• I noticed one of the recently elected councillors in my area had some concerning points in there BIO about climate change denialism. Checked their social media and it's filled with people crying about 15 minute cities.

    The depth of their ignorance knows no bounds, as we already can be classed as a 15 minute city.

    • makingStuffForFun@lemmy.ml
      ·
      10 months ago

      I have not researched them at all. I heard a guy on the bus the other day chatting. Saying that in them, you should have everything you need within 15 minutes (good), but if you want to use a resource outside of your zone, you're going to have to pay a tax or similar (bad).

      Sounded too extreme to be true. Shrugged and moved on.

      • What you overheard about leaving the zone and paying a tax is a bit of an exaggeration.

        The intent is to discourage car usage within the zones, and one possible method is a levy on vehicles entering them. A better method is improved street design.

        There hasn't been a proposal I'm aware of that actually prevents people moving around by any means of transport other than private motor vehicles.

        • makingStuffForFun@lemmy.ml
          ·
          10 months ago

          Hmmm interesting. I believe reward is a better training tool from experience.

          If they tax people to move about in the end, I'll become a right winger, I guess, in people's eyes.

          I can't imagine it going through if it does get proposed, but you never know.

            • makingStuffForFun@lemmy.ml
              ·
              edit-2
              10 months ago

              True that taxes exist, but we're also free to move about the country. It's a fallacy to consider a new tax is of course ok, as we already have taxes.

              As I say, I'm against it. If it comes to play, I'll use the democracy thing and vote against it, if we have the option to vote against it.

              • Gorgritch_Umie_Killa@aussie.zoneM
                ·
                10 months ago

                But, we are specifically not free to move about the country. There is a lot of locked land we technically need permission to be on, sometimes even national parks, the most public of public land, costs us to get into. I think what you're really thinking about is road access, which can/is already subject to taxes and tolls. All these taxes are in our lives without '15 minute cities'.

                Taxes need to be redesigned from time to time to reflect the changing nature of our country. The GST's introduction was a good State wealth booster, much like the recent tax cuts have a solid argument, regarding re-indexing, even if the design of the policy itself has problems.

                The 15 minute city is a long term restructure of the built environment, it won't be a single bill, or a politicians election platform. So you'll have the chance to vote against the parts you dislike, and vote for the parts you like, but most of all we won't notice the changes, until we one day realise we walked to the gym instead of driving.

                Its a long term redesign or our built environment back towards the human scale distances and sizes. This is because there have been far reaching negative consequences to leaning into the car scale built environment we have now.

                If riding on the bus for an hour to get to work/school/hospital annoys you, then 15 minute cities is probably worth a deeper look.

  • Psiczar@aussie.zone
    ·
    10 months ago

    One of the new councillors who won in Joondalup I caught on security camera dropping anti-vaxxer propaganda in our letterbox.

    It’s a major concern when stupid wins.

  • Gorgritch_Umie_Killa@aussie.zoneM
    ·
    10 months ago

    A bit worrisome. Hopefully contact with real governance will shake a few of these people out of their attitudes.

    The concealment of political affiliation at this level sits uncomfortably with the sense of openness and accountability democracy is supposed to instill. A clear way to decrease the threat of what is an attempted hostile takeover of Local Councils is to start requiring the political affiliations of candidates be publicly disclosed.

  • Nath@aussie.zoneM
    ·
    10 months ago

    I mean, my local couciller won on a platform of wanting to arrange after school care for kids at the local primary school. It doesn't take a lot at the local level. Nor can anyone at that level do all that much harm.

    Best case, these people get genuinely into their roles and find out what issues face local governments (Hint: It isn't vaccines).
    Worst case, they are completely nuts and vote against everything because it isn't about vaccines. But there are usually 8 councillers on the council and they can reign that sort of thing in.