Sorting the posts on this community by "top of all time" you see it's mostly memes. Is there a community like this where people actually discuss solutions to these problems and encourage activism? Otherwise this community is more of a way to distract potential activists with emotional venting.
There's value to both, but I understand the frustration. A big part of building a world without cars is developing an anti-car culture though, and memes are very effective at that.
This question came up often in the old /r/fuckcars and the response there was typically that discussion of solutions and activism made more sense in other communities like NotJustBikes and WalkableCities. I don't know if those have corresponding federated communities yet though.
The sidebar mentions one of the community goals is to discuss car alternatives. I do see some posts like this after scrolling more. Maybe I just need to spend more time here to calibrate. Anyway, I hope that I get to see more posts in the future that discuss alternatives and opportunities for activism!
The same issue is with any anti-something community and also on reddit. Eventually they turn into picture-of-text karma farms.
It's really easy to unite people in negativity when being against something in common, but it's a lot harder to unite them in being for any solution.
I dislike the idea of copying subreddits to here for that reason. The problems follow along too.
It might have been more useful on Reddit, because of the massive userbase, to shout out anti messages from the roof tops, hoping to sway some opinions, but without any suggestions for solutions it's just rabble-rabble.
Imagine if the president said "look anti-car people, we hear you, what do you want?"
And it would still be "rabble rabble", because the anti-car communies consist of people who want to: ban large SUVs and trucks, have more public transport, ride their bicycles, have more pedestrian streets, change the property zoning, change politics, etc.etc. and they don't necessarily agree on what they want.
Just found the instance, and I am someone who really wants to talk about urbanism and changing north america's car-centric design. I hope that I can contribute to this /c/ with conversation and examples of why "fuck cars".