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Culture War Roundup for the week of July 31, 2023

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In the U.S. at least, the places with the longest commutes are also the places with the most transit.

I am not sure that means much. In all of those states, the vast majority of commuters drive to work. So rush hour traffic is going to drive much of that, esp since areas with large amounts of public transit are dense and have worse traffic: Major cities in the states you list also rank very high in traffic congestion.

Moreover, you seem to imply that slow commutes are caused by public transit, and hence that the same commute is faster by car. That is unlikely to be the general rule, given traffic during rush hour. People prefer to drive to work when possible; if they take public transportation, it is at least in part because in their particular case, it is more convenient than driving.

Finally, you are ignoring obvious confounding variables. Eg: Places where people use public transit the most are also places that tend to have more expensive housing. Many people with long commutes in those areas have long commutes in part because they live farther away.

you have to ... wait,

Not in places with decent systems. In NYC during weekdays, subway trains run every 6 minutes or so, which means the average wait is 3 minutes. Less time than it takes to park.