Nebuchanezzar
Banned
I do? Wait, no I don't. My grandparents were too poor to afford a university education for their kids, my parents were also not encouraged to go to uni. In turn, they weren't able to secure employment that was high paying originally and had to buy a house on the outskirts of the city because it was the only place they could afford to live. Fast foward 20 years, things have changed for the better a bit. The end.Zimmerman8k said:No. You choose to live further away.
Doesn't have to be pal.Okay some circumstances may beyond your control, but that's life.
OH NOES!I don't want to sound like WAF here, but saying we need to level the playing feild who cant afford to live in certain areas is almost communism.
This is oversimplfying the scenario, and you know it. My parents do work hard, they work very hard, they've always worked very hard and I wouldn't doubt that they work any less hard than a doctor, lawyer, or corporate honcho. Unfortunately, their hard work doesn't entitle them to move into careers with enough money in them to move out of the area. We have a home loan like everyone else, we need to eat, and we're entitled to modest luxuries like everyone else in Australia is. I don't want to go too much into personal finances here, but suffice to say that there isn't enough money to move elsewhere, and while I can't be sure, I'm willing to bet that it's a similar situation for a good majority of people who live out here.There are already adequate social security provisions in Australia to ensure you have access to employment. Work hard, commute everyday, and someday move somewhere better.
We're entitled, as citizens, to have access to equal provisions as everyone else. Ergo, we have the right to expect that the state levels out the playing field. No-one should be more disadvantaged than anyone else. It's only fair.
Of course, there shouldn't be "better" places available in a city in the first place.
Trucks should be replaced by trains wherever possible.Zimmerman said:Its actually brilliant because it is not attractive for many motorists so it doesnt act as a disinsentive to use public transport. However, it is used by many, many trucks which have no alternative but to use the roads. This saves the truck companies much money which finances the building of the roads through the hefty tolls they pay. All motorists also benefit because trucks are a major cause of conjestion, road deterioration and fatal accidents.
I'm not suggesting that there shouldn't be an interchange where two motorways cross one another. But that thing is unnessecarily extravagant.