buckykat,
maggio,

I remember this as part of a short comic strip, with a family sitting in a car being scared. I can’t find the whole original, do you know where I can find it?

ltxrtquq,
vividspecter,

There’s a bunch of them here: www.theonion.com/opinion/cartoons

This might be the one you’re thinking of: www.theonion.com/congested-values-1819590506

jabathekek,
@jabathekek@sopuli.xyz avatar

I hate going there because of all the fucking idiots in their dumb cars stinking up the place.

person, (edited )

deleted_by_author

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  • jabathekek,
    @jabathekek@sopuli.xyz avatar

    fr lol

    rbos,
    @rbos@lemmy.ca avatar

    That whole place is a wasted opportunity for a pedestrian zone. It would be so nice if they’d kept the temporary tram line from the Olympics and banned personal vehicles.

    jabathekek,
    @jabathekek@sopuli.xyz avatar

    It baffles me how Vancouver does these really awesome things and then they’re like “haha no, this amazing concept that made the city a bit better was just temporary”.

    vividspecter,

    No doubt this is partly making fun of this idiotic idea.

    sik0fewl,

    I think you’re right and Strong Towns just tested out that theory. Spoiler: it did not work. I really hope they try it again with the brick.

    AeonFelis,

    The flag needs a longer pole so that American drivers can see it from the top of their SUVs.

    copymyjalopy,

    I’m going there in a couple weeks, would be cool of this was real.

    jabathekek,
    @jabathekek@sopuli.xyz avatar

    BYOB (Bring Your Own Bricks)

    seathru,
    @seathru@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

    Bring your own brick (BYOB) just in case.

    jabathekek,
    @jabathekek@sopuli.xyz avatar

    (╭☞´ิ∀´ิ)╭☞

    lgsp,

    Relevant video in which a guy stands still at the side of a road next to a pond:

    • Hands free: he gets a lot of splashes by uncaring passing drivers
    • Holding a brick in his hand: drivers slow down and avoid the pond.

    It’s really funny:

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQpaEN_TN_U

    As usual drivers care more about their car than other people’s wellbeing.

    BTW: any shop that sells inflatable bricks?

    LovesTha,
    @LovesTha@floss.social avatar

    @lgsp @mondoman712 Painting a foam brick with a rubbery paint should collapse down well in a bag and spring up to full size really quickly

    PedestrianError,
    @PedestrianError@towns.gay avatar

    @lgsp @mondoman712 I remember my preschool having a big stack of cardboard bricks to build with. Maybe they still have those in toy stores?

    photonic_sorcerer,
    @photonic_sorcerer@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

    Because of the implication?

    lgsp,

    To cross the roads safely when needed 🙂

    brbposting,
    hOrni,

    I am doing this. I have to walk along a narrow pavement next to a road to get to the nearest bus stop. During a rain it has many puddles and I’ve been splashed on many occasions. Will be making a foam brick next week.

    lgsp,

    Please share it, then, if you really do!

    Baku,

    I saw a video a few weeks ago of a trucker who had to pull over on a fast road and he was holding a sharp pole in his hand. People usually reacted by giving him space, rather than driving inches away from him at 80km/h, like they usually do.

    doubtingtammy,

    LMFAO Drivers hate this one trick

    xantoxis,

    Drivers hate this one brick

    gallopingsnail,
    @gallopingsnail@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

    Drivers hate this one brick

    xantoxis, (edited )

    Looks to me like a lot of them are slowing down to see what kind of performance art he’s doing. Even the bus driver pointed at him in curiosity. Admittedly, there are also a lot of them swerving away from the puddle in a moment of sudden awareness, or just swerving away from him in a moment of fear.

    There may be some aspect of attention-grabbing that would work no matter what was in his hand. People see so many umbrellas on a rainy day that it barely registers, but if you hold anything at all that’s eye-catching, you’ll pop up in their conscious attention and they’ll treat you like a person instead of a road hazard.

    I mean, if it works it works, but I think it would be less effective if a lot of people did it. “Oh, I’ve seen this one, he never actually throws the brick.”

    c0ber,

    I mean, if it works it works, but I think it would be less effective if a lot of people did it. “Oh, I’ve seen this one, he never actually throws the brick.”

    seems easily solved by having at least some people actually throw it when called for

    xantoxis, (edited )

    That’s true, it wouldn’t take very many before people were always cautious.

    EDIT: Wait, what am I saying. Drivers routinely just kill each other for a million reasons, and then never do anything about the reasons or use any caution whatsoever.

    Mango,

    Gotta say it’s good carrying a passive threat.

    Ho_Chi_Chungus,
    @Ho_Chi_Chungus@hexbear.net avatar

    oh I’ve been there before. Anti-getting-hit-with-a-car-bricks aren’t even the weirdest part about the place. They got so many seagulls over there they have professional falconers who have trained hawks to scare off the seagulls. Absolutely bizarre to see IRL

    Danquebec,

    They can’t just establish an independent population of falcons in the city? That’s what we did in Montréal for the pigeon problem. A university introduced them a few years ago and now they’re having babies.

    Aggravationstation,

    Not that rare. I live in a coastal town in England. We have hawk handlers come every year. We also have speakers that blast the sound of hawk calls on the dockside but the seagulls seem to have worked out that they’re bullshit.

    Rentlar,

    It’s a “mature” version of “crossing flags” that are a not uncommon sight in Japan near school zones:

    https://live.staticflickr.com/4317/35255215303_d40b3861b8_b.jpg

    Phoonzang,

    I’ve seen those in the US not too long ago, too.

    endhits,

    Amazing how America has to have the threat of damage to property to get people to not run over pedestrians, while Japan just has a little flag to increase visibility.

    America is sick.

    Gabu,

    Japan is extremely walkable and has some of the best public transportation in the world, is the thing

    Rentlar,

    Hahahaha I think this sign is tongue in cheek. Most of the surrounding area outside of Granville Island is very easy to walk and enjoy yourself without a car. At Granville you have to be careful of a large influx of tourists in cars and cement mixer trucks.

    AeonFelis,

    You mean “bonus points” flags?

    Rentlar,

    Bonus years in jail lol.

    Scrollone,

    What are they used for? You just take one and wave it?

    Underwaterbob,

    If they’re anything like the ones in Korea, they hire someone to be there during busy times, and whenever someone wants to cross, the person steps out with the flag and stops traffic. Usually in school zones.

    SimplyATable,

    Similar thing happens in the US where I am

    pineapplelover,

    Yeah they’re called crossing guards. Schools around here hire some near schools

    SparrowRanjitScaur, (edited )

    You just pick one up and carry it across the road and then drop it off in the little bin on the other side. The idea is that you’re more visible when you’re holding a flag.

    Rentlar,

    That’s right, anyone crossing takes it, holds it in front of them, and crosses.

    https://shop.r10s.jp/e-plus/cabinet/z064/m_minihata_w.jpg

    (The flag reads “crossing in progress”)

    hOrni,

    It seems, that the laws are to blame. In my country, when a pedestrian stands near a crossing tha car has to stop under penalty. Even if the pedestrian is just walking towards the crossing. Drivers usually comply.

    Nouveau_Burnswick,

    That is the law on Ontario, all lanes of traffic must stop for someone using a pedestrian crossover (zebra crossing). The penalty for failure to comply is $1000 and 4 demerits. Fines are doubled ($2000) in community safety zones.

    The law isn’t to blame; driver compliance, enforcement, and road design is.

    FireRetardant,

    The number of people that slowly inch their bumpers towards the old lady crossing the street so they can zoom past is truly disgusting. Could you imagine treating your own mother like that?

    Nouveau_Burnswick,

    Some stranger? No way.

    My own mother? Absolutely.

    Anyways, my thought is that crosswalks should default to walking, and if cars want to pass then can get out and press a beg button to get the light.

    njordomir,

    I think when you press the button to cross a spike strip should automatically deploy directly on the stop line. Inching into the ped area with just the front tires will cost you two tires, running the light costs 4 and probably some scratches in the paint.

    jaybone,

    Step 5. Get arrested

    Etterra,

    Not likely, they look like fake bricks.

    Mango,

    Or excessively high quality bricks.

    mondoman712,

    For carrying a brick?

    jakob,

    @mondoman712 @jaybone
    For waving with a brick?

    jaybone,

    I’m happy some people live in a world where they think people would not be arrested for carrying a brick.

    Etterra,

    They look like foam bricks. Same results, virtually no chance of harm in case of brick throwing. Win-win.

    brian,

    is it legal to carry flashing red and blue lights when crossing streets as a pedestrian? The number of times I’ve gotten stuck in the middle of the crosswalk bc no one will stop is absurd

    Grass,

    Maybe custom blinking shoes like what they used to make for kids back in the day? Just mimic the blinking pattern.

    There are many people who still wouldn’t notice until the siren comes on though. I can spot an interceptor if the sunlight just happens to hit it right, yet my mom will drive right past a parked white cop car with lights on and be surprised when I told her she didn’t slow down to pass it. Then if an emergency siren goes off she panics and tries to pull to the shoulder without locating the emergency vehicle when fully blocked in by other cars and only moving enough to block the ambulance driving along the shoulder.

    Veritrax,

    Ear plugs and an air horn would probably do the trick.

    Kultronx,
    @Kultronx@lemmygrad.ml avatar

    I do this in winter time with a snow/iceball, idly tossing it in the air ready to throw.

    TQuid,
    1. Granville Island should be car-free, full stop;
    2. I actually don’t find that specific crossing very bad;
    3. This is still funny as hell.
    BigBananaDealer,
    @BigBananaDealer@lemm.ee avatar

    i remember seeing a video where a guy stood next to a huge puddle to see if people would splash him when driving by, they all did

    then he did the same thing except he was carrying a brick and everybody slowed down so as to not splash him

    Track_Shovel,

    I’m from a much less pedestrian friendly city, and I completely agree with point #1. There are a lot of other ways to get to Granville and it’s so close quarters with cars, you can’t even swing a cat

    delirious_owl,
    @delirious_owl@discuss.online avatar

    We should pressure our governments to install these in every crossing where >1 pedestrian has been hit by a car

    ziixe,
    @ziixe@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

    They would have to take budget from the military to afford this, what an outrageous act! Wait they can just defund hospitals and schools even more, but do you honestly think they would allocate even a dollar to safety for their citizens? Nah they would just shove the new money into the military again

    This whole thing is satire, I didn’t say /s since it looked like it’s just focusing on the last sentence instead of the whole comment

    Iceblade02,

    Ah yes, the most mature response to every societal problem - threatening violence.

    ProgrammingSocks,

    Cars are violent

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