By Michael Craig on 1.23.03 @ 12:34AM
What you drive says a lot about what you drive.
My mother-in-law told me back in 1984 that I could never own a
Volkswagen. "That car was Hitler's idea." (Ferdinand Porsche
designed the engine, but this is not an argument to get into with
one's mother-in-law.) A Mercedes was out of the question not just
because of Nazi association but because we had no money, terrible
credit, and our trade-in was a four-year-old Dodge Omni Miser --
that was its actual name; cool, huh? -- with over 100,000 miles and
heavy body damage. She had a grudge against the Japanese from World
War II and told me Henry Ford didn't have a nice opinion of Jewish
people. Chrysler products were verboten because both our fathers
blamed the company for ruining their professional lives, not an
uncommon claim in Detroit.
So we bought a red Yugo, which we nicknamed Dracula. Around the
time Dracula bit the dust, our fortunes and credit had sufficiently
improved where we could purchase a car that a couple drunken
teenagers couldn't tip over. We bought an Audi and told my
mother-in-law that Audi comes from Sweden. Luckily, she was not
very knowledgeable about European cars, especially when our next
car was a Porsche. I think we passed it off as Italian. Frankly,
her son-in-law managed to hold a job for a couple years and turned
out to be less of a bum than she expected, so she was willing to
believe whatever crapola we handed her.
Everybody has an opinion about what you drive. For our most
recent vehicle, we tried to make everybody happy: a yellow Hummer
H2. GM product, over three tons of Detroit iron, costs enough to
employ about forty-five auto workers. We picked it almost by
process of elimination. With German and Japanese products out of
the question, and two of the three quasi-American automakers off
limits, the world suddenly seemed very small. I heard Hyundai is a
comer, but South Korea is a little too close to the axis of evil
for my taste. If Lexus and BMW hadn't already been disqualified, we
had to skip them because too many doctors drive them. No health
care reform, no Lexus or Beemer. Someone suggested a Cadillac but
that car has a reputation as a pimp car; at least it did on
Starsky & Hutch. I wouldn't dare be so insensitive to
women.
Of course, the H2 has engendered a level of resentment I never
imagined. Jeffrey Runge, the head of NHTSA (National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration), said he wouldn't buy an SUV for his
daughter "if it was the last one on Earth." It took Runge until
2003 to decide that SUVs, because of their higher center of
gravity, are more likely to roll over. Whatever that guy does, he's
not going to do it very fast.
In addition, I'm on the verge of going nuclear -- or, nucular,
if you will -- on Arianna Huffington. Her so-called "Detroit
Project" is running ads linking SUV ownership to terrorism, because
they run on gasoline, which we buy from the Middle East, which
finances terrorists.
I think Huffington has it completely backwards. Osama bin
Laden's family, for example, didn't make their money selling oil.
They built roads. Roads, Arianna, which your Ford Focus
guzzles to get around. The H2 doesn't need roads. My SUV is a bin
Laden-free zone.
I appreciate that President Bush has leveled the playing field
by increasing and speeding up the depreciation on small businesses
that use SUVs. (A writer does count as a small business, right?)
I'm just a little surprised that this provision is getting any
publicity. I thought this was the sort of tax break that only
showed up in unrelated legislation on those rare days when Congress
stays in session beyond the evening news hour. This more than makes
up for the mischief of the Earth Liberation Front. Calling these
guys terrorists probably has Mullah Omar spinning in his cave;
delinquents with gas cans is more like it. If there's a place in
hell where terrorists hang out, I don't look forward to what the
ELFs have to look forward to for eternity.
I'd prefer to let the free market sort this out. If my H2 keeps
guzzling 91 octane premium, which it will until April when I can
occasionally supplement it with 100 octane racing fuel, I might be
able to drive up the price of oil high enough to encourage further
exploration. And if the price of gas gets too high, all those SUVs
on the lots will encourage the automakers to develop better
alternatives. I'm also hoping the Venezuelans who follow both my
driving habits and the rising price of oil realize they have to get
rid of that socialist they've got running the country. They're
losing out on opportunities to make too much money off gringos like
me.
Turning cars into geopolitical battle grounds always backfires.
Back in the Seventies, as a teenager in Detroit, I took a lot of
abuse for learning to drive on my Mom's brown Toyota Corolla. It
cost me my friendship with Steve, a neighbor whose dad got laid off
at Ford. Steve's dad didn't strike me as any kind of political
activist, until he started making ends meet by buying junked
Japanese cars -- usually Toyota Corollas -- and charging a buck in
the Livonia Mall parking lot to take a swing at the car with a
sledge hammer.
In the end, the Corollas that didn't end up under the hammer led
a revolution that made money and provided jobs for Americans. Many
of those Japanese cars lasted longer and got better gas mileage.
Enough people weren't intimidated into driving them that the U.S.
manufacturers had to compete with them, taking some of their best
ideas and developing some new, better ones. America got better cars
and many Japanese companies sold enough cars that they had to build
plants in the U.S., employing U.S. workers, to meet demand.
I don't even think the people who paid Steve's dad a dollar to
whack the Corolla got their money's worth. Sure, the first few got
to smash in windows and headlights. But I was in the parking lot
one day and saw a guy take a swing at a hubcap, hit the tire
instead, and almost kill himself when the hammer ricocheted back at
him. Another guy, who was one swing too late at the front grill,
caught the engine block flush and turned into a mummy for twenty
minutes from the reverberation.
In the meantime, I've got a bumper sticker to answer anyone who
gives me a hard time over owning an SUV: Honk if I ran you
over!
topics:
Trade, Business, Law, Oil