Hotels that are empty most of the year, giant grocery stores where any individual isle is empty the majority of the time, internet cables that have bursts of information but are rarely at their maximum capacity the vast majority of the time.
They are not good comparisons because they are shared infrastructure, but that is what they are getting at.
A real comparison would be a hammer that gets used a few times a year but takes up far less space, doesn’t require roads, doesn’t pollute when you use it, and costs far less to own.
Hotels and grocery stores - yes, they’re there for the same reason as parking lots. To make money for the rich.
The internet cable comparison doesn’t fit. Just because you don’t always need maximum capacity, doesn’t mean you don’t have to account for it. It’s like with sewage pipes, you need to accommodate the worst case or else it can go to shit (in more senses than one) very quickly. In the year of 2026, internet is a basic necessity.
True, but you could say this about any type of infrastructure. Plus i hate counting crows.
The Counting Crows version is a cover.
The original was sung by Joni Mitchell.
True but I agree with the OP. I also hate counting crows.
At least they gave between the buried and me their name.
I won’t deny that they suck, but that’s not the song’s fault.
Why do they suck?
They don’t. Mrs. Potter’s Lullaby and Mr. Jones are bangers, and their cover of Friend of the Devil is marvellous.
Taste is subjective.
Also wow. Found the entire Counting Crows fanbase.
Mostly because I still have ears. Without those, they’d be ok I guess.
That doesn’t answer my question
I didn’t say it was.
Big Yellow Taxi is one of the greatest of all time, as other many other Joni Mitchell Songs.
Yeah, they keep flying around and getting behind each other.
Like what other type of infrastructure?
A pink hotel, a boutique, and a swingin’ hot spot.
Hotels that are empty most of the year, giant grocery stores where any individual isle is empty the majority of the time, internet cables that have bursts of information but are rarely at their maximum capacity the vast majority of the time.
They are not good comparisons because they are shared infrastructure, but that is what they are getting at.
A real comparison would be a hammer that gets used a few times a year but takes up far less space, doesn’t require roads, doesn’t pollute when you use it, and costs far less to own.
Hotels and grocery stores - yes, they’re there for the same reason as parking lots. To make money for the rich.
The internet cable comparison doesn’t fit. Just because you don’t always need maximum capacity, doesn’t mean you don’t have to account for it. It’s like with sewage pipes, you need to accommodate the worst case or else it can go to shit (in more senses than one) very quickly. In the year of 2026, internet is a basic necessity.
I said they were not good comparisons…
Why’d you bring them up, then? The first two are actually good comparisons.