Hot, Flat, and Crowded — Mission Statements

Greetings for another installment of this blog book club experiment. I want to take a step back and explain why we decided to read Thomas Friedman‘s book Hot, Flat, And Crowded in the first place and what it’s even really about.

I think in many ways, this past election cycle has invigorated people’s interests in politics and global issues and we are at a crossroads: its a ‘now or never’ time to figure out solutions and innovate to many of the worlds growing problems… or at very least set ourselves on the path towards that goal. What Friedman’s writing does so well is illuminate this information, but explain in a way that allows non-experts to understand.

So what the frak is Friedman referring to in his book? What is his mission statement? Here is a recent appearance the Daily Show that really distills it down:

“The core argument is very simple: America has a problem and the world has a problem. America’s problem is that it has lost its way in recent years — partly because of 9/11 and partly because of the bad habits we have let build up over the last three decades, bad habits that have weakened our society’s ability and willingness to take on big challenges.

“The world also has a problem: It is getting hot, flat and crowded. That is, global warming, the stunning rise of middle classes all over the world, and rapid population growth have converged in a way that could make our planet dangerously unstable. In particular, the convergence of hot and flat and crowded is tightening energy supplies, intensifying the extinction of plants and animals, deepening energy poverty, strengthening petrodictatorship, and accelerating climate change. How we address these interwoven global trends will determine a lot about the quality of life on earth in the twenty-first century.” (Friedman, p.5)

This pretty much lays out the concept of the book, but I find a few things interesting even within these two paragraphs, (and we can and will certainly explore these more as the book goes on):

America has lost its way since 9/11 — I find it fascinating now 7+ years after this event, that we are perhaps finally realizing we have been in shock as a country (though might not want to totally admit it yet), and it has actually disrupted our way of life. So in many ways you could say the terrorists have gotten what they wanted.

However, I wonder if because of all this, it could be the single defining event to jar us from complacency and actually strengthen us in the long run. No one seemed particularly invested in developing new renewable energy or beginning any sort of environmental movement until it became both an economic factor (we can’t afford not to develop to create new jobs, new technologies etc) and a national security factor (we can’t afford to depend on unstable countries to power us and the rest of the no longer emerging, but ’emerged’ world). Maybe one positive in those attacks was the eventual altering of our ‘bad habits.’ Would be sort of ironic.

One other quote seemed particularly relevant considering all the recent talk about the ‘Big Three’ automakers asking for bail out money:

“But what the Detroit executives never tell you is that one big reason the public wanted SUVs and Hummers all those years was that Detroit and the oil industry consistently lobbied Congress against raising gasoline taxes, which would have shaped public demand for something different. European governments imposed very high gasoline taxes and taxes on engine size — and kept imposing them — and guess what? Europeans demanded smaller and smaller cars. America wouldn’t impose more stringent gasoline and engine taxes, so Americans consumers kept wanting bigger and bigger cars. Big Oil and Big Auto used their leverage in Washington to shape the market so people would ask for those cars that consumed the most oil and earned their companies the most profits — and our Congress never got in the way. It was bought off.” (Friedman, p.17)

As Friedman and many other have said many times since, the Big Three domestic automakers, GM, Ford and Chrysler, have played a part into getting us to where we are now by creating products that are wasteful and expensive to own and maintain, not to mention closing factories in the United States and moving elsewhere for cheaper labor.

I find it interesting that now they are asking the public to loan them billions to stay afloat, as well as the billions they are asking for developing a new fleet of ‘greener’ vehicles and create new jobs.

Here is a recent appearance of Friedman on NBC’s Meet the Press regarding an ‘car czar’ and the evolving economic crisis (Friedman starts at about 4:40):

Anyway, I’ve written enough for one night. Curious what you all think.

2 thoughts on “Hot, Flat, and Crowded — Mission Statements”

  1. I totally agree with Friedman on the auto bailout and am anxious to see how the auto CEOs re-present themselves later this week after their drive to Washington in hybrid cars. To me, it just seems ludicrous to give the auto companies money with no long term plan for viability in an economy that needs to move away from fossil fuels. I’m always amazed at how quickly we converted car factories to bomber factories during WWII… I mean in a period of a couple years we were ramped up into production. Incredible!!

    Conservatives like to say that it was WWII that ended the depression… well, OK,if that’s indeed true it’s largely because it involved massive gov’t spending towards the war effort. So, Great! Let’s declare war on global warming. Let’s retool in two years and require the auto industry and start building electric cars. Let’s have a manhattan project to build a national electric grid. Let’s focus on creating international relationships and get serious about creating a non-fossil fuel based world economy.

  2. I completely agree with you here. It wasn’t the war itself, but the amount of money and jobs created for the war effort domestically (creating fleets of planes, tanks, ammunition, sexy Rosie the Riveter posters)…critics of FDR say his public works programs didn’t work, but isnt a war effort the ULTIMATE public works project? If we took that same amount of ingenuity, hard work, and creativity to collectively put ourselves on path towards new energies, it would most certainly create new jobs in the process. (Plus all those other natl security and economic and ecological benefits as well).

    The automakers ignorance on the issue seems archaic and foolish, especially when they begin to start asking for money without a plan. The public would buy into the hybrid and electric car market as soon as the automakers start taking it seriously.

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