Comments like those GB News presenter Mark Dolan made during his Saturday night 'Tonight' programme used to be the preserve of ranting anonymous Twitter accounts and conspiracy theorists. However, with Conservative 'red wall' MP Nick Fletcher this week raising similar concerns in Parliament, it seems the 15-minute city 'debate' is going nowhere.
Addressing Don Valley MP Fletcher's House of Commons words, Dolan delivered a six-minute-long 15-minute city monologue, working towards the punchline, "it took me less than 15 minutes to realise they are a terrible idea".
Claiming the schemes — aimed at enabling active travel so many local amenities can be reached by bike or on foot within 15 minutes — are the creation of "creepy local authority bureaucrats" hoping to instil "a surveillance culture that would make Pyongyang envious", Dolan worked through many of the 'greatest hits' of those who oppose the concept.
"These deeply illiberal, un-British 15-minute cities are beyond the pale," he argued. "They're hurting communities, hurting small businesses and they've got to go. And it didn't take me 15 minutes to work that out."
And while many who saw Dolan's rant questioned on social media whether convenient access to shops without using a car is un-British, the segment also garnered a predictable stream of conspiratorial-minded replies too.
"Creepy local authority bureaucrats would like to see your entire existence boiled down to the duration of a quarter of an hour," Dolan told GB News' Saturday night viewers. "This dystopian plan in some of Britain's most iconic towns and cities being blocked off, with cars being restricted to certain areas, all overseen by number plate recognition cameras installed everywhere, with a surveillance culture that would make Pyongyang envious.
"Many consider this idea laudable – 15-minute cities make everything walkable. You can go by foot to grab a coffee, do your grocery shopping, have a pint. And if you don't fancy walking, everything you need is just a five-minute bicycle ride away. Lovely.
"Fans of this scheme say it will deal with traffic and congestion and make life easier, more convenient and sustainable for locals. Except that as the MP Nick Fletcher, who has raised the question about this in parliament points out, these low-traffic neighbourhoods are having an impact on small businesses, given the lack of passing trade they now receive."
Earlier this week, Fletcher told the House of Commons that 15-minute cities are an "international socialist concept" which "take away our personal freedom" and "destroy our towns and cities and keep us prisoners in our communities", seemingly providing the inspiration for Dolan's rant.
> Tory MP attacks 15-minute city concept with known conspiracy theory
The MP's comments were fact-checked by Reuters' Nick Hardinges and prompted Oxford City Council to insist that in the case of its scheme "no filters will 'trap' residents... they're points on a road, not a 'zone'. People living on roads near them can enter & leave via other roads ANY time without a permit".
However, Dolan's 'Take at Ten' did not seem concerned with this, instead accusing the schemes of "crushing enterprise" and being an "unprecedented assault on how we go about living our lives – allowing the state to control your movements by car".
"It genuinely feels like a policy that would happen in mainland China, not Sheffield, Canterbury, Bristol or that great seat of western enlightenment, Oxford," he continued. "How shameful that any of this should happen in Britain, the home of liberal democracy, the home of free speech, the home of individual self-determination.
"People aren't stupid. Most people don't use cars unnecessarily – they get behind the wheel when they need to get somewhere, perhaps taking people with them – dropping the kids off to school, or a builder with colleagues in the back, or taking tools to a job.
> Levels of motor traffic nearly halved within London LTNs, new study finds
"During the pandemic, when the likes of myself and others warned that we were setting a precedent, allowing the state to encroach so much on our lives, controlling our movements to 'stop Covid', we were labelled mad conspiracy theorists.
"Well, state overreach is now the norm and these 15-minute cities, low-traffic neighbourhoods and ULEZ zones are just another example. I'm sorry, but in a free country, you ought to be able to get in a car and drive wherever you like. But that freedom is already starting to feel like a distant memory."
Criticism of 15-minute cities has become popular among high-profile right-wing figures such as Laurence Fox and Katie Hopkins, while in December Nigel Farage warned that "climate change lockdowns" are coming. With Fletcher and Dolan's comments reaching the House of Commons and right-wing media, it seems we can expect plenty more still to come.
This week, police in Bethnal Green, East London, urged Tower Hamlets Borough Council to not scrap a Liveable Streets scheme, saying that it has resulted in a reduction in antisocial behaviour-related crime.
The appeal was made in their response to a consultation into removing the low-traffic neighbourhood (LTN) scheme around Arnold Circus, on the fringes of the popular night-time area of Shoreditch.
The police response, posted to Twitter as a screenshot by the Clean Bethnal Green account, highlighted that antisocial behaviour had fallen by more than a third in the six months after the LTN was put in place, compared to the preceding six months, and warned that removing could see levels of crime, as well as road danger rise.
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You'd need to ask Len Deighton, he's 93 and his first job was as a booking clerk on the railway; those chaps used to take no sh1t, so tread careful when you make that suggestion!
I reckon I can take a 93 year old.
PKD said that his inspiration was Ward Moore’s Bring The Jubilee (1960), an alternate based on the South winning the American Civil War, as well as William Shirer’s The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich (1960), Alan Bullock’s Hitler: A Study in Tyranny (1962) and The Goebbels Diaries translated in 1948, amongst others.
Oxford City Council: We want to save people from the misery of sitting in traffic jams.
GB News ghouls: Maybe we like the misery.
"Local Shops are Woke"
(sarcastic comment on twitter)
GB News presenter talks out of their ar*e. Well that is such a surprise.
MP Nick Fletcher, who has raised the question about this in parliament points out, "these low-traffic neighbourhoods are having an impact on small businesses, given the lack of passing trade they now receive."
Fake News unless you really have the data to prove a "lack of passing trade" and that there is a causal relationship to LTNs. Aside from the flaw that customers of small business value do not pass but actually stop and visit the business, isn't it the case that they do so on foot, not in a vehicle..
We heard about the small business concern that trade might be affected so now that LTNs have been in place for a while, where is the data about the reality and can it be discriminated from the impact of war, energy crisis and cost of living?
For example is a small business product/service a mandatory living cost or discretionary so change more related to those aspects than travel?
By "passing trade", do you think he means the car users who abandon their vehicles on the zig zags near the pedestrian crossing while they "just nip in" to pick up some fags or their take-out?
They do realise that there won't be barbed wire fences and machine gun towers preventing you from travelling more than 15 mins away don't they?
ThEyR'E cOMInG fOr mY rIGht tO cAUSe cONjESHcHun
If they're "illiberal" then you'd think that GB News would be all in favour...
The irony is that, given GBeebies' viewing figures, Dolan's views have probably reached more people by being quoted here than they did through his actual show.
That's the best thing I've heard all week. I asked so like ' The Wetherspoons' Channel'.
Can't claim it as my own invention unfortunately but as soon as I saw it I thought it was a great fit.
Flicking autoconnect a gin.
I really should take the time to proofread my comments.
SausagesSorry.I seem to remember that before the rise of big supermarkets, it was common to have a bunch of small shops in local high streets. 15 minute neighbourhoods are simply trying to return to that model as private cars don't scale well if everyone uses them.
It's simple geometry - to make room for lots of car parking and roads, you have to move the facilities further apart which then means that the average travel time increases which leads to more cars being on the road at once which leads to increased congestion which leads to moving the facilities further apart to make room for more roads.
GB News is clearly for people who have given up on logical reasoning skills. The sooner they die off, the better for everyone.
But they're LIMITING OUR FREEDOM to have to drive everywhere to accomplish basic tasks, after getting a licence, buying a car, taxing it, getting insurance and filing it up regularly at the fuel station WHICH IS MY RIGHT as a proudly independent Brit!
These local neighbourhood thingies are about people *tearing the heart out of communities* by making it less attractive for others to use the neighbourhood as yet another access road and encouraging people to do things more locally!
They're coming for my right to kill people with particulates and noxious gases!
However I can't wait for them to build a velodrome within 15 minutes of my house
I think that begs the question of logical reasoning skills.
I also note the fact that apparently the Scots can manage 20 minutes active travel but the English only 15. The cynic in me says that this is more to do with Scotland not wanting to spend so much and/or restrict cars...
When is one person's leafy cul-de-sac, neat little village or gated community another... er, the same person's creepy 15-minute neighbourhood?
"People aren't stupid." They are if they believe this crap. The tories are taking away the right to strike and our human rights, but look over there!! 15 minute neighbourhoods. Too, too transparent.
Aren't all the people who are claiming that this is an international marxist conspiracy the same ones who told us Brexit would be brilliant?
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