• malamignasanmig
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    11 months ago

    appreciate the fervor. but yeah, we have a long way to go. our mass transport system is something i did not really pay attention to, thinking that these problems always come with big cities. only after i have witnessed the commuter-friendliness of the mass transit in Taipei and Singapore did i appreciate how much different it could be.
    also, government implementation should go hand in hand with change in commuter habits (ayaw talaga maglakad ng karamihan. magagalit pa sa driver kung hindi pababain sa alanganing lugar).

    • megane-kun@lemm.ee
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      11 months ago

      Just a bit of a comment about “ayaw maglakad ng karamihan.” I’m one of those people who don’t see that happening. Maybe it’s just my bubble, but people are actually willing to walk a reasonable amount of distance in order to take public transport. What they don’t appreciate is walking for kilometers just to be able to ride one short hop to a different stop just to be able to take a bus/train/whatever that’s vaugely in the direction they needed to go. (That last bit is me speaking from personal experience, lol! Muntik na akong ma-heatsroke at pulikatin, tapos parang ako pa ang may kasalanan na na-exhaust ako.)

      I’ve grown up commuting to school, first via LRT(1) (wala pang MRT nor LRT2 nun, lol!) and then via MRT3. Ang di ko na lang na-sasakyan regularly ay LRT2, though I did use it as an alternate to MRT3 sometimes. I’ve had a lot of time to think during commute about the state of our mass transport system.

      It’s a very different experience than I’ve had with the different limited-access highways out of the metro: usually NLEX, but also sometimes SLEX, STAR and TPLEX. It’s not as bad as people have said it was. While we’re not as car-centric as the US, their car-centric mentality have rubbed off us especially when it comes to putting commuters last.

      I think our mass transport system comes hand-in-hand with urban planning. However, our urban planning being the way it is, our mass transport system has to pick up a lot of slack. It would be ideal if I don’t need to haul my ass to Pasay Rotonda to take the LRT to my school somewhere in Manila, but it’s already a thing and so LRT must be able to pick up the slack, and so on. What we don’t want is for people to think they need a car (especially dun sa mga mejo unfit, or yung may mga alagang bata or seniors) in order to function.

      • malamignasanmig
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        11 months ago

        i get you. yung comment ko na yun, makikita mo lang kung palagi kang nagjijeep. hindi naman kasi ginagawa yun sa mga bus drivers. i have stopped counting the number of rude passengers that demanded to be dropped off in illegal/inconvenient spots because they cant be arsed to walk for 1 minute. i feel bad for the manong jeepney drivers sometimes kasi tatarayan o mumurahin pa sila.
        agree: this is one of the worse cultural imports we got from the US.

        • megane-kun@lemm.ee
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          11 months ago

          Ahhh!! Yeah. I haven’t really ridden the jeepney a lot these days, but I’ve noticed that too back in the BC (before Covid) times. Usually, jeepney drivers know where people tend to drop on and off, and so pag sinabi mong “para lang po sa tabi” they’d not immediately stop, but stop where it’s more or less appropriate. Ang nakakairita pa nyan minsan, may bumaba na sa usual stop (usually nito sa area namin, kanto, gate ng subdivision etc.), pero may napapansin ako na iba, kaka-lagpas lang sa “stop”, pilit pang papara.

          I’d usually ask kung saan pwedeng bumaba if I’m not a local or at the place often. I’d then just walk the remaining distance (or ride a trike kung may makita ako).

          I just remembered my mom telling me she’d ask the jeepney driver to drop off right in front of where we live, and I was aghast since ako naman, I ask the jeepney driver to drop me off at the nearest 7/11 (where people usually get on and off anyways–bonus na rin yung being able to get some snacks before going back home). Dumadaan naman ang jeep sa tapat namin, pero kung magbababa sila sa tapat namin, they’d have to stay at the outermost lane, and then cross several lanes just to be able to make it to the nearby U-turn slot. Ako yung naawa sa jeepney driver pag ganun, di lang abala, takaw-disgrasya pa.