I got the email the other day. You know the one. Gas prices are so high we should all not buy gas on some specific date. Oh, wait, this one had a much better idea than just not buying gas on a specific date; it said that we should all just avoid buying gas from the two biggest companies. And this will really work, really. And we should all forward this to all 209 people in our contact list. Really.
I wanted to reply, but resisted to avoid appearing cheeky. I actually wanted to “reply all” since I got this email twice in the same day from two different people, with open recipient lists. I really had to actively talk myself out of it, because that would have really been cheeky. Really.
So, here’s what I would have said if I had replied.
Yippee! The price of gasoline is finally so high that even people who aren’t weird, hippy, granola types are thinking twice about how much of it they buy. (When I bought my first car nearly 20 years ago, my family mostly giggled because I really wanted one that got good gas mileage. Really.) I can hardly wait until it gets to $5.50 per gallon to see just what it will push us to do.
If I don’t buy gasoline on a specific day, how does that matter? I don’t buy gas most days, only about once per week. It’s very likely that I won’t be buying gas on the arbitrary urban legend date in the email that everyone is forwarding around. And I’m probably not avoiding the purchase of gas on that day because of the email; I probably just don’t need to buy gas that day.
Let’s talk about what kinds of things we could really do that would make a difference in the price of gas.
We could demand that all cars are highly fuel efficient.
We could advocate for efficient, convenient, cost-effective transportation. I long for the day I could just jump on a train for the three hour trip to visit my sister and her kids. I’d love to spend that time reading to my kids or knitting, or doing just about anything other than driving.
We could permanently park our gigantic fuel-sucking SUV’s and Hummers.
We could work to make new urban development inviting and friendly for pedestrians and bicycles. I live less than 1/4 mile away from a large chain grocery store. I walked there exactly once to get some milk in the 18 months we’ve lived in this house. It is not convenient, safe, or enjoyable to walk there on roadways that are clearly only designed with vehicular traffic in mind.
We could stop bombing and threatening to bomb countries in the Middle East that are rich in oil.
We could let the Alaskan wilderness remain wilderness.
We could use people powered mowers on our lawns (do you know how much gas you use mowing your lawn?)
We could turn our cars off in parking lots instead of leaving them idling. If your car idles 1 minute, you’ve already used more gas than you will to start it up again. I know we live in Wisconsin, but your car doesn’t get cold that fast, does it?
Let’s start having some real conversations about real changes that can impact our consumption of gasoline. Really.
1 Comment »