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The Future of the Gardiner ExpresswayFriday, October 20. 2006Trackbacks
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I agree with the need for more transit, but you cannot eliminate a major expressway in a large city without a capable expressway replacement. None of these plans offers even close to that. To give an indication of just how far left the city has moved, consider the Alaskan Way Viaduct in Seattle - one of the world's most environmentally-friendly and liberal (even moreso by U.S. standards) cities in the world. Much like the Gardiner, it's ugly and on the waterfront. However the city realizes simply eliminating it would be a colossal error. That's why they are moving towards burying it with the same, if not enhanced capacity. That's what we should be doing here. But it's not. And the end result will be a nail in Toronto's coffin. Many American cities were ruined in the '50s, '60s and '70s by racist, right-wing policies. Toronto will go down in history - and make a fascinating urban study one day - as a city destroyed by ill-advised, socialist left-wing policies.
First off, sorry for the delay; your comment was rejected by spam filters and I just found it in the logs.
I strongly disagree that somehow being "anti-car" implies being "left-wing". I've often wondered if subways should have "executive class" service. Would you pay more for a seat with some elbow room, a network connection, and a coffee bar? I sure would. Modern mass transit needs to accommodate the needs of multiple user groups, not to attempt to reduce all of them to one service level. An extension to these routes that runs to the airport should allow airport users to get downtown on an express basis -- if the users are willing to pay for it. I think that environmentalism makes more sense for those associated with "right-wing" policies than it does for any other. Unsustainable development means unsustainable growth. The way we're going it means involuntarily reduced populations, huge resources directed to adapting to the mess we've made (it's not fixable), and a serious reduction to in what we currently define as "progress". The problem isn't free enterprise, it's that cars are ridiculously inefficient in so many ways: environmentally, economically, and in terms of wasted productivity. Where did you Toronto History blog disappear to?
Did you once post Bits and Pieces of Toronto History? Get back |
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