Ok...it still doesn't say the graphs are the same.Beware of Doug said:Look at the driving line, Sweden bottoms out at around ~33%, Nashville at 70%. Just because the lines might intersect at a point doesn't mean they are similar. At some point in the last few years I attained the same muscle mass of Randy Macho Man Savage. It doesn't mean we are similar, it just means he has been decomposing for 9 years.fig96 said:It doesn't say the graphs are the same. It says the two cities have nearly the exact same adjustment in driving, walking, and transit use, and they're at most a 2% difference from each other.Beware of Doug said:Saying those graphs are the same or similar is just stupid.HotardAg07 said:
Interesting
Also, I have worked in both towns, and the entire comparing of Nashville and Stockholm is just silly. One is on archipelago which changes a lot of how you travel in and out of the city. Sweden also goes through a big transformation of activity from March to May as they go from no day light and freezing, to a ton of day light. Also comparing a European country and Tennessee on biking habits is like comparing the swimming habits of a duck and a cinder block.
It's saying the percentage change in people's habits is almost identical, which it is.