Because I'm seeing claims like "use fees for government services are a regressive tax on the poor": Any subsidies of automobile impacts are a *huge* tax on the poor, paid for in health, injuries, and the ways in which this mandates car ownership.
If we don't make owning a car incredibly expensive and difficult, we're just gonna continue building auto-only environments which exclude the people who can't afford a car from our communities.
Today's Timdle got me on the first commercial steamboat vs the first canning process, and a sports question which was actually interesting because of the geopolitical implications: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_hand_of_God
Need to fix my CMS so that I can format this stuff better, but I finally decided to start logging fiction podcasts at https://www.flutterby.net/Fiction_Podcasts
Went down to Roy's Redwoods, first time since they reworked the trails down there. Didn't get into the grove, did the loop trail. Was not disappointed.