An old story…. of big changes.  The impact of the auto on community, life.  I will let it stand alone:

“So it goes.  It couldn’t last forever, it was unsafe, but it’s hard to see something like that ‘end’.  I knew Ernie, and he lived there his whole life, over 80 years – the *only* place he *ever* lived. Scores of decades of watching that huge city turn into nothing but him.  Not long before he passed away, we had a chance to chat at length (as we were prone to do), I asked him what he thought was the biggest change during his lifetime.  Ernie said, ‘The automobile. The car’.

‘These roads are all the same.  The major highways, the roads – Sacramento or through Wilbur’s hills – are identical.  Nothing has changed.  It’s just that they’re blacktop now.  Before, when you were drawing a carriage with a horse, you would amble back and forth between these hills, and when you saw another human on their cart being drawn by a horse… you damn well stopped. You spoke to one another.  You see them from miles off, and you couldn’t just whizz by.  You stopped, and you talked – about the direction you were going, the direction you were coming from – but you connected and you spoke. It wasn’t kindness or community, it was simply what you did.  To not do so wouldn’t have been rude or bad – it would have been unheard of.’

‘Then the car – the auto.  All of a sudden, people are moving faster, people are gettin’ to where they’re going, and there wasn’t time to stop.  There wasn’t a need to pull over and chat – you’d stop the car, roll down the windows – it just wasn’t the priority.  So that change was bigger than the auto – it altered communication. We don’t connect, or care to.  Our community of humans got pushed aside so we could get where we were going. It never was the same.’”

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