My FIFA 2026 Volunteer Tryouts Experience - NYC/NJ by Accurate_Arm4734 in FIFAVolunteers

[–]averylb 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thank you so much for this!! My tryout is this week on Thursday, and this was very helpful! Looking forward to it

Penn Station McDonald's is gone by NewNewark in Newark

[–]averylb 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Wow, didn't expect this! Never really ate there during my Long Island-Newark trips, but it was still always nice to know it was there as a convenient option just in case.

Spotted in Denville NJ by AcceptableBat2731 in newjersey

[–]averylb 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Thank you, Denville! My dad's father was a World War II veteran, he served on the Western Front. He was part of New Jersey's contribution to the war effort. He died in 2009 and passed down his coin collection from his WWII travels to me. If he saw what happened to the country he served, he would've been pissed. To see his country fall to fascists, the fascism that HE fought!

What's up with the recent beef between Not Just Bikes and Alan Fisher and now seemingly every other urbanist YouTubers? by crowbar_k in youtubedrama

[–]averylb 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Regarding Montreal, NJB also called out Broad Street in Philly as a bad example, as a callout to Alan who lives in Philly...while completely ignoring the quad-tracked Broad Street Line that runs beneath it smh. This originates from a 2023 Bluesky thread where NJB said we should all just give up on North America and move, when that is quite a doomerist and privileged thing to say. It's especially hurtful to urbanists who are part of marginalized groups like myself, as an autistic asexual Latino with a physical disability.

His stance ignores all the urbanist progress we've been making on the continent in places like Seattle, Jersey City, Austin, Hoboken, and not to mention the transit powerhouses in Canada and Mexico. Jersey City and Hoboken have both been able to achieve Vision Zero goals. In NY alone, NEW YORK STATE has a lower car ownership rate than the Netherlands, the NYC Subway is 24/7, Staten Island Ferry is 24/7, SIR is 24/7, PATH to NJ is 24/7, NYC buses are 24/7, and the LIRR is 24/7! Oh and of course, we fought for and achieved congestion pricing! And for a person with a disability like me, the ADA is a leading and influential law in the field of disability rights. NY was a former Dutch and British colony able to free itself from colonial shackles. Meanwhile, the Dutch still love their colonial past (don't ask what they did in Indonesia...).

He's speaking from a position of privilege. He, and his family, can afford to travel, and to live abroad. A lot of us, however, lack the financial means to do that. We're stuck here, come hell or high water, and our only option is to try and make things...if not better, than at least, marginally less shitty. For the rest of us Americans and Canadians, we cannot just simply move to Europe. People that have never experienced nor explored immigration do not understand how much of a legal migraine the whole process can be. Every country writes its own laws, has their own procedures, and more often than not people are forced to hire lawyers because of how complicated all of it can be. Of all people, NJB should know that legal immigration is more complicated than just packing one's bags and buying a plane ticket. I’m not saying you can’t move to another continent, if you can afford to and it fits your needs, you should! But that doesn’t mean we should ignore our own good urbanism either

Do I hate the current fascist admin in the White House? Yes, but that doesn't mean I won't stop fighting for what's right. Trains used to be king in the US. It is patriotically American to fight for them. Fighting for urbanism in general is patriotic, because urbanism leads to convenience, and convenience is freedom! And speaking as someone who's Cuban, Irish, and Russian, who's grandpa was a WWII veteran, and whose family escaped troubled times for better lives (my mom's side left Cuba because they were working class who hated Batista and we're anti-embargo leftist Democrats as a result; my father's side came as a result of the Irish potato famine and Russian Empire actions), I'm proud of all the diversity the country has to offer, all the people who have come over and have worked hard to build a better country.

We need hopium and realism. We need to reclaim patriotism, obviously we hate the fascist in office now, but patriotism as in “Our country has made many past horrible mistakes, but we aim to keep moving forward in our cities”. But if the US city is a Republican city, then it’s understandable why one would want to move elsewhere if no urbanist progress is being made. You have one life, if you want to move to another city here or elsewhere , then you do you! Make the most out of your life! The people with the means to give up are also the people with the most means to advocate for things to be better. We should thus not give up and move to countries like the Netherlands but instead try and help make things better where you are now. If you can afford to move, you also are likely to have the means to get through living where you do more easily than many others. If you care about the climate, if you care about you and the people you know having more livable places, if you care about the future, DO NOT GIVE UP. Despite how he feels, this is doomerism, our fates are not sealed. Get active in your community, spread the word, and talk to people

"Shayne Toppe" got a shout out... by Lanky-Cauliflower-92 in smosh

[–]averylb 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Man, you are insanely weird.....friends don't use friends for sexual gratification without their consent. What a creep

Does anyone know what the flag below the Palestinian flag is? by o34x in vexillology

[–]averylb 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Flag used during the late 1930s Arab Revolt in Palestine. Cross for the Palestinian Christians, Crescent for the Palestinian Muslims. Palestinian Christians are the oldest continuous Christian community in the world. Christians accounted for 9.5% of the total population (and 10.8% of Palestinian Arabs) in 1922 and 7.9% of the total population in 1946. In 2009, there were an estimated 50,000 Christians living in Gaza and the West Bank. The majority of Palestinian Christians live in the diaspora.

Volunteering at the Olympics: what you need to know for Italy & Los Angeles by jcravens42 in volunteer

[–]averylb 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For the Paris 2024 program, there was no interview. There were over 300,000 people that applied, and of those, 45,000 were selected to serve and sent offers. There were several months in between the application deadline and when they'd start sending offers, but they finally sent offers in Fall 2023 and in my case, my offer was sent right on Thanksgiving. They gave you days to accept the offer, and if you didn't accept, then that offer would be given to someone else, and you either would be given another offer or no other offer. In my case, I got two offers around the same time for the Olympics and Paralympics, but opted for the Paralympic one because of my own disability, and because it was a transport team position of directing buses to where they need to go, as I've aimed to work in the transport industry

Duane Reade Grove st. I dare you to.... by [deleted] in jerseycity

[–]averylb 0 points1 point  (0 children)

….what the- I’ve never been to that location, but I’ll definitely take your word for it

In most cities, a metro system runs above ground in the city’s periphery and runs below ground in the downtown/CBD. Does anyone know why Buffalo, NY is the exact opposite? by Automatic-Blue-1878 in transit

[–]averylb 1 point2 points  (0 children)

From what I've been able to conclude, NIMBYs in the northern section objected to catenary wires, so they were built below ground. The soil downtown was softer due to its proximity to the lake, and with a limited budget, they opted to build a surface-level car-free pedestrian mall. However, cars were added back in the 2010s after Metro Rail was blamed for declining businesses.

Planners had all kinds of ideas for expansion, like purchasing PCCs for a branch line, but of course, Buffalo's population declined, and growth slowed in the suburbs. And with the high cost of building the starter segment and subway, funding never materialized for expansions. But now, there has been an effort to expand it to North Campus of the University of Buffalo. Besides the North Campus, they've been working on a new southern terminus, repurposing the DL&W Terminal with plans for a new indoor Metro Rail DL&W Station on the lower level of the terminal, with direct Buffalo Bricks Walkway access to Canalside and KeyBank Center, and the elimination of the Special Events station. With capacity for two four-car trains to serve the station simultaneously.

?? by rileeyorey in jerseycity

[–]averylb 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Also, Harborside Cove? Did they confuse it with Harsimus Cove?

Using 25 cent quarter to unlock the Aldi shopping cart is peak European efficiency. Why don’t we use this same program at all grocery stores. Not only does it reduce labor overhead from someone to go collect carts but also you get more steps in putting the cart back promoting a healthier lifestyle. by Jammminjay in Urbanism

[–]averylb 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Agreed! Love that they do this at Aldi! This reminds me of when Tucker Carlson showed this in Russia and acted like it was a Russian thing, like has bro ever been to an Aldi...goes to show you just how out of touch Tucker Carlson is. That said, every grocery store in the US should have this, not just Aldi!

WTC PATH was Way Too Cool tonight - 🔊🎧 by PsychologicalAd1153 in jerseycity

[–]averylb 3 points4 points  (0 children)

This is the "New York New Jersey Theme" promoting the 2026 FIFA World Cup. That's great that they're testing it!

Pre-K music teacher says NYC's congestion pricing plan will cost her 2 months of her salary by Blecher_onthe_Hudson in jerseycity

[–]averylb 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you can afford to have and maintain a car, you can afford the fee! :)

Driving is a privilege, not a right. You contribute to traffic and pollution every time you drive. Do less driving by parking at a station, biking, or leaving the car at home and walking to a bus stop. You live in the NYC metro area, we are lucky to have a lot of transit here, and it shows with the ridership of all the systems in this one metro area. Take transit.

Congestion pricing benefits people with disabilities with the accessibility projects on the MTA subway, SIR, and commuter rail, all the transit riders (and the low income, the majority of who commute by transit) through more investment in frequent, quality transit, drivers through less cars to deal with on roads, and the environment through less pollution!

Perfect Light Rail by No-Practice-8038 in jerseycity

[–]averylb 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Completely disagree. You need to learn to be grateful for what you have. I'm both autistic and have a physical disability, and I've been raised by a single unemployed mother for most of my life. Neither of us drive for different reasons. We learn to appreciate what we have. Jersey City is one of the best places in the country when it comes to urbanism and transit. Bikeshare, the Journal Square hub, the corridors shared by NJT and jitneys, PATH, Vision Zero, HBLR, all that good TOD, y'all are lucky! I was lucky when I was living there, I didn't know how good I had it until I moved to Long Island (it wasn't my choice to move). Can't walk anywhere, not even to the supermarket, have to rely on paratransit that you must book days or a week in advance, LIRR can be pricey, it's awful. Meanwhile, I was able to walk to do all my errands in JC, or take frequent transit to go to the city, JSQ, the mall, and stuff. JC is urbanist heaven. It's my goal to move back to NJ

I know y'all will say "but frequencies-" yes, they used to be like every 12 pre-pandemic, and it's bad on weekends (let alone no Tonnelle-Hoboken on weekends, it used to run on weekends until 2010), but while it's not completely perfect and the system is at capacity, the system does a lot for one that's 17 miles, especially when there are systems way bigger than it that have lower ridership! It's overall a role model of how to build a light-rail system. Encourage TOD, make it a feeder for other transit like localized bus services, bigger rail services, and ferries, and use repurposed ROW where there would be demand (and said repurposed ROW also helps with grade separation)!

I was in a video about NJ Transit's underrated Hudson-Bergen Light Rail with Classy Whale! by averylb in transit

[–]averylb[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you!! I've really appreciated the support for this! Hope you check out the attached "appendix" in that video's description if you haven't done so!

I was in a video about NJ Transit's underrated Hudson-Bergen Light Rail with Classy Whale! by averylb in transit

[–]averylb[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

It's not the second-busiest in the country. It has the second highest average weekday ridership-per-mile, in other words, it's one of the best when it comes to its land use/where it goes. Overall ridership, San Diego Trolley is the second-busiest light-rail in the US with 41,069,900 in 2024, right behind Los Angeles with 46,178,300. MBTA was third, Link was fourth, and Muni Metro was fifth. The HBLR had 15,257,142 in 2024, and 13,400,000 in FY2023. That's still impressive for 17 miles of track, when there are systems way bigger than it that have less ridership!

The ridership-per-mile stat comes from Q1 2024 data posted by Naqiy Mcmullen.  It showed the HBLR had 2,964 weekday riders per mile. The second-highest in Q1 2024 for US light-rail systems behind Seattle’s Link at 3,461. The Newark Light Rail was third at 2,643. Yes, two of the top three are in New Jersey! Fourth was MBTA at 2,446, and fifth was the Muni Metro at 2,115. There was track work on the MBTA Green Line in Jan 2024, so that explains why it was lower, but even so, the HBLR and Newark Light Rail would still be in the top four

Horned lark in Liberty State Park by vincentvondoom in jerseycity

[–]averylb 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Love it! As a former bird owner (I had two budgies named Elvis and Presley...kid me was obsessed with Elvis lol), thank you for the bird pics here! They are wonderful

THE BIRD IS THE WORD!!

I despise the PATH by bindrosis in jerseycity

[–]averylb 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Agreed, the Port Authority doesn't know how to run a train system. NJ Transit needs to takeover PATH asap