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I'll wait to respond at length until I see that you're genuinely interested in the answer and not just trying to prove that car-freedom is for societal fringe-dwellers (see street cleaning thread), but in general I'll say that I've made choices that have made it easy to get by without a car-- you do have the ability to choose where you work, live, and shop.
Oh, OK, I'll give you the benefit of the doubt then. As you posted this on the heels of your response to TC which seemed to be putting forth a pretty definitive position statement that cars are an absolute and permanent necessity to the majority of people:
. . .I was afraid this was going to be another one of those "tell me how you get by without a car and I'll tell you why it won't work for me or most normal people" exchanges. Seen enough of those to last a lifetime . . .
I'd also add Jane Jacobs to your reading list on how car culture has changed our cities.
"Elitist?" "People claiming that their lifestyle is superior?"
I haven't seen that here-- can you give me an example?
What I see is people making defeatist and hopeless statements that cars are "necessary", and when anyone speaks up to share their experience and say they're not, they're labeled as simplistic, judgmental, short-sighted, condescending . . .
So, I gather that you currently don't have a commute because you "choose" not to work?
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