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Notes -
Recently there has been some discussion in the media about fare evasion, and I thought in light of @WhiningCoil's comment on low trust societies it might be of interest to you all.
Over the past five years the fare evasion rate on New York City's bus lines has risen from 20% to 50%. while there has also been a similar (but less dramatic) rise among subway customers.
Recently the MTA commissioned a study to investigate the psychology of fare evaders and The New York Post has picked this up and mocked the project.. The study broke down different "personas" of fare evaders like a software product manager might. The NYP felt that this was inane as the obvious conclusion was that scofflaws were simply motivated by a lack of enforcement:
I enjoyed this article by Manhattan Contrarian that criticizes the New York Post for completely ignoring race when discussing this issue, and pretending that lack of enforcement is the source of our woes.
I'll note as an amusing aside, that even the conservative Post uses an image of a White teenager for their illustration of a common fare evader.
However, I have to disagree with Francis Menton of The Manhattan Contrarian here when he writes the following:
The racial makeup of fare evaders is perfectly well known of course and actually quite openly acknowledged so long as it is being done by the right sorts of organizations for the right ends.
I also wonder why the Post refuses to ask why draconian fare enforcement measures are only now needed? Somehow the MTA functioned perfectly fine with its easily-avoidable turnstyles decades ago. To relate it back to WhiningCoil's comment, I can only say "I think the bottom line, is this is just what a low trust society looks like."
Luigi's CEO assassination has been a real statement piece to drive your point.
Other than money, the US lacks other recognizable traits of a developed nation.
High violence, low trust, unreliable social safety nets, bad health outcomes...... you name it. The US has money, and that's about it. Yes, being in the top 1% of America makes for an amazing life. Guess what ? That applies to every half-developed nation.
This is how ChatGPT outlines what living in a developed nation feels like:
Aspects of a Developed Country from a Quality of Life Perspective
Healthcare
Universal access to high-quality healthcare services.High life expectancy and low infant mortality.Education
Free or affordable access to primary, secondary, and tertiary education.Economic Stability
Strong social safety nets and pensions.Infrastructure
Efficient transportation systems (roads, public transit, airports).Modern urban planning with sustainable practices.Safety and Security
Low crime rates and effective law enforcement.Environmental Quality
Social Equity
Access to housing and elimination of poverty.Work-Life Balance
Reasonable work hours and paid leave policies.Opportunities for cultural, leisure, and recreational activities.(Note: it gave me a couple of woke talking points. I deleted those)
I've personally striked out what America fails at. It's pretty damning.
And why should anyone care what a jumped-up matrix multiplier trained on the output of the Internet thinks?
That's a tired argument. For near-consensus topics, Chat-gpt gives acceptable answers. I could've done the legwork and found this exact same points elsewhere, but I ain't doing that for free. So you get Chatgpt.
You don't have to post if a particular comment would cost you too much effort to be bothered to research and then type up.
And I'm not convinced that the median internet opinion fed into ChatGTP is a consensus view worthy of consideration. They poisoned these poor LLMs with all of reddit, etc. Their "consensus" opinion could be overly online nonsense. How indeed should I thicken my pizza sauce.
fair fair.
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I doubt I would trust any actual "consensus" on this topic, I'm certainly not going to trust ChatGPT. If you'd found the points elsewhere, I could tell you exactly why the definition was not to be trusted, but since you used ChatGPT as your authority, there is no authority.
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