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In 1975, annual traffic fatalities dropped by 9100 when the
nation was saddled with a national speed limit of 55 mph. 9100 deaths prevented – in one
year! Let’s put this in
context. 9100 is more than twice
the number killed by earthquakes and tsunamis in all recorded U.S history. (http://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/states/us_deaths.php)
Undoubtedly, millions of gallons of gas were saved (I’m
tracking down the actual estimate, but trust me – it’s big). But as soon as it could, America
shrugged off this onerous restriction in favor of the old higher speed
limits.
Why?
In the face of such common sense benefits, why would states
and localities return to more dangerous and expensive practices? They are always reaching into our
personal lives to regulate everything they can, so why would they be so eager
to give us back our right to rush breakneck around the highways, wasting gas
and killing each other with our cars?
There is a time-honored adage in America that pertains to
solving such riddles:
Follow The Money.
Who profits from America’s love affair with highway
speed? The lion’s share of the
money we waste driving 70-75 on our freeways goes straight to Exxon-Mobil,
ARCO, Unocal, Conoco-Philips, and the rest of America’s huge oil/gasoline
industry.
How much money?
Some very
conservative math (see my posting titled “Some Simple Math, Part 2”) suggests
that if only 1% of American drivers agreed to DRIVE THE LIMITS for one year,
we’d save about 140,000,000 gallons of gas. At a gas price of $2.80 per gallon, that’s
$392,000,000. At $3, it’s
$420,000,000. A savings of
half-a-billion dollars is not at all out of reach. With higher participation and higher gas prices, we could
easily save a multiple of that.
Maybe a BIG multiple.
So consider how much profit Big Oil lost when an entire
nation was forced to drive 55.
Tens of billions of dollars, easy.
Maybe hundreds.
Does this begin to explain why old speed limits were
restored, when the benefits of the newer, slower ones were obvious to any
thinking person?
Change Your Driving Habits. Change The World.
Thanks,
Rick Okie
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