Energy

The form of energy we use to get from A to B is not the problem. Whether it's electric, internal combustion, nuclear powered, or peddle cars, we're missing the point. Using electric cars is is like treating skin cancer with a band aid.

The real problem is how we design our cities.

Ever since auto manufacturer's decided that everyone needs to have a car, and that they need to drive those cars everywhere, cities have been designed around the concept. Literally everything is deigned with only the slightest thought of where people will walk.

Go to your local mall. Try walking from the street, through the parking lot, into the mall. There probably isn't any place designed for you to walk. You're walking where the cars go, and battling them for space as you make your journey.

We gave our entire country to the auto industry, and now we're dependent on oil, pollute in excessive amounts, and design our cities so that they only way to get around is to own a car.

It didn't used to be like this. Here's a graph showing historical per-capita vehicle ownership.

 Vehiclesandfuels Images Facts Fotw469

Compare that graph with this one of obesity rates from 1960 to 2000:

 Issues 2003 12 03 Bray2

I'm not saying that driving cars is making us fat, but I am saying that people used to walk a lot more. It used to be okay to walk two blocks to go to the corner store, but now we don't give hoping in the car a second thought.

Think about it - which of these two places would you rather live?

 Images Beaches France Beaches France Beach Pictures 3

 D Detroit 1 0 8 1 - - Backparkinglot

One place has lasting value, one place does not.

I saw an old photograph of downtown Provo and was surprised to see trolley tracks right down Center Street. Salt Lake City used to have one of the most impressive public transit systems in the country. Then the car came and made it all unnecessary. Now we all get to stay in our own little air-conditioned bubble as we move about the city.

So the solution for our energy crisis is not to come up with new innovative ways of powering a car (although that's okay too), it's to start designing our cities like they used to be designed. Remove our dependence on cars and the energy crisis solves itself.

Think of the effect that this would have not only on energy, but on pollution, obesity, social interaction, and an overall sense of community? This is the way the world should be.

Average: 2.7 (6 votes)

Also...

Also, I don't like not commenting as 'anonymous'.

-Bags... the Fatty Fat

No Wonder I'm A Fatty Fat

I've been wondering why I have gained 15 lbs. in the last month and a half. I can't drag my lazy ass off my couch to walk half a block to the Walmart that is literally NEXT DOOR to where I live. Man, I'm a deadbeat.

The pictures are misleading.

You are not showing wide and narrow streets / walkways, you are showing walkways and parking lots.

GIVEN THAT CHOICE I CHOOSE B = PARKING LOT.

WHY BETTER FIRE PROTECTION. BUILDING BURNING ON ONE SIDE ARE NOT LIKELY TO CAUSE FIRES ON THE OTHER SIDE.

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
 
CAPTCHA
Are you alive?
T
n
a
y
Enter the code without spaces and pay attention to upper/lower case.