Posted on 07/12/2015 12:09:17 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
*If youve never heard of ride-sharing, app-based taxi services like Uber and Lyft, you probably dont get out much.
They are pretty much taking over the world.
And John Zimmer, who co-founded Lyft, even goes as far as saying that in five years, most millennials wont own a car. They will see no need for it.
You could actually start seeing the majority of millennials in the next five years or so saying theres no reason I should get a car, Zimmer told Mashable recently. The car used to be the symbol of American freedom. Now its like owning a $9,000 ball and chain, because you have $9,000 in expenses on your car every year.
Sounds like something someone with a ride-sharing business would say.
But apparently theres data to support his theory.
An article in Huffington Post states millennials are less likely to get drivers licenses compared to previous generations; and according to the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety, the number of cars purchased by people aged 18 to 34 fell by almost 30 percent from 2007 to 2011.
Of course this could be for a number of reasons. The economy; parents unable to foot the bill for a monthly car note.
And these days, the Generation Yers use skateboards, bikes and public transportation more often as a means of travel. So this could also lend itself to the reasons why they are not purchasing cars.
Yet it is true, as Mashable notes, that this millennial shift has contributed greatly to the success of ride-sharing companies like Lyft and Uber, whose worth is at least $2 billion and $40 billion respectively.
Not to mention the contributions of their parents and grandparents; who rely heavily on the service for their own means of regular transportation.
Yet and still, the jury is still out on whether or not cars will soon be obsolete for the Gen Y set. A survey conducted this year found that 43 percent of millennials are actually likely to purchase a car in the next five years.
Whatever millennials do right now, its highly likely that theyll drive more as they age into their 30s and 40s, wrote reporter Emily Badger in an op-ed for The Washington Post last year. The question is whether theyll continue to drive less than their parents did at each stage of life and whether future generations will replicate their patterns.
The more I see of these companies, the more I think they have a thriving business mainly because their drivers get the shaft nearly every time they give someone a ride. That whole business model is going to collapse once drivers realize how little money they actually make when you factor in all the costs of doing business.
> “An article in Huffington Post states millennials are less likely to get drivers licenses compared to previous generations; and according to the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety, the number of cars purchased by people aged 18 to 34 fell by almost 30 percent from 2007 to 2011.”
Its not because they didn’t want them; its because they couln’t afford them, dummies. You know because of those huge student loans that you said they needed for liberal arts and transgender study degrees.../s
How do they check your driving record? And does absolutely clean mean no wrecks or no speeding tickets?
You just gave me an Idea....
Wait a second, isn’t all this carless society BS just copying the European society blueprint? And the UN and the WH do want us to go the way of Europe to be compliant with the Agenda 21 standard...so there may be a bigger picture at work here by promoting and publicizing articles like this..,
They care about your demerits. More than offenses that care demerits and you wont be driving for them.
UN’s Agenda 21
Cars require a job, and if mom is willing to take you, why even worry...
It most likely doesn’t. Personal lines policies don’t cover you if you’re transporting people/property for a fee.
There’s a difference between “own” and “afford.”
They’re gonna be in big trouble in TX. It’s a long walk across this desert. LOL
Honey, I have to take the kids to soccer, can I use the BIG skate board?
I have a 2001 Camry manual transmission. The thing is indestructible, an anvil.
“I bought a 92 ford ranger for 1500 4 years ago, 30 mpg on the highway, hauls everything, just wont die.”
Very smart move. Those are re-badged Mitsubishi L200s. My compliments.
What kind of car requires that much maintenance?
“Emergency vehicles only” is part of agenda 21. The serfs will be made to feel giving up their freedom of movement is a liberation and not a gelding.
I drive about 8,000 km every three months. My maintenance, on average, is about $400_$1,000 every three months.
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