Accord Hybrid one of LA's Ten Great Cars of Year
Yet, of the 10, one was the Honda Accord Hybrid and another was a Mini-Cooper, most of the rest were extreme gas-guzzlers.
Still, I was happy that a story about cars and Los Angeles, written by a Los Angeles Auto writer, would include a hybrid, but the article went further than that. Mr. Neil opens his article mentioning America's relationship to the internal combustion engine, and that this year provided evidence that something better than the internal combustion engine was clearly possible.
More important, he noted $3.00 gas in California and said, "American foreign policy is bloodily fixated on a region of the world whose single strategic value is oil."
It's not just because of the cost of gasoline that people purchase vehicles such as the Toyota Prius, or Ford Escape Hybrid, it's because of the costs of our dependency upon foreign oil, in addition to the environmental costs.
For decades Americans have died in the Middle East protecting foreign-oil dependency, like some maddened, craving drug addict.
But if California can say, No More, what an impact on the rest of the Nation.
Further, Neil brings up global warming, Bush's acknowledgement of global warming, as well as California's fight for clean air. "But automakers, suing to stop California's new carbon-emission standards, are in greenhouse denial." Then he asks, "Whose air is it, anyway?"
"The future belongs to automakers who embrace change. Toyota surpassed Ford as the world's No. 2 automaker in 2004 and will likely overtake GM in 2005, when it will sell more than 100,000 hybrid cars in the U.S.".
As in denial as America has been about oil, especially foreign oil and its costs, dramatic world events are forcing Americans to wake up to this issue.
American auto corporations better do the same.
Labels: Accord hybrid, Escape hybrid, Ford, Ford Escape hybrid, Foreign Oil Dependency, global warming, GM, Honda, Hybrid Vehicles, prius, toyota



1 Comments:
More people should learn about electric vehicles as a solution. "Zero emissions" is something that's going to be required by law one day (you know it will). Making the decision to go electric is far cheaper anyway, like 10 cents on the dollar vs. gas. (source: zapworld.com)
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