Are Hummer Owners Idiots?
More delightful proof positive that most SUVs are, in fact,
morally repugnant. Go, America!
By Mark Morford, SF Gate Columnist
Just in time for America's latest murderous war for oil, just in
time to
be reminded of exactly why our foreign policy is so horribly
mangled and
debilitating and Saudi enslaved and terrorist ready ...
Just in time to crush a few thousand smaller cars and kill a
bunch of
pedestrians and poison the environment and still be able to
traverse six
feet of standing floodwater in order to make it in time for
Timmy's soccer
game, it's the rollout of the new Hummer H2, the biggest joke of
the
entire SUV world, representing, well, just exactly everything
that's wrong
with America's view of the world.
Oh come now. You know it's true. You've seen the magazine ads and
you've
ogled the billboards and maybe sat there sort of benumbed and sad
as you
witnessed the noxious TV commercials that show the Hummer proudly
spanking
the soul of humanity and necessity and subtle intelligence. Grunt
and
drive, baby.
Perhaps you have felt, like millions of others, your very anima
spasm in
pain when one of these absurd tanks rumbled by you in the street,
making
children cry and beautiful women roll their eyes in disgust and
most
everyone else realize, Jesus with a Mini Cooper, hasn't the inane
SUV
thing gone far enough?
Isn't there enough evidence of these land tanks' utter
uselessness and
danger and cultural detriment? How much proof do we need? And
aren't we
ready for some sort of momentous change?
Think about it. The past few decades have seen dramatic
revolutions in
every other technological realm, from PCs to the Internet to
medicine,
from DVDs to cell phones to deep-space telescopes, from
"smart"
refrigerators and PDAs and MP3 players to glow-in-the-dark
vibrators that
can run off the power in your phone line during those
particularly naughty
blackouts.
So why not the car? Why, then, has there been absolutely zero
significant
revolution in automobile-engine technology in the past 50 years?
And can
this be connected to the ridiculous upsurge in sales of the
false-macho,
faux-rugged, increasingly deadly SUV? Shall we tender a guess?
Of course it's because of the oil and auto industries. It is not
even a
question. Of course it's because of the titanic truckloads of
cash to be
made by continuing to exploit the world's oil reserves, brokering
obscene
deals and destroying land and earning our nation phenomenal
levels of
hatred, going so far as to prepare to kill hundreds of thousands
of Iraqis
to protect those reserves.
And the SUV, simply put, is the poster child for America's
incessantly
voracious oil appetite. This is why ShrubCo has aggressively
thwarted the
development of alternative fuels, killed legislation that
would've
mandated both tougher fuel requirements and the development of
zero-emissions technology. Just ask Dubya Sr.: Oil does a rich,
paranoid
ruling class good.
It matters not, of course, that the piles of evidence stacking up
against
the SUV increasingly prove not only that it is the most abusive,
oil-dependent, terrorist-supporting death beast on the road today
(as
Arianna's Detroit Project ad campaign so delightfully points out)
but also
that SUVs are owned, by and large (but not, of course,
exclusively), by
complete jackasses.
You know it's true. SUV drivers tend, more than any others on the
road, to
be aggressive jerks. And New York Times reporter Keith Bradsher's
new
book, "High and Mighty: SUVs -- The World's Most Dangerous
Vehicles and
How They Got That Way," proves it.
As reported in a superlative Washington Monthly article that
quotes
extensively from Bradsher's book, SUV owners tend to be, in part,
more
selfish, self-centered, narcissistic, insecure and vain than
their
car-driving brethren. Oh yes they do. And the research backs it
up.
They are frequently "nervous about their marriages and
uncomfortable about
parenthood. They often lack confidence in their driving skills.
Above all,
they are apt to be self-centered and self-absorbed, with little
interest
in their neighbors and communities. They are more restless, more
sybaritic
and less social than most Americans are."
Oh but it doesn't stop there. Only a small fraction of SUVs are
ever used
for actual work, or for their off-road capabilities, or by people
who
actually need them for inclement weather or for their hauling
utility. And
SUVs are, as Bradsher points out, intentionally designed to
appear more
reptilian and threatening, in an attempt to instill a false sense
of
ruggedness and menace and a get-outta-my-way machismo. And, of
course,
they succeed. Sort of.
Furthermore, SUVs are marketed, and widely accepted, as more
safe, more
solid and protective, which is of course one of the industry's
biggest and
most contemptible lies.
In truth, SUVs kill a great many more passengers than they save.
They
crush other cars, and study after study proves they themselves
have
shockingly high fatal rollover rates and lethal side-impact
dangers. And,
given the horrible visibility from SUVs, their drivers have a
rather
unfortunate habit of running over their own children in the
driveway.
True.
This, combined with how their false sense of ruggedness
encourages their
owners to drive them like maniacs, makes for one of the biggest
and most
dangerous mass delusions in modern American culture.
In fact, the "kill rate" for SUVs is truly appalling.
To paraphrase the
Washington Monthly article, for every one life saved by driving
an SUV,
five others will be taken. And research has proved that a tank
like the
two-ton Chevy Tahoe kills 122 people for every 1 million models
on the
road; by comparison, the Honda Accord kills only 21 per 1 million
such
vehicles.
In other words, SUVs aren't the slightest bit safe for you, or
your
children or other drivers -- especially other drivers. And to own
an SUV,
Bradsher asserts, essentially places the driver's own ego above
the health
and safety of those around him, not to mention the health of the
environment.
Oh hell, it's tempting to quote the entire article, and the book,
and you
should just go click it right now and read the whole piece,
because it
really is truly appalling and sad and horrifying and really does
go a long
way toward answering that age-old question, Why do so many SUV
drivers
seem to be such jerks?
Which brings us, naturally, right back to the Hummer. The King
Kong of
SUVs, the biggest, most thuggish, most gluttonous, most utterly
useless,
cartoonish, silly, ultimately deadly civilian vehicle on the road
today.
Exactly three people in the entire nation actually need one, and
they're
all running guns and delivering copies of Honcho to ultraparanoid
militias
in remote Montana.
Perhaps it is worth noting, in this time of imminent, useless
war, when
our country is being run by, essentially, a failed Texas oilman,
that it
might be about time to rethink our all-American,
bigger-is-better,
screw-the-environment, high-fivin', the-world-is-our-prison-bitch
mentality.
Perhaps this is the ultimate reminder the Hummer makes so
explicitly
clear. Perhaps this is why the SUV itself is such the ideal
ethical
lightning rod in today's global climate.
For in truth, it is exactly the mentality that gave birth to the
SUV and
the Hummer in the first place -- the weak ego, the need to strut
a phony
toughness, the insecurity, the patriotic narcissism, the false
sense that
all is solid and protected and that we care for no one but
ourselves --
that has turned us into what we are today.
Which is to say, the world's bully, the preemptive superpower
aggressor,
the Great Antagonist, the most openly reviled nation on the
planet, equal
parts loathed and bitterly envied and grudgingly feared and
desperately in
need of a long, deep sociopolitical colonic -- to say nothing of
a nice
bicycle.
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Mark Morford's Notes & Errata column appears every Wednesday
and Friday on
SF Gate, unless it appears on Tuesdays and Thursdays, which it
never does.
He also writes the Morning Fix, a deeply skewed thrice-weekly
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