Toban Black

 

 

November 23rd, 2009

Selling automobiles


Car advertising

A car advertisement on the back of a local bus

Andy Rowell on the Oil Change blog -
Electric Vehicles May Increase CO2
(I think it’s too much of a stretch to say that electric vehicles are “all the rage”; but some people definitely are looking toward them as ’solutions.’)

Brad Aaron on the Streetsblog New York City site -
Do Your Part: Buy an Audi, Drive Fast” (in October)
(Evidently the author is using the word “transit” to refer to mass transit — such as buses.)

Fred Pearce in The Guardian -
BMW’s ActiveHybrid X6 Accelerates Nonsense About High-performance, Low-emission Cars” (in September)

Brad Aaron on the Streetsblog New York City site -
Ad Nauseam: Toyota’s (Passive-Aggressive) Ransom Note to America” (in October)

Here are some related posts on this blog -
http://tobanblack.net/blog/?tag=automobiles





|   Comments (0)Categories: Ecology: Energy and carbon · Liberal individualism · Political economy: Capitalism






September 6th, 2009

The summer Climate Camp in London, England: Sample coverage


Overviews

A Camp for Climate Action press release -
Climate Activists Hit Big Business and Banks

A BBC article -
Climate activists stage protests

Bike swoop photos
- Set one
- Set two

Day 2: The European Climate Exchange

A Camp for Climate Action video and press release -
Everyone’s a loser at the Climate Casino!

[Read more →]





|   Comments (1)Categories: Ecology · Ecology: Energy and carbon · Globalizing (harmful forms of) · Political Economy · Political economy: Capitalism






July 19th, 2009

Not-so-distant waste


A lot of garbage

That photo was taken last year in Toronto, Ontario, Canada –
well before the ‘garbage’ strike which is underway there right now.

Christopher Hume (in this article) -

“At a time when a garbage strike has turned Toronto into a festering communal dumpsite, the connection between consumption and trash can be seen – and smelled – everywhere around us.”

Waste in and around a bin which had been taped shut by the city government -


(From one of Matthew Blackett’s posts on the Spacing Toronto blog.)

Mike Smith (in this article) -

The “strike opens our eyes to the awful levels of waste we produce.”

“They call it a work stoppage, but almost anyone can take it as an excuse to slow down and think.

At a local café, I drink coffee that’s arrived here in bean form from afar on a huge metal bird; I finish and put my cup in a bin, having no need ever to think of it again. It will simply… disappear.

Except, this time, it doesn’t. The cups, the wrappers, the refuse – the things we’ve been refusing to think about – sit there, reminding us that there are many wizards who work this magic for us, often behind the curtain of night. The breakdown of a machine proves the best way to observe how it works.”

“Even now, striking, garbage collectors are providing a sort of public service. As trash mounds grow in the rinks and pools of local parks, we are faced (nosed, specifically) with the reality of how much we throw away and the lives we lead in pursuit of the privilege to do so.”

“There’s a poetry to parks being chosen as dumps, a chance to see how connected things are.”

[Read more →]





|   Comments (3)Categories: Ecology · Ecology: Energy and carbon · Liberal individualism · Political Economy · Political economy: Capitalism






May 7th, 2009

Claiming the streets


Exerpts from a piece that Anna Letitia Mumford wrote
for the blog fifty car pile-up -

“Contrast the reaction of the authorities to the blockage of vehicular traffic in the [major 1999] Seattle [protest] and [later] Iraq war protests to the typical police reaction when sidewalks are obstructed by construction or bikelanes are occupied by double-parked vehicles.

There is nothing inherent in the overwhelming primacy given to privately owned vehicles on our public streets. Rather it is the result the cumulative effect of less than a hundred years of … policy decision-making that has favored automobile owners.

Imagine in the next hundred years, the potential of our bicycle and pedestrian advocacy efforts to … [claim] our streets [while] re-engineering our communities to make car ownership less convenient.

One way to create these changes is to physically occupy the contested space.”

[Read more →]





|   Comments (3)Categories: Liberal individualism · Local autonomy (constructive forms of) · Political Economy · Political economy: Capitalism · Solidarity






February 17th, 2009

Dangerous driving


On a suburban street in London, Ontario, Canada

=====

Ben Fried at Streetsblog -
Streetfilms: New Yorkers Walk and Ride for Safer Streets

Brad Aaron at Streetsblog -
Memorializing Pedestrian Victims in Portugal

Brad Aaron at Streetsblog -
Safety in Numbers” (October, 2008)

Monika Warzecha at the Spacing Toronto blog -
Think of the children” (November, 2008)
“In the district of Greenwich in London, England, a lot of the speed limit signs in residential areas have pictures beneath them drawn by children.” …

Ben Fried at Streetsblog -
Horns, What Are They Good For?” (November, 2008)





|   Comments (0)Categories: Liberal individualism · Solidarity






February 15th, 2009

“Full Throttle”


Fast car culture

Cars and speed are the common denominators here

The “Full Throttle” advertising reinforces other fast culture culture (that is, other promises of fast car driving),
which this promotional message also is based on, to an extent.

For months, that “Full Throttle” drink advertising has been in a ‘variety’ store window here in London, Ontario, Canada.

That store is beside a busy street here in London.
In the above photo you can see the reflection of a car which was being driven by at the time.

About a week earlier, the driver of this Doritos truck left it idling along the side of the road
outside of the same ‘variety’ store -

Automobiles, junk food, and advertising
are major common threads between these “Full Throttle” and Doritos truck photos.

[Read more →]





|   Comments (1)Categories: Ecology: Energy and carbon · Liberal individualism · Political economy: Capitalism






December 22nd, 2008

“Rushing to nowhere”


By Stephanie McMillan

Here are some other posts about transportation issues -
http://tobanblack.net/blog/?tag=transportation

Of course, car drivers don’t alway ‘veg out’ (in one way or another) after they reach their destinations,
but some sort of zombie-like relaxation often is what people are rushing towards, isn’t it?

In fact, aren’t people more apt to want to tune out like that after rushing around in cars?

(This isn’t to say that people can’t think and watch TV at the same time, however.  And it’s over the top to say that people who do rush toward some form of passive relaxation are headed “to nowhere.”)

There are more related posts here -
http://tobanblack.net/blog/?tag=urban-sprawl





|   Comments (3)Categories: Liberal individualism






October 3rd, 2008

Different forms of transportation


USA Today - “More golf carts leaving greens” (July 21st)
[via Post-Carbon Cities ]

powering down blog - “my commuter cycle
… “In this post I’d like to share my commuter cycle with readers - the bicycle I ride to work and back.” …

Lloyd Alter at the Treehugger blog -
For bicylists, there is safety in numbers
“The more bicyclists there are on the road, the lower the rate of accidents” …

Michael Graham Richard at the Treehugger blog -
D.C. bike-sharing program launches today, first in the USA” (August 13th)

Diamond-Cut Life blog - “How to save money on gas
“The way we drive has a huge impact on our fuel consumption” …

No Impact Man blog - “A bike races a car and wins
… “Once a year, Transportation Alternatives, which advocates taking the New York City streets from the cars and giving them to the people, runs its commuter challenge–bike vs. car vs. transit.” …

A Youtube video -
Bicycle train to Amsterdam from Berlin

Lloyd Alter at the Treehugger blog -
Slow freight joins the slow movement
… Certain “wine sellers are keen to display the ‘Carried by sailing ship’ label on bottles” …

A related post -
Versatile bicycle parts





|   Comments (0)Categories: Local autonomy (constructive forms of) · Solidarity






September 30th, 2008

Debts and cannibalization



A credit card design

Danny Schechter at Common Dreams -
The Next Bubble Is on the Way: Credit Card Debt” (August 11th)

Selected exerpts -

“Few are paying attention to the next bubble expected to burst: credit cards. You would never know it by watching … slick VISA card ads.”

“The coupling of home equity debt and credit card debt has gone hand in glove for years. The homeowners at risk can no longer use their homes as ATM machines, thanks to their prior re-financings and equity loans, often used in the past to pay off their credit cards. Indeed, homeowners cashed out $1.2 trillion from their home equity from 2002 to 2007 to pay down credit card debts and to cover other costs of living, according to the public policy research organization Demos.

To compound the problem, fewer people are paying their credit card bills on time. And, to flip the old paradigm, more are using high-interest credit card cash to pay at least part of their mortgages instead of the other way around.”

Credit cards generally are used to gain quick, short-lived relief from poverty, and/or to bring in a spurt of consumer ‘goods’ –
but often without nearly enough concern about future consequences (which may entail escalating poverty because of mounting consumer debts). The future thus often is sacrificed for immediate consumption — sometimes out of desperation, when poverty is a factor.

[Read more →]





|   Comments (2)Categories: Ecology · Liberal individualism · Political economy: Capitalism






September 28th, 2008

Oil consumption is a problem


“I beg to disagree with any candidate who would say we can’t drill our way out of our problem.”

Sarah Palin (quoted in this article)
on the future of the United States

On oil consumption and dependencies in the United States (in particular) -

by Andy Wahl





|   Comments (1)Categories: Ecology: Energy and carbon