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PostPosted: Wed Feb 22, 2023 2:42 pm 
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Location: Stamford Britains prettiest town till SKDC ruined it
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-leicestershire-64722590

Image

But the buses still get to drop off and pick up at the front

More details on the £22m redevelopment of Leicester railway station have been released, a month before an online consultation is due to begin.

Leicester City Council said it aimed move the main entrance to face Station Street and the city centre, with a taxi rank set for Fox Street.

Last year the authority was awarded £17.6m in central government funding for the project.

If planning and listed building consent is given, work may start this year.

Leicester Railway Station plan

A taxi rank would also be moved to Fox Street under the plans

The Parcel Yard pub and adjacent taxi office would need to be demolished under the current scheme, and the council said the owners of the sites "have been informed of the plans and negotiations are ongoing".

Leicester mayor Sir Peter Soulsby said redesigning the railway station "is a major project that will make a huge difference to the city".

"[The] railway station is a beautiful building, but is in need of a radical overhaul to help it meet the needs of a modern city," he said.
Image

current rank, drop off zone just off the ring road/A6


Designs for the inside of the station were released last year

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PostPosted: Thu Feb 23, 2023 11:36 am 
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Why do modern improvements, be it Stations, Airports or city centres tend to make things worse for both users and service providers alike.


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PostPosted: Thu Feb 23, 2023 5:29 pm 
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It's increasingly obvious that an increasing number of people in positions of power don't just want cleaner cars and taxis, but they want them off the road altogether and us plebs either confined to home or work, or only allowed to use public transport.

Of course, that's decade's old, in essence, but the impetus is increasing, particularly with the 'climate emergency' and with how the elites see how they could control people with lockdown. And, of course, lockdown indirectly led to lots of car and traffic-related restrictions, many of which haven't been reversed.

And they'll demonise and gaslight you if you object :?

This isn't about the trade, and might be better in the politics section, but it helps explain a lot of trade-related stuff :roll:


It’s true – the climate fanatics are coming for your car

https://www.spiked-online.com/2023/02/2 ... -your-car/

It’s not a conspiracy theory to believe the green elites don’t give a toss about working people.

Taking the meme ‘Everyone I Don’t Like Is Hitler’ to dizzying new heights, now we’re being told it’s far right to want to drive your car. Motorist and fascist, peas in a pod. Protesters against Low Traffic Neighbourhoods and so-called 15-minute cities – policies being adopted in various regions of the UK that will severely limit where and how often a person can drive his car – have been damned as hard-right loons. Who but a modern-day Brownshirt would bristle at eco-measures designed to save Mother Earth from car toxins? One author attended this month’s colourful protest against Oxford City Council’s anti-driving policies and decreed that this motley crew of car-lovers are on ‘the road to fascism’. Only they’ll never get there, presumably, given the elites’ penchant for road restrictions.

The climate fanatics are getting desperate. Of course, they’ve long used the tool of demonisation to try to shame and silence their critics. ‘Denier’ is a favoured insult. Question any aspect of the climate-alarmist agenda, including the harebrained claim that billions will soon die in a fiery apocalypse of man’s making, and you’ll be branded with that D-word. It marks you out as unfit for public life.

Yet the hysterical denunciation of pro-car protesters as maniacs and conspiracy theorists who are one car journey away from becoming open fanboys of the Fourth Reich is a new low. It’s classic gaslighting. The elites are hell-bent on restricting car-use, and this will make life harder for people, especially working-class people. To brand as nuts those who make this correct observation feels like a species of psychological warfare.

Take Oxford. If you say Oxford is turning itself into a ‘15-minute city’ – that is, a hyper-localised city in which you can get what you need within a 15-minute walk from your home – you’ll be mocked as a gullible fool. Oxford’s plans are being ‘jumped on by conspiracy theorists’ who are ‘falsely conflat[ing]’ different things, says one report. Slate calls it the ‘15-minute city conspiracy theory’ (why are American publications so bad at covering British issues?). As for the claim that Oxford is trialling a kind of ‘climate lockdown’, that’s yet another ‘conspiracy theory’, say the city’s councillors. And we’ve received a ‘torrent of abuse’ as a result of this ‘conspiracy theory’, they say. In short, everyone needs to calm down and pipe down.

Hold on a minute. Oxford really is bringing in ‘traffic filters’, though. And the intention really is to ‘reduce traffic levels in Oxford by targeting unnecessary journeys by cars’. Motorists really will be fined if they drive through the traffic filters during certain times of the day. And the aim really is to socially re-engineer the city’s populace out of using their cars – the road restrictions and financial punishments are designed to ‘make walking, cycling, public and shared transport the natural first choice’, boasts Oxfordshire County Council (my emphasis). That is, it’s a kind of sin tax, to use John Stuart Mill’s phrase, where you’ll be fined for the sin of driving in the hope that you’ll eventually feel so economically punished that you’ll choose walking instead. And all of this really is about protecting the climate from the fumes of Oxford’s motoring masses. It’s about ‘help[ing] tackle climate change’, Oxford says of its sinister traffic filters, which will be enforced by ‘automatic number plate recognition cameras’.

What’s more, Oxford really has signed up for the idea of the ‘15-minute city’, where a city’s infrastructure is slowly but surely rearranged to make walking everyone’s first choice for getting about. The Oxford Local Plan 2040, which will be used to determine all future planning applications in the city, is entirely ‘structured around the 15-minute city concept’ – in the council’s own words! – where all key services will be reachable by a 15-minute walk. Sure, the ‘traffic filters’ and the ‘15-minute city’ are, strictly speaking, separate policies, but both have been embraced by Oxford, both are designed to limit car use, and both will impact on people’s freedom of choice and freedom of movement. It really is disgraceful that those who point this out are being written off as modern-day hysterics who’ve fallen for feverish conspiracy theories about a carless future.

Elsewhere in the UK, boroughs really are being made into Low Traffic Neighbourhoods, with the use of bollards or boom barriers to physically prevent motorists from driving on certain roads. The impact this is having on tradesmen, mums of young children and disabled people is terrible. But who cares about the difficulties faced by people who must drive so long as the eco-minded middle classes can enjoy their al-fresco brunch without hearing so much vrooming and beeping. Meanwhile, the Ultra Low Emission Zone (ULEZ) being enforced by London mayor Sadiq Khan really does charge motorists £12.50 a day to drive certain vehicles in London and, soon, Outer London. It was good to see trade union Unite describe the expansion of ULEZ as ‘profoundly anti-worker’, given how many working-class people need to drive to work and for work.

The climate fanatics are coming for your car. It’s not a myth. It’s not a conspiracy theory. They’re open about it. In both the UK and the US, eco-thinkers continually talk about using urban planning to socially re-engineer the throng. Let’s remake American cities so that ‘walking, biking and public-transit use’ are prioritised over car-use, says Vox. Don’t call this anti-car, though. Don’t say the establishment longs to deprive us of the great 20th- and 21st-century freedom of getting in one’s vehicle and going wherever one pleases. You’ll be denounced as a crank.

Yes, some hard right-wingers have attached themselves to the uprising against the motorphobia of the new elites. But you’d think the Guardianista middle classes would understand that this is inevitable in a relatively free society. After all, these are the kind of people who attend anti-Israel demos at which you will frequently see the most vile expressions of anti-Semitic hatred and who went on those bitter anti-Brexit marches at which some banners mocked the intellectual inferiority of working-class Leave voters. If the appearance of a far-right t*** at a pro-driving protest means that everyone who’s pro-driving is far right, then by the same token you all must have a very serious problem with Jews and working-class folk. That’s how this works, right?

Taking the meme ‘Everyone I Don’t Like Is Hitler’ to dizzying new heights, now we’re being told it’s far right to want to drive your car. Motorist and fascist, peas in a pod. Protesters against Low Traffic Neighbourhoods and so-called 15-minute cities – policies being adopted in various regions of the UK that will severely limit where and how often a person can drive his car – have been damned as hard-right loons. Who but a modern-day Brownshirt would bristle at eco-measures designed to save Mother Earth from car toxins? One author attended this month’s colourful protest against Oxford City Council’s anti-driving policies and decreed that this motley crew of car-lovers are on ‘the road to fascism’. Only they’ll never get there, presumably, given the elites’ penchant for road restrictions.

The climate fanatics are getting desperate. Of course, they’ve long used the tool of demonisation to try to shame and silence their critics. ‘Denier’ is a favoured insult. Question any aspect of the climate-alarmist agenda, including the harebrained claim that billions will soon die in a fiery apocalypse of man’s making, and you’ll be branded with that D-word. It marks you out as unfit for public life.

Yet the hysterical denunciation of pro-car protesters as maniacs and conspiracy theorists who are one car journey away from becoming open fanboys of the Fourth Reich is a new low. It’s classic gaslighting. The elites are hell-bent on restricting car-use, and this will make life harder for people, especially working-class people. To brand as nuts those who make this correct observation feels like a species of psychological warfare.

Take Oxford. If you say Oxford is turning itself into a ‘15-minute city’ – that is, a hyper-localised city in which you can get what you need within a 15-minute walk from your home – you’ll be mocked as a gullible fool. Oxford’s plans are being ‘jumped on by conspiracy theorists’ who are ‘falsely conflat[ing]’ different things, says one report. Slate calls it the ‘15-minute city conspiracy theory’ (why are American publications so bad at covering British issues?). As for the claim that Oxford is trialling a kind of ‘climate lockdown’, that’s yet another ‘conspiracy theory’, say the city’s councillors. And we’ve received a ‘torrent of abuse’ as a result of this ‘conspiracy theory’, they say. In short, everyone needs to calm down and pipe down.

Hold on a minute. Oxford really is bringing in ‘traffic filters’, though. And the intention really is to ‘reduce traffic levels in Oxford by targeting unnecessary journeys by cars’. Motorists really will be fined if they drive through the traffic filters during certain times of the day. And the aim really is to socially re-engineer the city’s populace out of using their cars – the road restrictions and financial punishments are designed to ‘make walking, cycling, public and shared transport the natural first choice’, boasts Oxfordshire County Council (my emphasis). That is, it’s a kind of sin tax, to use John Stuart Mill’s phrase, where you’ll be fined for the sin of driving in the hope that you’ll eventually feel so economically punished that you’ll choose walking instead. And all of this really is about protecting the climate from the fumes of Oxford’s motoring masses. It’s about ‘help[ing] tackle climate change’, Oxford says of its sinister traffic filters, which will be enforced by ‘automatic number plate recognition cameras’.

What’s more, Oxford really has signed up for the idea of the ‘15-minute city’, where a city’s infrastructure is slowly but surely rearranged to make walking everyone’s first choice for getting about. The Oxford Local Plan 2040, which will be used to determine all future planning applications in the city, is entirely ‘structured around the 15-minute city concept’ – in the council’s own words! – where all key services will be reachable by a 15-minute walk. Sure, the ‘traffic filters’ and the ‘15-minute city’ are, strictly speaking, separate policies, but both have been embraced by Oxford, both are designed to limit car use, and both will impact on people’s freedom of choice and freedom of movement. It really is disgraceful that those who point this out are being written off as modern-day hysterics who’ve fallen for feverish conspiracy theories about a carless future.

Elsewhere in the UK, boroughs really are being made into Low Traffic Neighbourhoods, with the use of bollards or boom barriers to physically prevent motorists from driving on certain roads. The impact this is having on tradesmen, mums of young children and disabled people is terrible. But who cares about the difficulties faced by people who must drive so long as the eco-minded middle classes can enjoy their al-fresco brunch without hearing so much vrooming and beeping. Meanwhile, the Ultra Low Emission Zone (ULEZ) being enforced by London mayor Sadiq Khan really does charge motorists £12.50 a day to drive certain vehicles in London and, soon, Outer London. It was good to see trade union Unite describe the expansion of ULEZ as ‘profoundly anti-worker’, given how many working-class people need to drive to work and for work.

The climate fanatics are coming for your car. It’s not a myth. It’s not a conspiracy theory. They’re open about it. In both the UK and the US, eco-thinkers continually talk about using urban planning to socially re-engineer the throng. Let’s remake American cities so that ‘walking, biking and public-transit use’ are prioritised over car-use, says Vox. Don’t call this anti-car, though. Don’t say the establishment longs to deprive us of the great 20th- and 21st-century freedom of getting in one’s vehicle and going wherever one pleases. You’ll be denounced as a crank.

Yes, some hard right-wingers have attached themselves to the uprising against the motorphobia of the new elites. But you’d think the Guardianista middle classes would understand that this is inevitable in a relatively free society. After all, these are the kind of people who attend anti-Israel demos at which you will frequently see the most vile expressions of anti-Semitic hatred and who went on those bitter anti-Brexit marches at which some banners mocked the intellectual inferiority of working-class Leave voters. If the appearance of a far-right t*** at a pro-driving protest means that everyone who’s pro-driving is far right, then by the same token you all must have a very serious problem with Jews and working-class folk. That’s how this works, right?

I’m going to say it: this is a climate lockdown. It is perfectly legitimate to describe top-down, eco-justified restrictions on people’s freedom to drive as a climate lockdown. No, it isn’t the handiwork of the WEF and it isn’t part of a global plot to imprison us in our homes. But erecting cameras to spy on car-users and fining those who drive to certain parts of their own city, all with the intention of pressuring us to walk instead, is a breed of lockdown. It is illiberal, anti-modern and further proof that our green-leaning elites care little for the freedom or the bank balances of working people. Protesting against this isn’t ‘far right’ – it’s sensible and good.

Brendan O’Neill is spiked’s chief political writer and host of the spiked podcast, The Brendan O’Neill Show. Subscribe to the podcast here. And find Brendan on Instagram: @burntoakboy


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PostPosted: Thu Feb 23, 2023 7:26 pm 
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I reckon they manufactured the so called "Climate Crisis" purely to advance a new world political agenda aimed at keeping the masses under control through fear in the same way religion used to do.


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PostPosted: Thu Feb 23, 2023 8:51 pm 
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Best get my glasses changed.

As I'm seeing double. :shock: :shock: :shock: :shock: :shock:

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PostPosted: Thu Feb 23, 2023 9:40 pm 
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It is a true fact that only a small percentage of the CO2 in the atmosphere has been generated by human activity the rest is courtesy of all our volcanoes but that small percentage partially tips the balance. The rest is down to the other far more potent greenhouse gases that we spray from Aerosols or release due to the complete carelessness of fossil fuel extraction especially Russia

It also hasn't helped that we allowed world population to grow at an alarming rate which suits the world of big business (expanding population = expanding business) but generates much pollution

I think climate change is real but the panic stricken rush towards "renewables" and electricity is badly thought through

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PostPosted: Fri Feb 24, 2023 9:06 pm 
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When it comes to reducing UK emissions I think back to what this fella said at the Oxford Union.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zJdqJu-6ZPo

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PostPosted: Fri Feb 24, 2023 9:22 pm 
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Climate change has been happening since the end of the last ice age which we are still comming out of.


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PostPosted: Sat Feb 25, 2023 10:41 am 
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Looking at the picture, moving the rank to the new position and having the new fron enterance will actually mean that passengers has less distance to go from the platform to the taxi rank. The main difference that I can see is that the new rank will not be under cover like the existing one is and I don't see where the overflow of taxis are going to wait under this scheme where at present they rank up on Conduit Street.

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