
Season 2 · Episode 406
Policing Shekels, Losing Dollars: The Transit Friction Crisis
Exploring how aggressive transit enforcement creates high-stress cities and why "policing shekels" might be costing us the future of green mobility.
My Weird Prompts · Daniel Rosehill
February 1, 202620m 21s
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Show Notes
In this episode of My Weird Prompts, Herman and Corn Poppleberry dive into a frustrating reality of modern urban life: the rise of aggressive public transit enforcement. Using a listener's "nightmare" experience in Jerusalem as a jumping-off point, the brothers analyze why cities are spending millions on inspectors and high-tech gates even when the math doesn't add up. From the trust-based systems of Germany to the "Transit Ambassador" model in San Francisco, they explore the psychological and economic toll of treating passengers like suspects. Is the drive to collect every last cent actually driving people back into their cars? Tune in to discover why the future of green cities depends on reducing friction, building trust, and moving away from a "policing" mindset in public services.