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Got
Oil?
Filed October 21, 2002
By
Arianna Huffington
The
Bush team's ridiculous and wildly inflammatory anti-drug ads are
still running in heavy rotation. You know the ads I'm talking about
-- the ones where innocent-looking, middle-class teens admit their
culpability for the consequences of the drug trade. "I helped
blow up buildings," says one doe-eyed youth.
So
if that is legitimate logic, and our president says that it is,
I wonder if we might turn the tables on him by starting a little
ad campaign of our own to sabotage another misguided Bush campaign:
the War on Conservation.
The
thought occurred to me after the startling announcement that the
administration was taking precious time off from an actual, necessary
war -- the one on terrorism -- to sue the state of California for
daring to require that carmakers put more energy-efficient models
on the road.
Turning
the letter of the Federal Clean Air act against its clear intent,
Department of Justice lawyers lined up on behalf of the administration's
friends in the hydrocarbon-loving auto-manufacturing industry and
argued that as long as California's cars are in compliance with
the lax Federal standard, the state cannot impose a tougher one.
For those keeping score, the Bush administration is in favor of
states' rights when the states want to weaken federal safety standards
of any kind, and against states' rights when the states want stronger
measures.
So
how about using the same shock-value tactics the administration
uses in the drug war to confront the public with the ultimate --
and much more linearly linked -- consequences of their energy wastefulness?
Imagine a soccer mom in a Ford Excursion (11 mpg city, 15 mpg highway)
saying, "I'm building a nuclear bomb for Saddam Hussein."
Or a mob of solo drivers toodling down the freeway at 75 mph shouting
in unison, "We're buying weapons that will kill American soldiers,
marines, and sailors! Yahoo!"
It's
not just a fantasy. Last week, talking to my friend Scott Burns,
co-creator of the "Got Milk?" campaign, I was delighted
to hear that he already had two ad scripts ready to go. The first
one feels like an old Slim Fast commercial. Instead of "I lost
50 pounds in two weeks" the ad cuts to different people in
their SUVs: "I gassed 40,000 Kurds," "I helped hijack
an airplane," "I helped blow up a nightclub," and
then in unison: "We did it all by driving to work in our SUVs."
The
second, which opens on a man at a gas station, features a cute kid's
voice-over throughout: "This is George." Then we see a
close up of a gas pump. "This is the gas George buys for his
car." Next we see a guy in a suit. "This is the oil company
executive who makes money on the gas George buys." Close up
on Al-Qaeda training film footage: "This is the terrorist organization
supported by money from the country where the oil company does business.
" It's followed by footage of 9/11: "We all know what
this is." And it closes on a wide shot of bumper to bumper
traffic: "The biggest weapon of mass destruction is parked
in your driveway." Pretty effective.
Can
the administration seriously deny that oil dollars do, actually,
finance a spreading slick of evil in the world today? In Iraq, oil
money has kept Saddam's repressive regime afloat even in the midst
of tough UN sanctions. According to a report just released by the
CIA, Saddam has been spending his oil money on conventional arms
and weapons of mass destruction, while starving and torturing his
own people.
In
Saudi Arabia, our second largest foreign supplier of oil, the money
you spend at the pump over here pays for a feudal monarchy that
gorges itself on excess while bankrolling terrorist mischief abroad
with its support of suicide bombers.
Even
our close ally Kuwait, our eleventh largest oil supplier, manifests
an ambivalence toward America that, if you accept the Bush administration's
drug-war arguments about the validity of remote effects, resulted
in this month's assassination of an American Marine on military
exercises. Thank you, Exxon.
Would
it be so painful for us to slow down the intravenous drip of oil
that keeps these hideously anti-American regimes alive? There are
car companies with electric and hybrid cars already on the market.
And a little pressure on our wasteful ways could unleash a new wave
of good old American inventiveness.
But
instead of applying the marketing skills it uses for its wrong-headed
drug war to the eminently worthwhile cause of saving energy, Bush,
Inc. has sided with the Enrons of the world to stifle energy-saving
technology and keep America in an artificially prolonged state of
dependence.
Of
course, waiting for the Bush administration to get religion on energy
conservation would be about as fruitful as waiting for Saddam to
welcome U.S. inspectors to his palaces. It ain't gonna happen. Unless,
that is, the public makes it happen. Anyone willing to pay for a
people's ad campaign to jolt our leaders into reality?
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