Hi Chicago bike activist. I am co-author (with Bianca Mugyenyi) of the just released Stop Signs: Cars and Capitalism on the Road to Economic, Social and Ecological Decay. We plan to be in Chicago May 30, 31 and June 1. Would you be into helping us set up event for one of those days?
By the time were are in Chicago we expect to have had few good reviews circulating and to have been on democracy now so hopefully that would help with turnout.
Here is our website, which we are slowly getting together. http://stopsigns.fairtrademedia.com/
yvesengler@hotmail.com
thanks and take care
yves
Authors offer 14 ways North America’s automobile-dominated transportation system is irritating, irrational, irresponsible and increasingly inhuman
The I-14
1. Cities have been torn down, remade and planned with cars’ needs as the overriding concern.
2. Behind the wheel it’s me, myself and I.
3. Only three percent of the car’s fuel energy actually moves what needs to be moved.
4. Cars encourage sprawl and the privatization of space.
5. Car-burbs are infertile ground for the social movements necessary to tip back the scale between rich and poor.
6. The car’s insatiable appetite for space crowds out bikes and pedestrians.
7. For every mile of travel, the car is dozens of times more likely to cause death and injury than the train, bus or airplane.
8. Cathedrals are built to worship the automobile.
9. A quarter of our working lives are spent paying for cars.
10. Automotive pollution kills tens of thousands annually.
11. Hundreds of billions of dollars are spent every year to subsidize off-street parking.
12. Driving brings out the beast in the newly evolved human, Homo Automotivis.
13. Auto-dependent development is pushing oil extraction into increasingly sensitive environments.
14. A model of transportation that relies on individuals hopping into two, four or eight thousand pound metal boxes to get from one place to another is utterly unsustainable.
In North America, human beings have become enthralled by the automobile: A quarter of our working lives are spent paying for them; communities fight each other for the right to build more of them; our cities have been torn down, remade and planned with their needs as the overriding concern; wars are fought to keep their fuel tanks filled; songs are written to praise them; cathedrals are built to worship them. In Stop Signs: Cars and Capitalism on the Road to Economic, Social and Ecological Decay, authors Yves Engler and Bianca Mugyenyi argue that the automobile's ascendance is inextricably linked to capitalism and involved corporate malfeasance, political intrigue, backroom payoffs, media manipulation, racism, academic corruption, third world coups, secret armies, environmental destruction and war. An anti-car, road-trip story, Stop Signs is a unique must-read for all those who wish to escape the clutches of auto insanity.
"Mugyenyi and Engler's Stop Signs is at one and the same time an entertaining, fact-filled anthropological tour of the land of Homo Automomotivis, and the first all-out global ecological critique of the American automobile addiction. Not since Jane Holtz Kay's Asphalt Nation has a book appeared that so clearly exposed the auto-irrationality of the most car-dependent country on earth."
John Bellamy Foster, editor of Monthly Review and co-author, The Ecological Rift
"This book is a must read for anyone who wants to understand the impact of the private automobile on our urban transportation options."
David Cadman, Vancouver City Councillor, International President ICLEI-Local Governments for Sustainability
"In Stop Signs, Mugyenyi and Engler take readers on an insightful, fact-filled journey through the primary habitat of the car-dominated species they call Homo automotivis. With wit and originality, they weave travel tales into a convincing argument against the auto economy, culminating with a fresh call to leave car culture behind."
Katie Alvord, Author, Divorce Your Car! Ending the Love Affair with the Automobile
"Mugyenyi and Engler illustrate the relationship between cars and suburban living. You come away shaken, but ready to roll up your sleeves and contribute, however modestly, to constructing a new world in the twenty-first century."
Richard Bergeron, Montreal city councilor, urban planner and author
Yves Engler has four published books including The Black Book of Canadian Foreign Policy (Shortlisted for the Mavis Gallant Prize for Non Fiction in the Quebec Writers' Federation Literary Awards)
Bianca Mugyenyi coordinates campaigns at Concordia University's Centre for Gender Advocacy
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I like riding my bicycle but I think the bicycle "community" (everything's a fuckin' community) is overrun with self righteous, finger-wagging, puritanical schoolmarms who want to dictate the behavior of others while demanding the freedom to do whatever the Hell they please (note the twisted, longwinded rationales often put forth here for cyclists disobeying traffic laws).
I think many of these bastards just hate to see people riding around in cars enjoying themselves and the freedom to go places cars give them. How dare the masses enjoy the fruits of their labor without first consulting Yves, a Cotton Mather on a Trek.
I don't find car ownership all that onerous or expensive. Perhaps that is because I own a car made in 1994 that has been paid for since before Y2k and has given me 316,000 almost totally trouble-free miles.
Then again I do all my own maintenance and the little that a mid-90's Camry requires is neither expensive nor very difficult. Other than oil changes, brakes, tires and the 90k timing belt change it needs very little other than checking the fluids. It still has compression within factory specs and gets 30MPG in mixed driving.
The only real costs are fuel and licensing as liability-only insurance is very cheap and hardly even registers on the log book of expenses. There is no such thing as a free lunch. It'd be nice to be car-free but my lifestyle is just NOT compatible with being stuck in one very small geographic vicinity all the time. I've got more of a need to roam the midwest and the continental USA at a rate not consistent with pedaling to get there. I do give people like Todd a nod for limiting themselves to only having a bicycle for personal transportation It's just not something I want to do with my own life. Life is too short to be stuck in an anthill like Chicago all the time. I like to live a little larger than that.
I foresee a time in my own lifetime when the freedom to pilot a motorized personal vehicle wherever one wishes on all but the most remote of areas will be a thing of the past. Motor vehicles will be controlled by computerized transportation nets and such things as steering wheels and piloting controls will be vestigial if present at all.
The hostility towards privately-owned transportation is part of it, but I am sure the change-over will be done in the name of "safety" due to the inability of the increasing number of said drivers to operate their vehicles with anything but the barest modicum of an aside to consideration and respect for the lives and safety of other road users.
When the technology comes to make such a thing possible the ability to just jump in a car (or motorcycle) and drive wherever one wishes without permission from some authority will be a thing of the past.
Jeff Schneider said:
I don't think it's somehow 'wrong' to own or use a car. I do, too. And, like you, I don't spend much money on it compared to most Americans (though I also understand the societal costs of my driving). But I would still love the freedom that more transportation alternatives would provide. For example, if I am lucky, I may live beyond my ability to drive, and I'd love to still be able to get around.
I like the part here where you pretend that driving a car is just a matter of personal choice, like choosing a hairstyle, conveniently ignoring the literally incalculable public expenditure that makes it possible.
I also like the part where you boldly become literally the only person in the entire United States to detect hostility to privately owned transportation.
I like the part here where you pretend that Freedom of X (insert just about anything here) just a matter of personal choice, like choosing a hairstyle, conveniently ignoring the literally incalculable public expenditure that makes it possible.
I also like the part where you boldly become literally the only person in the entire United States to detect hostility to Freedom of X (insert just about anything here).
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