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Completely withdrawing from a location is not really "routing around."

This is a case where capitalism is attempting to dominate the political realm.


Uber and Lyft completely withdrew, but capitalism didn't. To the contrary, capitalism routed around the lack of Uber and Lyft, by spawning a (poor) alternative.


Sure there are some things you can't legislate, but this isn't one of them.

Uber and Lyft simply don't want to do this because it threatens their profit margins. It makes just as much sense to blame the companies for this situation.


> Uber and Lyft simply don't want to do this because it threatens their profit margins.

You do understand how silly that sounds right? They want to protect their profit margins because... they're businesses! Uber and Lyft both said beforehand that they'd leave if they were forced abide by the silly measures put in place by the Austin silly council, so no, it does not make sense to blame them.


Yes, it does.

Many nations have the reasonable law "Anyone has the right to property, given that the property is only used for the benefit of society as a whole".

Looking at it from that perspective, Uber trying to get a monopoly by avoiding full insurance, by using predatory pricing, etc, is very bad.

For the customer, the ideal would be a hundred seperate taxi companies, independent.

But all providing a simple web API to book, and then others could create webinterfaces and apps to interact with those APIs. Similar to taxi.eu or mytaxi.


What would be the use case for something this?


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