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Dear
Friends,
The
anti-SUV ad campaign you helped create, which we have named The
Detroit Project, is unveiling our two 30-second ads (entirely funded
by your contributions) at a press conference in Los Angeles at 10am
this morning. The ads are available at www.thedetroitproject.com.
Also on our website will be a letter you can send to Detroit's automakers,
a form to fill out for those dumping their SUVs, and a paypal link
so that we can raise more money and buy additional air time. The
ads will start running on the political talk shows this Sunday in
major markets around the country.
All
the best,
Road
Outrage: How Corporate Greed And Political Corruption Paved The
Way For The SUV Explosion
By
Arianna Huffington
America's
automakers have finally sputtered into first gear.
Responding
to the growing public outcry over its reckless gas-guzzling ways,
the auto industry used the Detroit Auto Show this week to unveil
a line-up of "coming soon to a showroom near you" hybrid
vehicles -- including a number of hybrid SUVs.
The
question -- though I'm willing to bet no one at the car show asked
it -- is: What took them so long? After all, cars powered by a combination
of gas and electricity have been around since 1905, when the Woods
Motor Vehicle Co. offered a dual-powered model.
And
while Detroit's sudden interest in hybrids after a near-century
of neglect is certainly a step in the right direction, given the
fact that many of the prototypes on display in the Motor City won't
be on showroom floors for years -- if ever -- it's fair to wonder
just how decisive a step it is.
It's
one thing to make a big show of rolling out glittering "concept
models" intended for future production -- or to promise, as
GM did, to have a million hybrid vehicles for sale by 2007 "if
demand is high" -- and quite another to commit the marketing
resources necessary to create the high demand. Time will tell if
the industry has really fallen in love with this new/old kid on
the block or if the industry's embrace of hybrid technology is just
a one night stand, a here-today-gone-tomorrow defensive gambit for
the PR cameras.
We
have ample reason to question the sincerity of the industry's stated
intentions. Anyone remember the Supercar, that 80 mpg marvel that
was supposed to hit the road by 2004 but instead managed to eat
up $1.5 billion in taxpayer money before being abandoned on the
side of the highway? Or the FreedomCAR, the Bush administration's
equally lame "responsible vehicle" partnership with Detroit?
Both highly touted programs allowed automakers to look like they
were sweating blood to improve fuel efficiency while doing everything
in their power to convince consumers to buy more and more fuel-inefficient
-- and hugely profitable -- SUVs.
For
a good indication of Detroit's real plans, we need look no further
than this week's L.A. Auto Show. (Yes, I'm a regular on the auto
show circuit.) There were as many hybrid cars on display as there
were rickshaws. And in full page newspaper ads headlined "What's
Up At GM?" the auto giant bragged about having "once again
shattered the record for SUV sales, topping the million mark for
the second consecutive year -- propelled by breakout vehicles like
the one-of-a-kind Hummer H2."
The
sales deck is clearly stacked in favor of Detroit's beloved behemoths,
with billions being spent on SUV advertising and ever-more tempting
marketing come-ons, like GM's "Zero, Zero, Zero" program
which was introduced in December and offered no-interest financing
on 13 of its SUVs for up to 60 months -- very tempting in these
tough times.
Of
course, Washington continues to do its part by holding SUVs to lower
fuel efficiency and air pollution standards than passenger cars.
Our politicians have even refused to close a deeply misguided tax
loophole that rewards buyers of extra large -- and extra wasteful
-- SUVs with extra large tax breaks.
Think
of that: at a time when our leaders should be touting the importance
of reducing our dependence on foreign oil, the people being given
a financial incentive to purchase a new vehicle are those buying
fuel-chugging SUVs.
"I
was surprised," said Karl Wizinsky, a health care consultant
from Michigan who just bought a giant Ford Excursion even though
he admits he doesn't really need it, "that a $32,000 credit
on a $47,000 purchase was available in the first year. I mean, it
is a substantial credit." Yes, it is. And it's created a substantial
-- and artificial -- demand.
It's
the kind of lunatic public policy that makes you want to slam on
your brakes and scream out your car window: How can this kind of
thing happen?
The
answer is as simple as it is distressing: special interest money
has once again trumped the public interest. That's why the auto
industry was able to turn its back on hybrid technology for so long,
and why our politicians refuse to this day to demand that the auto
industry change its hydrocarbon-loving ways.
The
numbers tell the story: the auto industry spent close to $37 million
on lobbying in 2000. And you can bet that money wasn't spent trying
to convince Congress to designate a "Windshield Wiper Appreciation
Week." Although I'm sure Congress would have been glad to oblige
if its deep-pocket pals in Detroit had only asked. After all, the
industry has donated over $77 million to federal candidates and
the political parties since the 1990 election -- with $12.5 million
doled out during the 2002 election cycle.
It
also doesn't hurt to have very good friends in very high places.
Before becoming White House chief of staff, Andy Card was an executive
at GM, and before that, the chief lobbyist for the Big Three auto
makers. And you wondered why the administration has thrown its considerable
weight behind GM's efforts to overturn a California law requiring
carmakers to put more energy-efficient models on the road?
Because
of the corporate takeover of our democracy, Washington has remained
firmly stuck in the Dark Ages of energy policy. That's why Bill
Clinton came charging into office promising to raise fuel efficiency
standards to 45 miles per gallon but left without having increased
it one inch per gallon. And why George W. Bush can try and score
points by proposing to raise the ludicrously low SUV mileage standard
by an equally ludicrous 1.5 mpg over the next four years.
It's
also why the Big Three, once again, have to play catch up with Toyota
and Honda, which have been putting out hybrid cars since 1997. How
ironic that if American car buyers want to do something truly patriotic,
they have to buy Japanese to do it.
So
Detroit has sensed -- belatedly but still ahead of the slowcoaches
in Washington -- that public opinion is shifting -- and has taken
some baby steps toward meeting the rising demand for more socially
responsible cars.
Now
it's up to all of us to make sure that the pressure and the demand
continue to grow. Otherwise, the auto industry will gladly underfund
and under-advertise its hybrid models, allowing them to crash and
burn -- yet more "proof" that American consumers don't
really care about anything other than their precious SUVs.
And
that would suit those gas-guzzlers in Detroit -- and those cash-nuzzlers
in Washington - just fine.
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