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So True (No LCB)

To: "Spridget Mail List" <spridgets@autox.team.net>
Subject: So True (No LCB)
From: "David Riker" <davidr@sunset.net>
Date: Wed, 1 Sep 1999 23:45:50 -0700
Reply-to: "David Riker" <davidr@sunset.net>
Sender: owner-spridgets@autox.team.net
>If there's one thing this nation needs, it's bigger cars.  That's why
 I'm excited that Ford is coming out with a new mound o' metal that
 will offer consumers even more total road-squatting mass than
 the current leader in the humongous-car category,
 the popular Chevrolet Suburban Subdivision-
 >the first passenger automobile designed to be,
 right off the assembly line, visible from the Moon.

 >I don't know what the new Ford will be called.
 Probably something like the "Ford Untamed Wilderness Adventure."  In
 the TV commercials, it will be shown splashing through rivers,
 charging up rocky mountainsides, swinging
 on vines, diving off cliffs, racing through the
 surf and fighting giant sharks hundreds of feet
 >beneath the ocean surface-all the daredevil
 things that cars do in Sport Utility Vehicle
 Commercial World, where nobody ever drives
 on an actual road.  In fact, the interstate highways in Sport Utility
 Vehicle Commercial World, having been abandoned by humans,
 are teeming with deer, squirrels, birds and other
 wildlife species that have fled from the forest
 to avoid being run over by nature-seekers in multi-ton vehicles
 barreling through the underbrush at 50 miles per hour.
 In the real world, of course, nobody drives Sport
 Utility Vehicles in the forest, because when you
 have paid upwards of $40,000 for a transportation
 investment, the last thing you want is squirrels
 pooping on it.  No, if you want a practical
 "off-road" vehicle, you get yourself a 1973
 American Motors Gremlin, which combines the advantage of
 not being worth worrying about with the advantage of being so ugly
 that poisonous snakes flee from it in terror.
 In the real world, what people mainly do with their Sport Utility
 Vehicles, as far as I can tell, is try to maneuver them into and out
 of parking spaces.  I base this statement on my local
 supermarket, where many of the upscale patrons drive Chevrolet
 Subdivisions.  I've noticed that these people often purchase
 just a couple of items-maybe a bottle of diet water and a two-ounce
 package of low-fat dried carrot shreds-which they put into the back
 of their Subdivisions, which have approximately
 the same cargo capacity, in cubic feet, as Finland. This means there
 is plenty of room left over back there in case, on the way home, if
 these people decide to pick up something
 else, such as a herd of bison.
 Then comes the scary part: getting the Subdivision out of the parking
 space. This is a challenge, because the driver apparently cannot,
 while sitting in the driver's seat, see all the way to either end of
 the vehicle. I drive a compact car, and on a number of
 occasions I have found myself trapped behind
 a Subdivision backing directly toward me, its
 massive metal butt looming high over my head,
 making me feel like a Tokyo pedestrian looking
 up at Godzilla.  I've tried honking my horn, but the Subdivision
 drivers can't hear me, because they're always
 talking on cellular phones the size of Chiclets
 ("The Bigger Your Car, The Smaller Your Phone,"
 that is their motto). I don't know who they're talking to.  Maybe
 they're negotiating with their bison suppliers.  Or maybe
 they're trying to contact somebody in the same
 area code as the rear ends of their cars, so they
 can find out what's going on back there.
 All I know is, I'm thinking of carrying marine flares, so I can fire
 them into the air as a warning to Subdivision drivers that they're
 about to run me over.
 Although frankly I'm not sure they'd care if they did. A big reason
 why they bought a Sport Utility Vehicle is "safety," in the sense of,
 "you, personally, will be safe, although every now
 and then  you may have to clean the remains
 of other motorists out of your wheel wells."
        >
 Anyway, now we have the new Ford, which will be even larger than the
 Subdivision, which I imagine means it will have separate decks for  the
 various classes of passengers, and possibly,
 way up in front by the hood ornament, Leonardo DiCaprio showing Kate
 Winslet how to fly. I can't wait until one of these
 babies wheels into my supermarket parking lot.
        >
 Other motorists and pedestrians will try to flee in terror, but
 they'll be sucked in by the Ford's powerful gravitational field and
 become
 stuck to its massive sides like so many refrigerator
 magnets.  They won't be noticed, however, by the
 Ford's driver, who will be busy whacking at the side
 of his or her head, trying to dislodge his or her new
 cell phone, which is the size of a single grain
 of rice and has fallen deepinto his or her ear canal.
        >
 And it will not stop there. This is America, darn it, and Chevrolet
 is not about to just sit by and watch Ford walk away with the coveted
 title of Least Sane Motor Vehicle. No, cars will keep
 getting bigger: I see a time, not too far from now,
 when upscale suburbanites will haul their overdue movies back to the
 video-rental store in full-size, 18-wheel tractor-trailers with
 names like The Vagabond. It will be a proud
 time for all Americans, a time for us to cheer
 for our country. We should cheer loud, because
 we'll be hard to hear, inside the wheel wells.




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