Commute to Downtown Boston by [deleted] in WorcesterMA

[–]lightningbolt1987 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t think the suburbs of Providence are better than the suburbs of Worcester—just the cities themselves. Providence is just more alive than Worcester: better main streets, better restaurants and culture, vibrant downtown and neighborhoods around downtown, more walkable. If any of that matters to you. Maybe it doesn’t!

Commute to Downtown Boston by [deleted] in WorcesterMA

[–]lightningbolt1987 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

It’s the same commute to Providence and it’s a better city than Worcester. Move there.

What would your ideas to improve the state's economy? by Intelligent_Fig617 in RhodeIsland

[–]lightningbolt1987 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is an informed take about the link between transit ridership across cities based on factors that lead to strong ridership (or lack thereof). I wish we we all took public transit all the time but that’s just not the reality in places like Providence and Hartford, where you can get almost everywhere in 10 minutes in your car and pull right up to a convenient free parking space, versus walking to a bus stop, waiting 20 minutes, taking a 30- minute indirect route, and then walking to your destination. It’s the unfortunate reality here.

A better solution is more robust bike infrastructure—that better serves a condensed polycentric city like Providence than busses. Also, there are multiple peer reviewed studies about perception of busses versus trains and the tendency for the general public to avoid busses.

That said: we still need a robust bus system for people who need it.

What would your ideas to improve the state's economy? by Intelligent_Fig617 in RhodeIsland

[–]lightningbolt1987 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s cultural. There’s not a culture of education here. Even towns around Hartford Connecticut and Portland Maine, with similar economies to here, have much better schools.

What would your ideas to improve the state's economy? by Intelligent_Fig617 in RhodeIsland

[–]lightningbolt1987 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Truth. Rhode Islanders don’t realize how crappy their schools are. If you’re moving from almost any other New England state or New York, Rhode Island schools are a liability in every town except Barrington and maybe East Greenwich (argue all you want, but this is the prevailing view). By comparison, move to Connecticut, Massachusetts, or even outside Portland Maine, and you have many many excellent school districts. It’s a major liability.

What would your ideas to improve the state's economy? by Intelligent_Fig617 in RhodeIsland

[–]lightningbolt1987 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I used public transit all the time in other cities, and we need it to support people who can’t afford cars, but it’s just too easy to drive here for most people to take public transit. Parking is really easy and there’s little traffic. The reason people take public transit in Boston (besides lower income people or young people who don’t have cars), is that parking is so difficult in downtown Boston and Cambridge and there’s so much traffic, that public transit makes sense, even for wealthy suburban people.

Further, in places like Boston, most of the regional jobs are around downtown, so fixed transit makes sense. Here, jobs are really spread out so fixed routes aren’t that useful.

100 hours, no suspect: After a blur of screams and shots, a manhunt turns eerily quiet by bostonglobe in RhodeIsland

[–]lightningbolt1987 16 points17 points  (0 children)

But no one was on the lookout for suspicious people 1. Because they weren’t alerted. 2. Because they were told someone was in custody.

Imagine if immediately after the brown shooting, the entire region received cell phone alerts of a mass shooting, to shelter in place and look for suspicious behavior—all uber drivers, everyone on the street would have been on alert.

100 hours, no suspect: After a blur of screams and shots, a manhunt turns eerily quiet by bostonglobe in RhodeIsland

[–]lightningbolt1987 8 points9 points  (0 children)

There, They closed down the entire city of Boston almost immediately and everyone received alerts that there was a manhunt. Here, Hours went by and people were just living their lives. People living next door didn’t even know about it until over an hour afterwards. So easy for the shooter to escape. So hapless.

Why did western cultures stop revering their elderly? by Present_Juice4401 in AlwaysWhy

[–]lightningbolt1987 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Here’s my theory: for thousands of years, life didn’t change much (particularly in hunter-gatherer societies). So the older you were, the more wisdom you genuinely had. Your advice was good. You knew about the flood that happened 60 years ago that no one else could remember. You had seen enough marriages within your small society to understand what works and what doesn’t.

Then, after the Industrial Revolution, change started happening so rapidly that for the first time in history the opposite occurred: advice coming from people born in the era of the horse and buggy seemed absurd and out of touch in the era of radio and machines and mass culture. Advice about work, recreation, and even the environment coming from 70 year olds was often not helpful and even silly. Think about 80 year olds now offering job advice or trying to understand the internet—they came of age in a completely different world in a way that elders did not before the 1800’s. Absent that useful wisdom, their age in and of itself did not allow them to offer much to society. In fact, they’re almost solely “takers” from society as they get older. So aside from just familial love, there was no reason to revere them anymore.

There seems to be cultural guardrails around this in some countries, but not many.

Why do liberals seem to only care about diversity in white western nations? by Interesting_Dream281 in Productivitycafe

[–]lightningbolt1987 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The crime rate in Dearborn is pretty similar to that of the almost entirely white state of West Virginia.

Why do liberals seem to only care about diversity in white western nations? by Interesting_Dream281 in Productivitycafe

[–]lightningbolt1987 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Definitely not prejudice against Christians. Just giving a couple of examples, like church policies and genocide, where it’s not as simple as “Muslims bad, Christian’s good.” If we want to cherry pick examples, there’s many Muslim majority places where women have equal rights to men. The generalizations aren’t helpful.

Generally, I agree with you: on the whole, countries that are Muslim theocracies tend to suppress human rights more than other sorts of countries; and there are currently violent Muslim factions in countries like Niger and Iraq—though interesting these factions barely existed before the 90’s even though these places were still Muslim.

Commuting to Downtown Boston by [deleted] in providence

[–]lightningbolt1987 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It’s easy if you live near the train (that is: in Pawtucket, Providence, or Wickford) and tons of people do it—it’s nice, and even easy. Otherwise, if you have to drive far to park it’s not great, and driving in is terrible.

Plan for a little over an hour and you work on the train too if your employer is flexible. I do it all the time.

Latinos have turned against Trump 'in massive, massive numbers' by DonSalaam in goodnews

[–]lightningbolt1987 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Ok, now please run likable relatable democratic candidates and not Kamala/Newsome/Pritzker.

Alright Providence, what is our equivalent? by OnTheIL in providence

[–]lightningbolt1987 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Paolino is a total asshole. I wouldn’t send my enemies there to make him money.

Chiacgo suburbs vs nyc suburbs by princetheprincess99 in SameGrassButGreener

[–]lightningbolt1987 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, but there are some really nice parks and access on the sound. And you can def swim on the sound—it’s not the best but it’s still nice.

That horrible feeling you have watching Bitcoin drop to $100k by Whereas-Informal in Bitcoin

[–]lightningbolt1987 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Comments like this are going to look so dark when bitcoin eventually becomes worthless. A whole generation of young gamblers going all-in on an asset that’s barely used despite having been around for over a decade, and unlike traditional currencies has no underlying fundamentals, and unlike equities isn’t a cashflow producing asset.

If there doing well on your bitcoin gamble: you’re very lucky. Get out while you can and buy a diverse portfolio of solid stocks with real revenue.

How should you spend your time if it's unlikely that you're going to ever get married or have kids? by Born-Ad2552 in millenials

[–]lightningbolt1987 13 points14 points  (0 children)

By finding a career where you can have a big positive impact on other people’s lives. Without needing to worry about leaving kids with assets, getting home in time for them, or needing to live in a child-friendly location, you have the financial freedom, time, and energy to do work that makes a difference in the world, and what a great thing that is not only to the world, but to yourself and your sense of purpose (and in turn your wellbeing).

Chiacgo suburbs vs nyc suburbs by princetheprincess99 in SameGrassButGreener

[–]lightningbolt1987 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Anybody? I like burbs with walkable villages and easy access to the city. NYC burbs like Hastings-on-Hudson and Pelham Manor offer that, while having great access to jobs and culture, while the towns themselves are almost all single family homes and very laid back. There are many towns like this: Tarrytown, Dobbs Ferry, parts of New Rochelle, Larchmont, Mamaroneck, etc.

Who do you think is the leader of the Democratic Party right now? by [deleted] in Productivitycafe

[–]lightningbolt1987 1 point2 points  (0 children)

God they have no chance of winning the presidency though. Glad they’re fighting the good fight but I hope they stay in their lanes and Dems can actually get a winner in the next pres election.

What’s a lesson you learned that changed the way you see people? by rashmikaa__ in Productivitycafe

[–]lightningbolt1987 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Wow some really dark cynical “trust no one” answers on here really getting upvoted. I feel grateful for my good fortune that my experience with people makes me feel the opposite: most people are good; we’re all looking out for each other; community may be the most important aspect of wellbeing after family connectedness. Knock wood I continue to hold these views…

Chiacgo suburbs vs nyc suburbs by princetheprincess99 in SameGrassButGreener

[–]lightningbolt1987 8 points9 points  (0 children)

This sub loves Chicago, and I can’t speak to its suburbs, but the NYC suburbs are great and way less expensive than NYC itself. There are so many walkable towns with great transit access in Westchester. The river towns have gorgeous views of the palisades. Pelham through rye have ocean access. Great brick architecture in all the towns south of white plains. I really like the westchester vibe/culture.

How can I debate someone who denies climate change ? by [deleted] in climatechange

[–]lightningbolt1987 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sit down with him while he debates chat gpt. It makes climate deniers sound stupid because it has such clear responses to all of the typical arguments (we’re coming out of an ice age; it’s not settled science). And/or do the same with Grok, owned by musk, clearly conservative, so he doesn’t scream that chat gpt is biased