Re: the bold, it also acts a a filter against people who don't have any money. I don't think that's a good thing, particularly in a city the size of New York, particularly for situations like trying to go to a doctor's appointment or meet with someone to apply for low income social programs and so on.Because removing the fee would reduce the revenue of the MTA which desperately needs it. Additionally, I feel that's good to make people pay for certain public services like transit because a minimum fee acts like a filter against anti-social people.
This isn't to say that I think the fees should cover the cost of the system or that it has to be profitable, the fare should be subsidized to make it affordable to take the bus, but making it free would hurt the system as it'd need to be subsidized further from other sources and could invite anti-social people who would make the experience worse for most people.

Only 5% of New Yorkers Voted for Mamdani
Less than 30% even bothered to vote.
![]()
Only 5% of New Yorkers Voted for Mamdani | Frontpage Mag
Less than 30% even bothered to vote.www.frontpagemag.com
This is the real issue... Self Loathing White Liberals showed up for this lunatic
![]()
Blue Collar workers and minority groups voted for Cuomo.
They've experience what "Defund the Police" actually does to their communities.
This is the real issue... Self Loathing White Liberals showed up for this lunatic
![]()
Blue Collar workers and minority groups voted for Cuomo.
They've experience what "Defund the Police" actually does to their communities.
A small fare isn't as much of a barrier to that as you might think. In my late teens and early 20s I was fairly broke by middle class standards and had to rely on the bus for a time because I didn't have a car. My issue with it was never that it was too expensive, it's that the bus service was bad.Re: the bold, it also acts a a filter against people who don't have any money. I don't think that's a good thing, particularly in a city the size of New York, particularly for situations like trying to go to a doctor's appointment or meet with someone to apply for low income social programs and so on.
Probably not so your idea is better than Mamdani's. My preference is for minimal bureaucracy though so I don't like to introduce that kind of complexity. Make it simple with one fare for everybody.Edit: re: anti-socials, do you think they'd go through all the trouble to get the special bus pass I suggested above just to get on and be mean to other passengers, particularly if it's taken from them if the cause trouble?
Federal and state officials should help cities with public transit but it should mainly be with the initial investment of building it out while the city should be able to maintain the system. That's where fares come in.As to for your first sentence, the obvious solution seems to me to pressure state and federal representatives to go along with the plan and contribute funding.
Take out every big city where most of the people live and you'll be left with rural towns. That's how it works. I think it's a false narrative to claim a state is actually red if all the cities weren't blue.That’s the city. Remove NYC, buffalo, the capital district and it’s a red state full of hillbillies. Most of NYS is the middle of nowhere.
This is the real issue... Self Loathing White Liberals showed up for this lunatic
![]()
Blue Collar workers and minority groups voted for Cuomo.
They've experience what "Defund the Police" actually does to their communities.
Re: "...fairly broke by middle class standards..."A small fare isn't as much of a barrier to that as you might think. In my late teens and early 20s I was fairly broke by middle class standards and had to rely on the bus for a time because I didn't have a car. My issue with it was never that it was too expensive, it's that the bus service was bad.
Specifically the low frequencies and the fact that without dedicated lanes and adequate busses they got stuck in traffic and had to take circuitous routes. A ~30-40 min commute turned into a two and a half hour trip, often more because I would miss my connecting bus due to getting stuck in traffic on the first one which meant waiting 30 mins for the next one.
Probably not so your idea is better than Mamdani's. My preference is for minimal bureaucracy though so I don't like to introduce that kind of complexity. Make it simple with one fare for everybody.
Federal and state officials should help cities with public transit but it should mainly be with the initial investment of building it out while the city should be able to maintain the system. That's where fares come in.
they did their time no?Well I want NYC to cooperate with ICE on Riker's Island. I have no idea why people are so against getting illegals out straight from prison.
fuck it, change the rules. also weren't mitt romney and ted cruz born in mexico and canada? they ran. idk enough about zohran's parents.He was born in Uganda, he can't be president.
I don't want to throw a pity party but my family was very, very cash poor at the time, we were just more so a middle class family down on our luck than a case of longstanding poverty. In terms of income we were at the bottom quintile but I didn't worry about gang violence and police brutality like some in the US who experience intergenerational poverty do.Re: "...fairly broke by middle class standards..."
I'm clearly not talking about people who are "fairly broke", but broke broke. It happens. People can find themselves with zero left days before "payday" (often many days before), whatever form that may take--social security, welfare, unemployment insurance, whatever, or even a low-paying job.
That could work I think, I'm just telling you my preference. I'll always prefer simplicity. If we're going to use tax returns to send poor people cards I'd rather just send them money.And simple? What is simpler than emailing proof of income? Don't they have state-level income taxes, and therefore tax returns? Register online, and pickup or have mailed your "get on the bus free" card; sounds simple to me.
No I don't think so.Re: "...the city should be able to maintain the system." Should? Again, this doesn't address your objection to obtaining additional funding from elsewhere so they can give poor people a break. If you're on a subsistence level income, not having to worry about how you will get back and forth to, say, your shitty low-paying job, could be a real help and might even lessen the overall number of "anti-social" people, don't you think?
New Yorkers have some have the highest tax rates in the world as is. The money is there, it just needs to be spent more efficiently. When people see their taxes poorly spent they feel reluctant to pay more.Instead of a tax cut, a one percent tax increase on income above a certain amount--which no one making a living "by middle class standards" would miss-- in a city/state the size of New York would surely cover a great portion of the lost revenue, I expect.
I'm basically all for any program that helps make poor peoples' daily lives easier and I don't get why you'd be against it, notwithstanding the above comments.
Because removing the fee would reduce the revenue of the MTA which desperately needs it. Additionally, I feel that's good to make people pay for certain public services like transit because a minimum fee acts like a filter against anti-social people.
This isn't to say that I think the fees should cover the cost of the system or that it has to be profitable, the fare should be subsidized to make it affordable to take the bus, but making it free would hurt the system as it'd need to be subsidized further from other sources and could invite anti-social people who would make the experience worse for most people.
What's wrong with free mass transit? Is there a better way to encourage people to use it rather than driving themselves?
Rikers is a jail not a prison so the vast majority of its population are awaiting trial.they did their time no?
Imo he's a mixed bag. Some really bad leftist policy ideas like rent freeze and state run grocers but he's also hinted at tackling government inefficiency and red tape which is at least partly to blame for the exodus from Northeast cities to Sunbelt states.
Yes I know it's subsidized as is but so are roads and no one complains about them, in fact if you try to impose something like congestion pricing many will complain.It already is subsidized... by quite a bit.
But hey... just bleed companies and tax payers more.
![]()
![]()