Results tagged “change” from Marilyn Sewell

The headline in the NY Times this morning tells us that China is planning to become the leading producer of hybrid and all-electric cars within the next three years.  And don't think they can't do it.  Five thoustand auto engineers and 5,000 battery engineers are living in a high-tech ghetto of 15 yellow 18-story apartment buildings in Shenzhen, and they are busily working to accomplish this goal for their country.  They earn less than $600 a month, and that includes benefits.

China is offering hefty subsidies for buyers, and they would like to raise their annual production rate to 500,000 hybrid or all-electric cars and buses by the end of 2011.  The U.S. has its own comparable program, of course, and the Department of Energy will get $25 billion to develop electric-powered cars and improve battery technology, plus another $2 billion for battery development.

China says that its intention--besides creating jobs and exports--is to fight urban pollution and reduce its dependence on foreign oil.  The problem is that the electricity that runs cars has to be produced somehow--a fact which electric car enthusiasts often seem to overlook--and China gets the bulk of its electricity from coal, the dirtiest source of energy for our planet. 

And then there was the news in March, coming from India: Tata Motors is launching its Nano, a small car that will cost only $2,200 in the U.S., for the cheapest model.  It is being touted as the "new way"--the smaller and cheaper form of transportation for the masses.  They plan to begin selling the cars this July, and will market an eco-friendly version which uses compressed air as fuel, as well as an electric version.  Tata is planning for an initial production target of 250,000 units a year.  Millions of Indians who never thought they could own a car will now have a chance of doing so. 

I have to ask a simple question: when emissions from the automobile are quickly ruining the planet, why are we human creatures going to produce automobiles of any kind for everyone on earth?  Shouldn't we instead be working very hard to create alternative models of transportation?  Shouldn't we be learning how to live and work in a more circumscribed area?

On top of the not-inconsequential problem of global warming, there is the on-going slaughter on our highways, which nobody seems particularly worried about.  Each year 43,000 people die on our roads.  You know some of them.  And 3,000,000 more are injured.  Chances are that you, at one time or another, have been among them.  Some of these injuries are devastating.  In India, 90,000 people are killed every year on the roads.  I hesitate to think what will happen when hundreds of thousands of little Nanos are added to the mix.

When will we understand that the problem is not (1) how to live the same way we've always lived, but more cheaply, and it's not (2) encouraging everyone in the world to follow the American Dream.  Our problem is to actually change the way we're living.  And the U.S. has the responsiblity to lead in this effort, for we have been leading in the wrong direction for our planet, for far too long.

Why, oh why, are we behaving like lemmings rushing to the sea?  What will it take to wake us up? 


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I just watched the Inuguration of Barack Hussein Obama as the 44th President of the United States.  One of the memorable phrases that he used in his address was recognizing "the triumph of hope over fear" at this time in our nation's history.

I feel that I just woke up from a bad dream, after the past eight years of Republican rule.  During that time everything that I hold dear about my country has been violated by the Bush administration: torture, in violation of the Geneva convention; pre-emptive war, in violation of international law; inept and wasteful handling of that war, once started; ignoring of the protections of habeas corpus; spying on American citizens; refusing to recognize scientific knowledge in making policy; allowing the short-term gains of the few to endanger the life of the planet; power and position given to those whose main virtue was their support of the President; deregulation, leading to shameful economic inequity and finally the breakdown of the economic system.  I could go on, but let's stop there.

Now in office is a man who embodies change.  The underprivileged son of a black man and a white woman, he is young, highly intelligent, compassionate, and a man of great integrity.  In his very person, he says YES to this nation, YES WE CAN.  Yes to all of us, not just some of us.  And in a time when so many of us have been beaten down by seeing our ideals dashed to the ground, we can once again choose hope over fear.  No wonder my tears were flowing so freely as I watched the Inauguration on television this morning.  It was a great letting go, and a great coming forth. 


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