Anonymous wrote:So, you SUV drivers know you are harming the environment and destroying your children's future. Yet you do it anyway. How do you reconcile that, exactly?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you believe that the use of fossil fuels has caused/accelerated/contributed to climate change and drive an SUV, please help me understand how you reconcile your beliefs with your vehicle choice. I would genuinely like to know. I live in Bethesda and practically everybody I know drives an SUV. Yet I'm pretty sure that, if I asked, they would say they are very concerned about climate change and disappointed the US withdrew from the Kyoto protocol. Obviously I risk alienating friends and neighbors if I ask this directly as it could sound accusatory. Please only answer if you have an SUV and these beliefs.
Because I spend two hours in bad traffic every day, and I have a better chance surviving a collision in my SUV than in a little Prius.
People tend to focus on the immediate rather than the future.
This is the same reason that most prevention messages fall flat with the public. People are more focused on their daily life than on preventing a disease that may or may not happen in the future.
Plus for that commute you need something that can handle snow and rain well.
Anonymous wrote:Hello? The first thing a typical American does to prepare for a kid is to buy an SUV! Get out from under your rock OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Recycling does not help the planet much. Recycling consumes a ton of energy.
I'm just curious what size home you have? I hope its a tiny one like the rest of us and not some oversized mansion. It does help. Why don't you stop eating and buying things?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you believe that the use of fossil fuels has caused/accelerated/contributed to climate change and drive an SUV, please help me understand how you reconcile your beliefs with your vehicle choice. I would genuinely like to know. I live in Bethesda and practically everybody I know drives an SUV. Yet I'm pretty sure that, if I asked, they would say they are very concerned about climate change and disappointed the US withdrew from the Kyoto protocol. Obviously I risk alienating friends and neighbors if I ask this directly as it could sound accusatory. Please only answer if you have an SUV and these beliefs.
Because I spend two hours in bad traffic every day, and I have a better chance surviving a collision in my SUV than in a little Prius.
People tend to focus on the immediate rather than the future.
This is the same reason that most prevention messages fall flat with the public. People are more focused on their daily life than on preventing a disease that may or may not happen in the future.
Anonymous wrote:I drive an ultra-low emission diesel suv only when necessary. Otherwise we drive in DH’s electric sedan.
Anonymous wrote:Recycling does not help the planet much. Recycling consumes a ton of energy.