Rising Gasoline Prices
US gasoline prices continue to rise. I say let ’em rise. Go to $5.00, even $6.00 per gallon. While I realize the increase would be very hard on the poor, it would also cause the whining class no end of “hardship,” and the poor are generally hardy stock, and will be fine. It’s those precious people in their SUVs motoring from suburb to suburb who I want to see have to sacrifice a bit in this new economy (a new economy they more than likely helped bring to fruition by voting for that awful George W. Bush and his cronies in God’s Own Party ®).
My commute to work is less than 10 minutes by car, and public transit isn’t out of the picture for me. Those high prices would, if fact, be just the push I need to make me use public transit. So I would welcome the change. (Yes, I know I should have the willpower to use public transport myself without an outside influence, but I don’t.) Anyway, it wouldn’t impact me directly as I don’t use much gasoline to begin with. However, the indirect impact would be a bit more obvious to me as it would cause prices of pretty much everything to go up. The trucking industry, for example, would have to charge more for transporting groceries and other consumer goods.
But ya know what? Necessity is the mother of invention, and we as a society would begin to invest in other, more efficient and less costly means of transportation. Perhaps the public transit systems in middle-tier cities like Atlanta would get the funding they need to be really good, usable systems. Perhaps we might see the use of cleaner fuels developed. Perhaps trains may be used to transport more and more goods. Shipping and distribution centers would be moved to areas accessible by train, creating, at least temporarily, jobs to construct those centers and to manage the logistics of the changes. A whole new segment of society could come to power, as the Oil Barons of Texas would finally be left choking on the dust of progress. That new segment could be those intelligent enough to adapt, to create a new way of doing things.
These changes wouldn’t come about without pain or cost. But it might be worth it to see this country a bit cleaner, a bit greener, and a bit more concerned for the greater good, not just for those on the other side of the tempered, tinted glass of the monstrosity on wheels that nearly rear-ended you on your way to work this morning.
out of 5 iPods
out of 5 iPods


