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I'd like that to be the case, but nearly every US city, no matter the size, is designed for cars. And the connections between cities prioritize highways, not rail. The US might be able to adopt electric cars, but it'll never be able to create the kind of walkable, bike-friendly, public-transport focused cities, because that would entail pulling up a lot of cities and neighborhoods by the roots. Once that is built up, its nearly impossible to undo it, and your only choice is to add innefficient kludges on top.
This is why it's so crucial to do what China and a lot of Asian countries did, and priorizite metro/rail first, and not build your cities around highways.
Old east coast cities were built around streetcars
There's a good episode about how they destroyed new york's neighborhoods and rebuilt it around the car: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=bb1IijxVR7c