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The
Christian Science Monitor 11-25-02
Introspection behind the wheel
By Ed Hunt
They'll
need a miracle.
A group
of religious leaders is trying to get Americans to give up their
gas-guzzling sport utility vehicles - and they are not alone.
The
National Partnership for Religion and the Environment recently met
with officials from Ford and General Motors, pressuring the automakers
to produce more fuel-efficient models.
The
automakers say they are just building what Americans want to drive.
True enough. So the Partnership is also working on the demand side
of the equation, educating their congregations about the morality
of their transportation choices. One group has even sponsored a
campaign posing the question "What Would Jesus Drive?"
Although it sounds like a joke, it is really a play on the "What
Would Jesus Do?" morality campaign that has spread like wildfire
through Christian youth groups in recent years. The purpose of that
campaign was to make Christians ask themselves if what they did
on a daily basis was consistent with their beliefs.
Organizers
of the new campaign hope to do the same but with a more specific
focus. Their goal is to highlight the environmental impacts of air
pollution and global warming on the poor and on all God's creation.
The
power of this simple question is that it forces us to reconcile
who we think we are, with what we do.
In
the US, we are what we drive. Cars are a projection of who we imagine
ourselves to be. If market research is to be believed, we drive
SUVs to make ourselves and our family feel safe. We buy them to
show our wealth, and the vigorous outdoor life that we wish others
to believe we engage in. They are status symbols, manifestations
of ego rendered in metal. It's hard to imagine Jesus buying a Chevy
Suburban to tow his fishing boat.
No
one is suggesting that buying the right kind of car or taking public
transit is going to help get you through the pearly gates.
Instead,
the campaign is designed to make believers a little uncomfortable,
and to make us think about how our actions ripple out through the
world and affect others.
Interestingly,
these groups are not the only ones calling for an intervention in
our harmful addiction to the SUV. The campaign is gaining national
attention and even spin-offs - particularly as more people realize
US dependence on foreign oil may be responsible for funding terrorism.
"I'm
sure there are plenty of Jews who send money to Israel, and then
turn around and send money to its enemies, every time they fill
up their SUVs with gas," Sheldon Drobny wrote recently in an
article titled "What Would Moses Drive?"
The
connection between terrorism and oil consumption is also being made
at the secular level - by capitalizing on the patriotism that swept
over the nation in the past year. Grass-roots efforts like the Patriot's
Pledge and the Green Ribbon campaign are growing.
The
campaigns cross partisan boundaries, calling on Americans to reduce
oil consumption because oil dollars "flow to tyrannical governments
that do not share our democratic values and to hateful terrorists
plotting attacks on our country," according to Republicans
for Environmental Protection, which distributed a buying guide for
fuel efficient cars last January.
Columnist
Arianna Huffington -- who traded in her 13 m.p.g. Lincoln Navigator
after the terrorist attacks - is even hoping to make the connection
between SUVs and terrorism funding in a series of commercials being
shot this week.
If
such a trend continues, one has to wonder: What Would Detroit Do?
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