briantrumpet
Timewaster
Does he understand anythingthat NATO is a defence alliance, not an attack alliance?
No.
The difference between an incursion and an excursion? No. The difference between political asylum and a mental asylum? No.
Does he understand anythingthat NATO is a defence alliance, not an attack alliance?
Does he understand that NATO is a defence alliance, not an attack alliance?
It’s Donnie on blame the other fellow mode again.
Something like starting a war that initially goes well and it’s look what I’ve done.
It begins to go wrong and it’s blame the other guy time.
Biden isn’t available for this cock up, so it’s all NATOs fault.
I believe roundabouts are the most dangerous bit of road design for cyclists.
The alternative to mini roundabouts anyway in the US is a 4 way stop. Trust me they are even worse. Absolutely everyone thinks they got there first and have priority.Could be - I know two people who had nasty accidents on them. I wonder how you'd get comparative data... @Pross, any ideas?
I suppose that in the US there are so few cyclists that it wouldn't be their primary concern.
The alternative to mini roundabouts anyway in the US is a 4 way stop. Trust me they are even worse. Absolutely everyone thinks they got there first and have priority.
Are there any ways in which US transportation isn't an example of how it *shouldn't* be done, whether it's road safety, lack of rail to reduce habitual flying, building more and more roads to 'reduce congestion' (but never does), urban planning being predicated on habitual car usage etc, etc, etc.?
Genuinely, is there a transportation area that they do better and set an example other countries should follow?
Could be - I know two people who had nasty accidents on them. I wonder how you'd get comparative data... @Pross, any ideas?
I suppose that in the US there are so few cyclists that it wouldn't be their primary concern.
Mmm. Probably not.Are there any ways in which US transportation isn't an example of how it *shouldn't* be done, whether it's road safety, lack of rail to reduce habitual flying, building more and more roads to 'reduce congestion' (but never does), urban planning being predicated on habitual car usage etc, etc, etc.?
Genuinely, is there a transportation area that they do better and set an example other countries should follow?
Mmm. Probably not.
Urban trolley busses maybe. North Americans are used to wires above street level, and severa cities have electric busses powered from overhead cables. Quiet, no tailpipe emissions,.no heavy batteries.