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Autocracy - An Invisible Dictatorship
In
the name of free enterprise, freeways, and the freedom to buy,
city air has been made unbreathable, the car is not the only
guilty party, but it is the one that attacks city dwellers most
directly.
BY
EDUARDO GALEANO
Kidnapping
of the ends by the means: the supermarket buys you, the television
watches you, he automobile drives you. The giants that make cars
and gasoline businesses nearly as juicy as arms and drugs have
convinced us that the motor is the only possible prolongation
of the human body. Under the dictatorship of the automobile,
the vast majority of people in our cities have no alternative
but to pay to travel, like sardines in a can, on crumbling and
scarce public transport. Latin America's streets never have room
for the bicycle, that scorned vehicle, symbol of backwardness
when it's not used for recreation or sports. Consumer society
that eighth wonder of the world, Beethoven's tenth imposes its
own symbolism of power and its own mythology of social advancement.
"Your car is your best friend,"
the commercial proclaims. Vertigo on wheels will make you happy:
"Live your passion!" offers another ad. Advertising
invites you to become part of the ruling class with the magic
little key: "Get it your way!" orders the voice that
gives the orders of the market, and "Show off your personality!"
And if you put a tiger in your tank, according to the billboards
I recall from my childhood, you'll go faster and be more powerful
than everybody, and you'll crush whoever gets in your way on
the road to success. Language creates the illusory reality that
advertising needs in order to sell. But in the real reality,
the instruments created to increase the domain of liberty end
up helping to hold us in jail. The car, machine for saving time,
eats up human time. Born to serve us, it puts us at its service.
It obliges us to work more and more hours in order to feed it.
It robs our space and poisons our air.
In the name of free enterprise, freeways and the
freedom to buy, city air has been made unbreathable. The car
is not the only guilty party in the daily crime of violating
the world's air, but it is the one that attacks city dwellers
most directly. The ferocious volleys of lead that get into your
blood and attack your nerves, liver and bones, are devastating,
above all in the southern realms of the world where neither catalytic
converters nor unleaded gasoline are obligatory. But in cities
throughout the planet, cars give off most of the gases which
poison the air, infect the bronchial tubes and eyes, and are
suspected of causing cancer. According to environmentalists,
every child born in Santiago de Chile breathes the equivalent
of seven cigarettes daily, and one out of every four children
suffers from some form of bronchitis. A Brazilian friend flies
to the city of Sao Paulo. On the plane, he meets a tourist from
Singapore. Singapore is, as we all know, one of the "Asian
tigers" that the international technocracy sells us as miracles
born of the freedom of money and the absence of the state.
My friend is left with his mouth
agape: the tourist is a public schoolteacher in Singapore and
she earns 15 times as much as a Brazilian teacher, because in
Singapore the state does not neglect education. In the airport,
another surprise hits when they climb into a taxi for the city
center: the cost of an equivalent trip in Singapore is 15 times
less because: in Singapore the state gives hefty subsidies to
public transport. When they reach downtown, the streets of Sao
Paulo are choked with traffic, and the air is a gray curtain.
Amidst the clamor, enemy of ear and soul, my friend manages to
hear a third surprise: in Singapore, the state limits the circulation
of private cars with high taxes and tariffs.
What is ecology? A taxi I painted green? In Mexico
City, taxis painted green arc I called "ecological taxis"
and I the few sickly-colored trees I that survive the stampede
of I cars are called "ecological I parks." In an official
publication I from the end of last year, I Mexico City authorities
offered a few pieces of "ecological advice" that seem
to have been inspired by the darkest prophets of the apocalypse.
The Metropolitan Commission for the Prevention and Control of
Environmental- Pollution recommends, and I quote, that on very
polluted days (and nearly all are) the residents of this city
"should go out of doors as little as possible, keep doors,
windows and vents closed, and not exercise between 10 a.m. and
4 p.m."
Those who know
about ancient Greece say the city was born as a meeting place
for people. Is there any room for people in these immense garages?
A little before the "ecological advice" was published,
I went for a stroll on the streets of Mexico City. I walked for
four hours amid groaning motors. I survived. My friends gave
me an effusive welcome, then they gave me the name of a good
psychiatrist.
The automobile
kills a multitude every year all over the world. In many countries,
the statistics are questionable or non-existent or out-of-date.
The most recent world-wide estimate available (from the Washington-based
WorldWatch Institute) indicates that no fewer than 250,000 people
died in traffic accidents in 1985. Not even the Vietnam War killed
as many people in a single year. In Germany, to give an example
from a country of well-kept statistics, in 1992 there were five
times as many deaths from cars as from drugs. In just that year,
the car killed twice as many Germans as has AIDS' in the ten
years since it appeared. Throughout the world, transport is the
primary cause of death among young people more than disease,
drugs or crime. A massive international publicity campaign warns
young people every day about the risks of sex in the time of
AIDS. Why isn't there a similar campaign about the dangers of
the automobile? Is a driver's license equivalent to a license
to carry a gun?
To travel
by bicycle on the streets of any large Latin American city, which
have no bike lanes, is a most practical way of committing suicide.
In the countries of the South of the planet, where laws exist
to be broken, there are many fewer cars than in the North, but
the cars kill many more. Why must Latin Americans who do not
have their own car the immense majority of whom cannot and will
never be able to buy one remain condemned to stand watch on comers,
with no alternative but to wait for the occasional bus? Why must
they remain obliged to buy tickets that eat up a healthy part
of their feeble wages,, without any alternative? Why don't they
open protected lanes for bicycles on the main avenues and thoroughfares
before it is too late?
Perhaps
some Latin American cities, the most Babylonian, have already
passed the point of no return on the road to their own ruin.
But in others it would be perfectly feasible to create an auto-free
zone. Cars don't vote, but politicians are terrified of causing
them the slightest displeasure. No Latin American government
civilian or military, right, center or left has dared to challenge
motorized power. It is true that recently Cuba has become filled
with bicycles. But that didn't happen during the 30-odd years
of revolution when Cuba could have chosen that cheaper vehicle
which does not dirty the air and which requires no more fuel
than human muscle. No. Bicycles appeared massively in Cuba when
there was no other choice, because not a drop of oil was left:
not as an embraceable joy, but as an inevitable calamity.
Not even revolutions, which no
one could deny sought change, proposed even the most elementary
steps to diminish their dependence on the omnipotent corporations
that dominate the world's trade in automobiles and oil. We Latin
Americans have swallowed the pill that the hell of Los Angeles
is the only possible model of modernization: a vertiginous superhighway
that scorns public transport, practices" velocity as a form
of violence, and drives people out. We've been taught to drink
poison, and we'll pay any price as long as it comes in a shiny
bottle. There is no colonialism worse than one that conquers
our heart and snuffs out our reason. |
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