Wow, you actually are going to ignore the exchange about London. I guess you’re not better than that after all.
There is absolutely no way that the Canadian Constitution’s guarantee of freedom of movement includes the right to be able to travel by a specific mode of transport. Otherwise cyclists and pedestrians would have been able to sue cities for shitty cycling and pedestrian infrastructure many years ago, not to mention lawsuits about terrible public transit.
The point about waiting a decade is that within another decade, tech will have moved on massively and today’s problems are going to be much less of an issue. A decade ago, I couldn’t travel more than 90 miles without needing to charge, now I can travel 330. In another decade, I reckon it’ll be 500 or 600 miles. And charging infrastructure, solar, storage, mini wind turbines, ASHPs, GSHPs etc will all also improve, making provision of charging in remote places much easier and cheaper than today. We are at the start of a huge build-out and the world is going to be dramatically different in the future.