Kasz216 said:
Transportation in general is a luxuary... outside your two feet. Sad but true. The US isn't built like Europe. If you saw your average suburb in the US you'd see why public transportation won't work.
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I think you're slightly mixing up cause and effect. From what I gather, the addiction to cars is what allowed suburbs to exist, not the opposite.
European cities were built when cars weren't widely available, to a greater extent than American cities. There's also some urban sprawl here nowadays, but nowhere near as much as in USA.
Depending on how the energy crisis plays out, suburbs may almost die. It's not something you'll see in the short-term, but perhaps medium/long-term (again, depending on how things play out; it's not a certainty).
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