by Kez » Thu 30 Jun 2005, 14:51:23
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('nocar', 'W')hy do so many Americans think that it is the end of the world, or at least end of civilized society, if you have to live without driving cars?
Of course in Europe, most people have some hunch about how to live without a car waiting in the driveway, while Americans have been driving and owning cars for as long as almost all of those who now live can remember.
Just to inform those of you who think that life has to end when you can not longer have a car: Before 1890 noone had a car, and there is evidence of human civilization before that time. And "oil" mostly referred to olive oil, occasionally whale oil.
As an American, I think it is simply because of our way of life. A lot of roads aren't set up for bikes. People commute 20 minutes or so on average to work, and don't carpool. Houses are spread out. We do have small cities with nice European type settings, with plazas and markets and whatnot, but they are only a small percentage. Most people live in suburbs far away from work or apartments in the city. People like the freedom of a car. No married couple I know has only 1 car. They all have 2 cars, but not necessarily 2 jobs.
Americans are also extremely spoiled. We have been spoiled by having a comfortable life up to this point. To suddenly take away cars, or air conditioning, or ice, or who knows what, half the population will freak out. Very few people know how to grow food, let alone grow enough to feed themselves and their family year round, and even fewer have the land to do it anyway. I can just picture carpooling every day with my wife. I will lose 1 hour every day and many more if she has to go somewhere. I can tolerate that, but most Americans will have a much harder time coping.
We are spoiled. We get food from boxes and throw it in the microwave. People at my office eat out for lunch
every single day. People here leave their computers and T.V.s on all the time. They drive like maniacs at a whopping 18 MPG. They are oblivious to any concern of energy.
It is very hard for many people to go from a comfortable, free life to a different lifestyle. People and generations will always adapt, but if this issue of Peak Oil, along with terrorism, the housing bubble, social security, national debt, etc. etc. come too swiftly, then it will cause extreme problems for everyone, even those who have already adapted and are ready for the very worst.