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Agence
France Presse (1-9-03)
Filling
up gas guzzlers promotes terror: new US ad campaign
Filling
up your gas-guzzling sports utility vehicle (SUV) does more than
simply damage the environment -- it also encourages terrorism, a
provocative new US ad campaign claimed Wednesday.
A group
lobbying against the soaring numbers of overly powerful passenger
vehicles on US roads launched the campaign in a bid to make consumers
aware of the link between petrol consumption and US foreign policy.
"We're
asking American consumers to connect the dots and think about the
effect that their gas-guzzling SUVs are having on our foreign policy,"
said Arianna Huffington, a columnist who founded the Detroit Project
group. "We want to point out how our driving habits are fueling
oil money to Saudi Arabia -- which funnels some of that wealth to
support charities and religious zealots with ties to terrorist activity,"
co-founder Lawrence Bender said.
Stressing
that the campaign was not aimed at "demonizing people who drive
SUVs," he alleged that some of the funds provided by US motorists
also went to Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein's investment in weapons
of mass destruction.
The
campaign launched in Los Angeles and New York features two provocative
30-second television commercials making a link between rampant petrol
consumption in the United States and terrorist activity.
One
of the ads, which begin airing Sunday in four major US cities, ends
with the slogan: "Oil money supports some terrible things.
What kind of mileage does your SUV get."
The
Detroit Project said there were 20 million SUV's on US roads that
guzzled petrol to the extent they only manage nine to 15 miles per
gallon (3.8 to 6.3 kilometers per litre).
"This
adds up to millions of barrels of imported oil each day," said
another group official, Hollywood talent agent Ari Emanuel who represents
stars such as Leonardo DiCaprio and Cameron Diaz.
They
urged motorists to downsize to more fuel-efficient vehicles, pressuring
major auto-makers to produce more economical cars and urging President
George W. Bush to pass a proposed bill on fuel efficiency later
this year.
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