It seriously depends on who you talk to. Places like r/fuckcars do not give the same impression as your comment. On that topic, I immediately discard the opinion of anyone who uses the word "stroad"
I don't know r/fuckcars but I can imagine the tiny fraction of people who frequent there don't like cars. And the tiny fraction of a fraction of those that post and comment there dislike cars even more.
I don't think that view should become the basis for anyone's understanding of people's general view.
It is sort of like browsing r/qanon and thinking that's conservatism.
> On that topic, I immediately discard the opinion of anyone who uses the word "stroad"
Isn't a "stroad" just a name for a street designed like a road? Is it inherently a negative word or does it just seem that way due to the anti-car context in which it typically appears?
A road is to connect remote places, it is to be used by cars and they travel fast.
A street is the space in between buildings of a town or city where people go about their business.
Some use cars, preferably most don’t cause they take a lot if space. But the street is for people, the inhabitants of the town.
A stroad is a place where people live in terror and then die.
I like cars, I have one, regularly drive it and like to go fast when on highways and such.
But they are dangerous and terrifying tools in the context of a town/city, especially for kids.
If I’m driving near people, I drive carefully, slowly and the street needs to be designed in such a way that it induces that kind of driving.
It's more a freedom from a car-dependance, than it is about being rid of a car altogether (although many do that).