I was (ill-advisedly) browsing Facebook this evening and came across this fire department post about how their massive fire trucks can't get through subdivision streets since cars are parked on both sides.
WE CAN'T HELP IF WE CAN'T GET THERE To... - Horry County Fire Rescue | Facebook
They include a picture, and there's clearly about the width of one lane clear between the two parked cars, so pretty much any non-massive vehicle should be able to fit through without issue.
There are 700 comments (!), so I launched into them, hoping that someone would mention the elephant in the room (i.e. massive American firetrucks). It took a while, but I found 1 comment out of hundreds that finally mentioned the fact that we've got oversized trucks here. One.
A huge proportion of people were saying crazy stuff like local government should force developers to build 4-lane roads in residential areas (i.e. 2 lanes for parallel parking plus 2 travel lanes) or literal neighborhood overflow parking lots in case someone gets a house guest. Tons of people were promoting wider roads (if you've spent any time on this sub, you know that's a bad idea, since wider = faster car speeds).
It's amazing how bad 95% of Facebook comments are. Like, if anyone implemented the majority of comments on that thread (or pretty much any Facebook discussion about the built environment), their town would be way up on the list of most dystopian and car-brained in America.