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The government has endorsed a conspiracy about “15-minute cities” as part of its major policy announcement prioritising car owners – despite having already debunked the theory.
Speaking to the Conservative party conference in Manchester today, transport secretary Mark Harper called himself “proudly pro-car,” while describing the concept of 15-minute cities – where local amenities are located within a 15-minute walk or cycle – as “sinister”.
“What is sinister, and what we shouldn’t tolerate,” said Harper, “is the idea that local councils can decide how often you go to the shops, and that they can ration who uses the roads and when, and that they police it all with CCTV.”
There has been opposition to 15-minute cities from those who say they are a front for “everlasting surveillance” and designed to restrict people’s freedom.
But these theories have been widely debunked, including by the government itself.
I want to believe normal people aren’t stupid enough to take this seriously, and will recognise it for the pathetic lie that it actually is. But I’m struggling to believe it.
The Tories clearly feel confident in pushing this narrative presumably because the Tory press have done enough of the groundwork that it seems less wild to their readers, so it will be lapped up in certain quarters where it fits their pro-Carbon, climate change intolerant agenda.
I’ve heard comments from multiple sources (including the Times, which is hardly left-leaning) that the current batch of Tories tend to assume that the Daily Mail is the voice of the whole electorate, and so what plays well with the Mail is what the public wants. I hope it backfires on them spectacularly.