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Support
Our Troops, Dump That SUV
Filed November 14, 2001
By
Arianna Huffington
On
the way to my daughter's school this morning, I encountered the
usual L.A. rush-hour road rally of elephantine sports utility vehicles,
many flying American flags. Taking the cake was a massive SUV proudly
sporting half a dozen -- one on each window and two on the bumper.
My first thought was, how patriotic! My second was, how much more
patriotic it would be to trade in the gas-guzzling leviathan for
something that sips, rather than chugs, at the gas pump.
Which,
thinking globally and acting locally, is precisely what I've decided
to do with mine.
Though
I don't consider myself an automotive fashionista, I must admit
I followed the thundering herd of protective parents unable to resist
the allure of what is basically a comfy Sherman tank. My SUV, a
Lincoln Navigator, was, I was told, the safest way to transport
my kids. And, as an added bonus, I could haul around a decent-sized
Girl Scout troop.
But
now we're at war, right? A New War. Everything has changed, hasn't
it? Perhaps in rhetoric. In practice, what are we being called to
do for the war effort other than shop 'til we drop, eat out and
visit Disney World?
Given
that our ability to play hardball with nations that harbor terrorists
is going to be seriously compromised by our foreign oil habit, shouldn't
we be doing everything we can to reduce that dependence -- starting,
say, yesterday?
On
Tuesday, the president ordered the government to boost its emergency
stockpile of oil to "strengthen the long-term security of the
United States."
But
nothing is being done to heed Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham's
warning that "reducing our nation's dependence on imported
oil is crucial to our national energy security, now more than ever
before."
On
average, SUVs consume over 6 miles per gallon more than a family
station wagon. No small difference when you consider that an improvement
of just 3 mpg in autos nationwide would save 1 million barrels of
oil per day.
On
top of this, I have belatedly discovered that despite those TV ads
showing them heroically scaling snow-capped mountains in a single
bound, SUVs are actually risky to drive: four times more likely
than cars to roll over in an accident and three times more likely
to kill the occupants in a rollover.
Flag
waving is great, but patriotic display is not a substitute for patriotic
action. And the public is galvanized for action, just as it was
during World War II. Back then, Americans answered their leaders'
call for sacrifice in dozens of altruistic ways: They collected
scrap metal to be refashioned as guns, planes, and tanks, planted
20 million vegetable "victory gardens," and made do with
3 gallons of gas a week. Just about what the average SUV devours
on a few latte-hauling trips to Starbucks.
But
when it comes to summoning the national resolve for shared sacrifice,
W has been no FDR. There have been too many pep rallies and too
few fireside chats. This president has the national ear, in a way
few presidents ever have. The problem is, now that he's got our
attention, he doesn't appear to have much to say.
His
speech last week included a general call to serve our country by
"mentoring a child, comforting the afflicted, housing those
in need of shelter and a home." But his appeal lacked the kind
of specificity that prods people out of their armchairs and into
action. If the president had informed us, for instance, that 12
million children live in households where people have to skip meals
to make ends meet or that there are a million homeless children
in this country on any given day, then Americans would be far more
likely to become what he dubbed "a Sept. 11 volunteer."
Of
course, when it comes to acting on our patriotism, we don't have
to wait for our leaders. If they won't lead, we can just step around
them. And when it comes to the vital issue of energy policy, it
appears that we'll have to.
As
well as giving up our SUVs -- or, even better, switching to hybrid
gas-and-electric cars that currently get up to 64 mpg -- we can
all make simple adjustments to wean our country from the foreign
oil teat, even if our leaders are too dazed by the energy and auto
industry lobbies to guide us.
We
can, for example, make sure our tires are fully inflated, reducing
gas consumption by 2 percent, we can slow down to 65 miles per hour,
reducing highway gas consumption by 15 percent, and we can stop
idling our cars in drive-through window and school carpool lanes.
And at home we can help conserve fuel by turning thermostats down,
weather-stripping doors and windows, buying energy-efficient fluorescent
lightbulbs, and unplugging cell phone chargers and hair dryers.
We
can't go on consuming 25 percent of the world's oil while being
only 5 percent of the global population. At least not if we want
to get serious about putting the screws to any number of oil-rich
and terrorist-friendly nations.
Laura
Bush gave voice to a widely held sentiment when she said that Sept.
11 has made us "more determined and prepared, wiser and in
many ways better." Not because of the number of flags attached
to car windows or news anchors' lapels but because of the willingness
the American people have shown to make whatever sacrifices are necessary
to meet the challenge to our way of life.
Frankly,
saying hasta la vista to my 13 mpg Navigator and hello to a 23 mpg
Volvo V70 station wagon is hardly a sacrifice. But it's a start.
Maybe I'll plant a victory garden in the backseat.
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