by The_Toecutter » Wed 20 Jul 2005, 01:23:39
In America, the saying is "all hat, no cattle". Most of the SUV drivers here are either nancyboy metrosexuals who never head offroad, old farts in midlife crisis who never head offroad, security moms who never head offroad, all of which don't seem very happy when you confront them with the consequences of their fuel use and vehicle choice that everyone shares, most of which commute in this vehicle alone. According to the American Lung Association, air pollution in the U.S. is responsible for more than 50,000 premature deaths each year. Add in all the subsidies this overbloated government gives big oil, all the military protection given to oilfields and pipelines, and a gallon of gas would end up costing over $5/gallon to make up the difference, and that SUV might cost 2 or 3 times more than a conventional car due to the extra materials for construction and pollution associated with its manufacture that inevitably ends up contaminating our air and drinking water. Would people have to compensate society for the damage to society associated with their vehicle choice, we might see mass transit take hold again along with more efficient vehicles(Not necessarily smaller or slower. Take a look at electric car technology lately).
I would like to see society shift more towards mass transit and bike, with cars for racing, SUVs for offroading, and pickup trucks for farming. A society which is reliant on cars for transit and makes them a necessity is downright stupid. What reduced numbers of cars there will be in the future out of necessity, why not offer electric vehicles to consumers instead of gas chuggers? The technology came for 200+ miles cruising range, musclecar-like acceleration and top speed, and battery life in excess of 250,000 miles nearly a decade ago. But the auto industry experimented, saw that all cars they offered were leased, and noted there were no tuneups, oil changes, servicing, engine repairs, or routine maintenance, got scared, and did all the could to fight public adoption of that technology in the state of California. The oil industry, wanting an oil shortage during peak, saw a threat to their profit margins since the fuel for cars today in America account for 45% of their oil consumption, so they bought out the first battery patents that allowed EVs to become possible.
I respect SUV drivers who actually use their vehicle for its intended purpose: sport. That's what they're for, offroading, mudding, not to piss away needlessly without any purpose precious resources that can't be replenished and are necessary to the continuance of a post-industrial living standard and threaten the sustainability of the human race on Earth(Fun is a purpose unto itself, while transportation is as well but transportation can be provided by non-automotive means). Same with cars. If I can, I'm never going to own a car that seats more than two people, and if I ever have a family, do all I can to get my family reliant on mass transit, bikes, ect, and if that's not possible, I'll be damn sure to build the car used and manufacture the fuel that powers it. The car I will have will be relegated to sport whenever commuting without it becomes practical(Today, that is obviously not the case, no mass transit and all, so I will be using it after it's finished until further notice.).
Unfortunately, mass transit in this country is lacking. Depending on how peak oil carries itself out, we could have mass transit in place and no fuel means very few cars and thus biking becomes much safer than today(If you've ever been on a bicycle and clipped by the passenger-side mirror of some asshole in an SUV going 50 mph, you will understand what I'm talking about.). I'd love to actually be able to realistically commute 15 miles to my campus via bike, but cars in the number they are currently at along with the danger associated with getting killed and the fact that you have to be constantly vigilant surely makes that bike commute a 3 hour one instead of the 45 minute one it should be. A bike with a faring can easily and comfortably be pedalled to 20 mph under pure human power at a liesurely pace. I'd prefer that to a car by far for commuting, keeping the car for the racetrack.
But that is not America today, and given the path we're headed, we probably won't have mass transit post peak, so the bulk of the population may lose mobility altogether(I'll have that elecric sports car by then built, and a portable wind generator to charge it with when it's parked, but the bike will take care of 99.9% of my needs assuming things go smoothly, and if not, the car will get me the fuck out of the city with no fuel worries!)
The unnecessary felling of a tree, perhaps the old growth of centuries, seems to me a crime little short of murder. ~Thomas Jefferson