Dusty Ayres
Commodore
Seeing as this forum is about the future, I decided to post this story about the Canadian International AutoShow and what people think about the role of the car in it:
http://www.eyeweekly.com/city/features/article/18711
So many jobs around here, directly and indirectly, depend on the car industry that if you live in Southern Ontario, taking a trip to the Canadian International AutoShow can be like going to a giant indoor company picnic. This was even more true where I grew up. Down in Windsor in the ’80s and ’90s, the yearly trip to the Detroit Autoshow was a very big deal. Many of our parents worked at one of the Big Three, our straight teeth — known as the “Buzz Hargrove Smile” — were the result of generous benefit packages, and deep employee discounts meant the cars viewed at the show would likely end up in our driveways.
The irresistible lure of $20- to $30-an-hour jobs at the factories kept many Windsor kids out of university and got them into home-ownership before age 25. The AutoShow was the shiny Oscar-like event that represented it all.
Moving to Toronto meant giving up a lifestyle where I drove at least 50km every day, zigzagging around the city in a car that I nearly lived in. Now I edit a magazine (Spacing) devoted to all things antithetical to car culture; I make part of my living writing about pedestrian activities; I will, sometimes, ride a bike across the city in rain or snow. Though the shift was welcome and liberating, the change is radical.
The Toronto show opened last Friday (it runs until Feb. 24), just days after General Motors announced a record-breaking US$38.7 billion in losses this past year. This announcement, coupled with the car increasingly being vilified by urban planners, peak oil crusaders and environmentalists (all of whom suggest at various degrees of amplification that the end is nigh for the automobile) had me wondering if the AutoShow still beats the drum of oblivious and happy progress that it did the last time I attended a show, sometime during the late-Mulroney era.
http://www.eyeweekly.com/city/features/article/18711