Can’t they do like the rest of us and find solace in mocking the shit out of each other on Reddit?
evenstevens280 on
Not a surprise. Pretty much every single town and village was connected up by extensive rail until the 60’s, and our connectivity has not been restored since. Buses were meant to replace the trains, but they could never offer as expedient or efficient a service – and still can’t.
So what’s the other viable option? Sitting alone in your car to go everywhere. And the more people that use their cars, the less money the (private) bus companies make, and as such they’re more likely to cut routes, further isolating people.
himit on
This is why I don’t understand the ‘retire to the countryside’ idea.
When you can’t drive or walk far, you want to be somewhere where you need to do neither.
jaylem on
I’ve seen elderly relatives decline rapidly once they give up driving. I’ve also seen elderly acquaintances hold off on giving up driving for way too long. One of them, in his 90s, reversed into a neighbours house before being convinced it was time to hang up the driving gloves. Fortunately none of the kids were in the kitchen when he drove into it.
Sadly car dependency is a huge problem in this country and as usual it impacts the most vulnerable disproportionately.
SuperSparSpartan on
Not sure about lonely, but the thankfully rare times I’ve had to use public transport, I feel confused to the whereabouts my and other people’s taxes have been going.
Really makes you question the claim that the UK is a modern first world country.
snakeoildriller on
How does that work with London? Lots of lonely people, I believe, all the transport you could ever want.
kema786 on
Maybe we shouldn’t have ripped up half our railways and took away a council’s ability to run bus services…
munkeyspunkmoped on
One bus an hour where I’m currently living and that takes 90 minutes to get to the nearest ‘city’. Luckily, I’m able to leave and will be off soon but without decent public transport people are stuck. We can’t all afford cars (that’s if we can even get lessons and driving tests).
Governments take things away. They rarely replace them.
8 commenti
Can’t they do like the rest of us and find solace in mocking the shit out of each other on Reddit?
Not a surprise. Pretty much every single town and village was connected up by extensive rail until the 60’s, and our connectivity has not been restored since. Buses were meant to replace the trains, but they could never offer as expedient or efficient a service – and still can’t.
So what’s the other viable option? Sitting alone in your car to go everywhere. And the more people that use their cars, the less money the (private) bus companies make, and as such they’re more likely to cut routes, further isolating people.
This is why I don’t understand the ‘retire to the countryside’ idea.
When you can’t drive or walk far, you want to be somewhere where you need to do neither.
I’ve seen elderly relatives decline rapidly once they give up driving. I’ve also seen elderly acquaintances hold off on giving up driving for way too long. One of them, in his 90s, reversed into a neighbours house before being convinced it was time to hang up the driving gloves. Fortunately none of the kids were in the kitchen when he drove into it.
Sadly car dependency is a huge problem in this country and as usual it impacts the most vulnerable disproportionately.
Not sure about lonely, but the thankfully rare times I’ve had to use public transport, I feel confused to the whereabouts my and other people’s taxes have been going.
Really makes you question the claim that the UK is a modern first world country.
How does that work with London? Lots of lonely people, I believe, all the transport you could ever want.
Maybe we shouldn’t have ripped up half our railways and took away a council’s ability to run bus services…
One bus an hour where I’m currently living and that takes 90 minutes to get to the nearest ‘city’. Luckily, I’m able to leave and will be off soon but without decent public transport people are stuck. We can’t all afford cars (that’s if we can even get lessons and driving tests).
Governments take things away. They rarely replace them.