Fair enough, let's delve into moving people in rural areas then if that's what you want to focus on and I'm going to focus on rural America, where I grew up where even to this day it's still less than 200 people in town and the cows outnumber the people.
There's been a ton of studies that show mass transit in rural areas don't work well, it's inefficient because of density, distance, and terrain. Rural America isn't the same as rural Europe, America is much, much more spread out. There have been some interest in more of the on demand services but they aren't exactly what you'd call mass transit more of a car pooling service, it kind of works but it's mostly there to service the elderly, which is another problem with rural America. Most places in Europe you're only a hour or two away from a major city, you don't have the same here and a bus isn't going to cut it and a train isn't going to happen even if America actually goes train happy because of distances, you'll need to get to a central location with a car to catch that train because that's how shit is just spread out in America.
You seem to think that each little town is self contained, here's the thing with a lot of rural America, it's isn't. My town I grew up in, my friends town 4 miles over isn't, my other friend 15 miles away isn't. Where we grew up the closest place with a grocery store was 20+ miles away and combine that with again density and terrain, since a lot of us, including myself didn't live in town, mass transit like your talking about isn't always feasible, convenient, or sustainable.
And again, it's not a stupid zero sum game here. Cars aren't going away anytime soon, face reality here, they're not and you can do more than one thing at at time to address climate change and EV's for people, for grain, for vegetables are part of that solution.
Fair enough, let's delve into moving people in rural areas then if that's what you want to focus on and I'm going to focus on rural America, where I grew up where even to this day it's still less than 200 people in town and the cows outnumber the people.
There's been a ton of studies that show mass transit in rural areas don't work well, it's inefficient because of density, distance, and terrain. Rural America isn't the same as rural Europe, America is much, much more spread out. There have been some interest in more of the on demand services but they aren't exactly what you'd call mass transit more of a car pooling service, it kind of works but it's mostly there to service the elderly, which is another problem with rural America. Most places in Europe you're only a hour or two away from a major city, you don't have the same here and a bus isn't going to cut it and a train isn't going to happen even if America actually goes train happy because of distances, you'll need to get to a central location with a car to catch that train because that's how shit is just spread out in America.
You seem to think that each little town is self contained, here's the thing with a lot of rural America, it's isn't. My town I grew up in, my friends town 4 miles over isn't, my other friend 15 miles away isn't. Where we grew up the closest place with a grocery store was 20+ miles away and combine that with again density and terrain, since a lot of us, including myself didn't live in town, mass transit like your talking about isn't always feasible, convenient, or sustainable.
And again, it's not a stupid zero sum game here. Cars aren't going away anytime soon, face reality here, they're not and you can do more than one thing at at time to address climate change and EV's for people, for grain, for vegetables are part of that solution.
Bro like 80% of the population lives in/near cities.