimes I think he's stuck in some weird realm that I just can't understand.
Before driver's licences had photographs on them, I simply used my Canadian Citizenship card - never had a problem with that. There are lots of people who don't have driver's licences, and I haven't heard them mention that they have problems. Elections Canada was taking Ontario Health Cards at the last election (seems that the federal government they aren't bound by Provincial laws restricting the use of the cards).A passport is an easy alternative to a driver's licence and is the genuine gold standard for ID. Also lasts five years, and costs about the same.
In Manhattan I suppose you can get away with never driving a car, but here? Even so, a driver's license is the gold standard of identification in Ontario and Canada. Everyone asks for a driver's license as the first piece of ID in anything you do ... banks, gov't agencies, etc. etc. ... and they don't accept Health cards.
Honestly though, I had a friend that didn't have a driver's license and she'd have to carry her Passport on her all the time if she was planning on drinking at all. It's a hassle. It's easier for her because she has a big purse to throw it in, but I know personally that I'd go crazy trying to find places to put that booklet all the time.
Even if you never plan to own a car in your life, having a full G license should be something that you attain as an adult sometime in your life. You never know when you'll need to drive somewhere, and even if this country is as connected as Europe or Japan by public, intercity transit, there will always be parts of the continent where it will be impractical to reach without a car. Not knowing how to drive and being proud of it is like being proud of not knowing how to swim. How can knowledge like this - actually any knowledge at all - be detrimental?
Anyway, whether Steve Munro has a drivers license, or not, I'm pretty sure he's sat in the passenger seat of a car a few times and knows a little bit about the kind of commute that motorists in Toronto endure.