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> National cuisines incorporated the new staple crop thoroughly, and it’s now hard to imagine Italian food without gnocchi, French sans vichyssoise, tapas without patatas bravas, a Eurasia bereft of aloo and rösti and colcannon and latkes.

Vichyssoise is not French food. it's a dish made by a French chef who worked in New York. ask any French and they would have no idea what a Vichyssoise is.


> ask any French and they would have no idea what a Vichyssoise is.

Neither would most Americans!

It's nice to know both cultures are equally provincial in this regard. :)


Fine, gratin dauphinois, then.

What are you talking about? In most cities public transport sucks, hardly goes anywhere, gets more expensive year after year, makes housing prices go up, and is slow and inflexible enough that people still end up needing cars to go around

It's interesting to read such an opposite opinions on public transport from Americans and Europeans.

Worth noting that only 17% of passenger transport activity in the EU is public transit (trains and buses).

https://www.eea.europa.eu/en/analysis/indicators/share-of-bu...


> democratically elected governments.

51% of a vote can go the wrong way now and then.


Yes but winner takes all is not the only voting system in existence, and democracy goes beyond just voting once every few years.

> democracy goes beyond just voting once every few years.

What else is there? You are effectively only asked to choose between bad and worse candidates at a fairly low frequency.


You're equating democracy to presidential elections, that's not the full extent of it. Free press, transparency, independent justice, referendums, etc. are all part of a democratic system. Norway / Denmark / Switzerland do it better than US / UK / France for instance.

Oh, and how do you know it will stop there? Control freaks don't stop at the first step.


> Smallish shops with bike racks in front of the door are simply too convenient

Most people don't live in city centers. Because they are the most expensive places to live in.


You don't need to be in a city centre for small shops with bike racks.

This is village with a population of a bit less than 3000, which I only know about because I have walked East-West across most of the state of Brandenburg (from Słubice in Poland to the city of Brandenburg) and this trains station was a convenient break point:

https://www.google.com/maps/@52.3459295,14.2800967,3a,60y,14...

Here's Aberystwyth, where I did my degree, population 13k, nearby villages boost that by about 6k, students by another 8k:

https://www.google.com/maps/@52.4145833,-4.0848806,3a,75y,19...

I grew up on the south coast of the UK. Which is certainly expensive overall, but it has cheap areas like Leigh Park which used to be entirely council houses (i.e. made for poor people and run by the local council):

https://www.google.com/maps/place/Leigh+Park,+Havant,+UK/@50...


One of those shows several cars in the photo and a single bike.

The other two show pedestrianised areas, and all three show pedestrians without any indication of how they go there. When I to to similar areas in my town (pop approx 23k) I have drive there, park, and then walk around.

I have several shops within easy walking distance and many people (including me) do walk to them, but quite a few drive. Few bikes (kids mostly) at shops although leisure cycling is VERY popular here.

One of the nice things about an edge of town area with its own identity as a village is we have a lot of local stuff which is walkable and friendly.


The UK is strange, it's really not bike friendly but you do have rows of small shops outside of city centers and towns have many of them too. France is rather the opposite or simply worse on all aspects in the countryside.

The UK varies a lot. A lot of places are walkable so a mix of public transport (in cities) or car and parking and then walking are common.

I never had a car in London, and would not want to drive in central London. Public transport is faster, less tiring, and while not cheap, is cheaper than running a car.

Living in Cheshire a car is a necessity.


> One of those shows several cars in the photo and a single bike.

Yes, and? "Cars are popular" is not a surprising claim that anyone has been contradicting, so far as I can see. (Also, Aberystwyth is tiny enough to get around entirely on foot, and hilly enough that bikers have to be exceptionally fit, and yet despite this, bike racks).

> The other two show pedestrianised areas, and all three show pedestrians without any indication of how they go there.

The Edeka in Briesen is one of the other two, I don't see a pedestrianised area, do you mean the car park owing to the open-air market set up in it?

The other one (Leigh Park) is literally in the middle of a typical UK conurbation with, as is normal in the UK, approximately universal pedestrian access. People can walk there easily from their homes, they can cycle, they can drive, they might even take a bus. One thing they're really not likely to do is come from very far away, because the only people who know about Leigh Park are the adjacent parts of the conurbation and they mostly look up their noses at it because it's poor.


The claim was made further up the thread that "I don't know a single person who orders groceries online. Smallish shops with bike racks in front of the door are simply too convenient, seems hard to beat" and I interpreted your photos as supporting that claim.

My point is that it is not "shops with bike racks" that are the alternative to online groceries, it is a mix that definitely involves more use of cars than bikes, plus probably more walking and public transport than bikes too.


Ah, got it. I missed that interpretation of the surrounding context, that's fair. Looking back at the comment you mention, I see how it could be interpreted as either "e.g." or "exclusively" bikes.

To your point, I agree, it's definitely not just bikes: I could bike to my local stores, I actually walk most of the time. With the "e.g."/"exclusive" split: Back when I was commuting, I did so by bus and train, and would also often go via a shop on the way home. The Briesen example is close to the train station, so my guess is that many of the locals would do likewise.

I'd go further though, we do order online about once every 6-8 weeks, because bulk purchasing 18 litres of soy milk and another 9 of long-life cow milk that way is more convenient than frequent small purchases at the same time as the perishables.


You don't always need to be a city center to have this convenience, but you can't be in an area that is car centric... And usually when people compare the cost of both of these places, they only account for the cost per square meter of accommodation.

You'd get these in inner suburbs, too. And non-inner suburbs, for that matter.

Sounds a lot like every very large company, in broader terms

No, estimated height has nothing to do with actual measurements

Can you elaborate?

Yes. The Japan Meteorological agency has a piss poor machine learning model that basically defaults to predicting 3 meters wave every time there is an earthquake in the sea and in the end it's usually a few dozens of centimeters. They lost all credibility by crying wolf every single time.

problem is these changes are constantly reverted (back to Microsoft services)

Microsoft had to move their local headquarters to Munich to have their municipality revert the change...

Now, if two or more municipalities managed to migrate to Linux at the same time...


Right, but if you point out that the median time to uninstall Open Office is two minutes people get mad.

Wait until Microsoft comes back with lobbying some well placed politicians and restores Microsoft 365 in no time. This happens every single time.

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