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Americans Want It All, and Hang the Consequences

 
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Adventurer



Joined: 28 Jan 2006

PostPosted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 10:04 am    Post subject: Americans Want It All, and Hang the Consequences Reply with quote

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Published on Wednesday, October 11, 2006 by the Independent / UK
Americans Want It All, and Hang the Consequences
by Andrew Gumbel


In the 1970s film Five Easy Pieces, Toni Basil plays a hippie who is hitch-hiking to Alaska (in Jack Nicholson's car) because it's the only place she can think of that is still clean. The rest of the US, she frets, is filling up with more and more "crap". "They got so many stores and stuff and junk full of crap, I can't believe it," she says. "Pretty soon, there won't be any room for man."

The film came out in 1971 and coincided almost exactly with the birth of the modern environmental movement, the launch of Earth Day, and the realisation that the limitless consumption of the capitalist-era American Dream simply could not go on forever. In the intervening years, the accumulation of rubbish has continued pretty much unabated - not helped by a population increase of almost 100 million people, and an orgy of environmental deregulation of industry. But so too has the level of anxiety about the consequences.

Today's counterparts to Toni Basil's character are still relatively marginal figures, if less eccentric in their obsessions. They also tend to be rich and successful - environmental consciousness now carries a high price tag.

Of course, they go to open-air farmer's markets to seek out pesticide-free organic fruit and vegetables supplied by small, family growers but they also pay a premium for it. They might drive energy-efficient, low-emission hybrid cars but they also pay more for their fancy petrol-electric engines than they are likely to recuperate in petrol savings over the lifetime of their car.

The same is true for many other aspects of environmental consciousness. Who uses washable cloth nappies rather than throwaway ones? Who has solar panels installed on their roof? Only those who can afford them.

The severely limited impulse to conserve is not only about economics. It is also deeply cultural. The United States is a place where the prevailing instinct is to want it all, no matter the consequences. Sure, there may be wars in the Middle East, Islamic militants on the march, smog in the air, pollutants in the water, hurricanes, floods and other tangible side-effects of global warming but that's not going to stop most people from hankering after a big car and a big house with state-of-the-art gadgets.

Cutting back is not cool or sexy. Given the choice between laboriously reviving old city centres with apartment renovations and corner shops, or ripping up cornfields to create suburban developments with huge houses and monster shopping malls, most Americans opt for the monster.

People certainly have mixed feelings. At the height of the Iraq war, it was not uncommon to see huge, gas-guzzling four-wheel-drives sporting "No Blood for Oil" stickers. Americans aren't happy about their obesity epidemic or their tendency to overspend in grocery stores or over-order in restaurants, even while they consume 200bn calories a day more than they need and throw away around 200,000 tons of edible food each day.

But will anything ever change? Telling Americans to consume less doesn't work. Giving them environmentally smarter versions of the same things - more fuel-efficient cars, better insulated houses, less heavily packaged food - may be a more promising avenue. Until the government, however, gets serious about forcing manufacturers to produce these things, the age of the more rational American consumer will remain a distant prospect.



[I suppose the author is saying there needs to be responsible leadership to back up environmental programs and relying on the public won't work.]
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Roch



Joined: 24 Apr 2003
Location: Seoul

PostPosted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 10:18 am    Post subject: Re: Americans Want It All, and Hang the Consequences Reply with quote

[quote="Adventurer"]Printer Friendly Version E-Mail This Article
Published on Wednesday, October 11, 2006 by the Independent / UK
Americans Want It All, and Hang the Consequences
by Andrew Gumbel


In the 1970s film Five Easy Pieces, Toni Basil plays a hippie who is hitch-hiking to Alaska (in Jack Nicholson's car) because it's the only place she can think of that is still clean. The rest of the US, she frets, is filling up with more and more "crap". "They got so many stores and stuff and junk full of crap, I can't believe it," she says. "Pretty soon, there won't be any room for man."

The film came out in 1971 and coincided almost exactly with the birth of the modern environmental movement, the launch of Earth Day, and the realisation that the limitless consumption of the capitalist-era American Dream simply could not go on forever. In the intervening years, the accumulation of rubbish has continued pretty much unabated - not helped by a population increase of almost 100 million people, and an orgy of environmental deregulation of industry. But so too has the level of anxiety about the consequences.

Today's counterparts to Toni Basil's character are still relatively marginal figures, if less eccentric in their obsessions. They also tend to be rich and successful - environmental consciousness now carries a high price tag.

Of course, they go to open-air farmer's markets to seek out pesticide-free organic fruit and vegetables supplied by small, family growers but they also pay a premium for it. They might drive energy-efficient, low-emission hybrid cars but they also pay more for their fancy petrol-electric engines than they are likely to recuperate in petrol savings over the lifetime of their car.

The same is true for many other aspects of environmental consciousness. Who uses washable cloth nappies rather than throwaway ones? Who has solar panels installed on their roof? Only those who can afford them.

The severely limited impulse to conserve is not only about economics. It is also deeply cultural. The United States is a place where the prevailing instinct is to want it all, no matter the consequences. Sure, there may be wars in the Middle East, Islamic militants on the march, smog in the air, pollutants in the water, hurricanes, floods and other tangible side-effects of global warming but that's not going to stop most people from hankering after a big car and a big house with state-of-the-art gadgets.

Cutting back is not cool or sexy. Given the choice between laboriously reviving old city centres with apartment renovations and corner shops, or ripping up cornfields to create suburban developments with huge houses and monster shopping malls, most Americans opt for the monster.

People certainly have mixed feelings. At the height of the Iraq war, it was not uncommon to see huge, gas-guzzling four-wheel-drives sporting "No Blood for Oil" stickers. Americans aren't happy about their obesity epidemic or their tendency to overspend in grocery stores or over-order in restaurants, even while they consume 200bn calories a day more than they need and throw away around 200,000 tons of edible food each day.

But will anything ever change? Telling Americans to consume less doesn't work. Giving them environmentally smarter versions of the same things - more fuel-efficient cars, better insulated houses, less heavily packaged food - may be a more promising avenue. Until the government, however, gets serious about forcing manufacturers to produce these things, the age of the more rational American consumer will remain a distant prospect.



[I suppose the author is saying there needs to be responsible leadership to back up environmental programs and relying on the public won't work.][/quote

You went to Bishops or Concordia -right?

Sort of fair but where is the Slam against your fellow Canadians who occupy, as far as I could tell, a similair Monster.

Be fair, Cousin!
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Adventurer



Joined: 28 Jan 2006

PostPosted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 11:10 am    Post subject: Re: Americans Want It All, and Hang the Consequences Reply with quote

Roch wrote:


[I suppose the author is saying there needs to be responsible leadership to back up environmental programs and relying on the public won't work.][/quote

You went to Bishops or Concordia -right?

Sort of fair but where is the Slam against your fellow Canadians who occupy, as far as I could tell, a similair Monster.

Be fair, Cousin!



When it comes to consumption and the release of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere the U.S. accounts for about 23% of it and Canada about 2.5%. So they are both similar with the U.S. being slightly more gluttonous in this aspect. Americans consume about 1,600 tons of municipal waste and Canadians consume about 1,400 tons in respect to their municipalities. Both countries can do much more and Harper is not working effectively on this issue. I do think there is more of a will in Canada to speak about the environment, but I think California really puts forward a good effort and puts many to shame out there. I like the programs in California for installing solar panels. I think Schwarzneggar, as a Republican, in some ways is more progressive than most partisans of any stripe. Anyway, the article was by an author writing from a U.K. newspaper, and you could argue that the U.K. pollutes a great deal. I am more concerned in a leadership in the U.S. getting the political will to put money towards solar power, turbines etc... I do not believe the population without proper leadership can make much headway. That is why I added my two cents. I don't necessarily agree with the way the author wrote the article. Canada is over the Kyoto targets. Harper faces political risks if he doesn't address that. I don't see the voters in the U.S., unfortunately, talking enough about the environment.

[I can't be fairer than that.]

http://ca.news.yahoo.com/s/reuters/canada_environment_canada_harper_col

http://www.greatlakesdirectory.org/zarticles/090102_great_lakes.html
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