casebro
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2005
- Messages
- 19,788
You have 8,000 pound SUVs?
Ford's discontinued Excursion. Used primarily by soccer moms to take the kiddies 2 urban miles to school.
You have 8,000 pound SUVs?
Evidence?The hypocricy is Greenpeace giving big advertisers a hard time for manipulating consumers
How is it misguided to promote fuel efficiency? (add: it is misguided though to promote some of the behaviors shown in the ad, in case that's what you mean)Misguided
No facts were presented.Gecko said:factually dubious
No argument. Amusing though.Gecko said:maybe just plain stupid
Greenpeace have campaigned to ban chlorine, the 11th most abundant element in the earths crust. They ceased to be a scientifically based environmental organisation sometime in the 1980s. This advert doesn't suprise me in the slightest.
Chlorine is the common link in many of the world's most
notorious environmental poisons: dioxin, DDT, Agent Orange,
PCBs, and the ozone-destroying chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) are all
based on chlorine. These and other chlorine-containing
substances dominate government lists of "priority pollutants"
that threaten health and the environment. But thousands of other
chlorinated poisons that cause similar harm are not regulated or
even monitored.
The global threat posed by the toxic "chlorine soup" now
present in the ecosystem is too complex to be solved by
addressing these chemicals one at a time. If we wish to preserve
the life-sustaining capacity of the planet, the root of the
problem -- the production and use of chlorine -- must be phased
out.
I believe that's the British term for what we call a sedan.Why would you put an engine in your salon? I guess it might make a nice conversation starter, but it's a pretty odd place for it.
They want to ban all chlorine chemistry. Their first target was PVC, but they want to ban the manufacture of chlorine containing compounds.
Horses mouth
Evidence?
Greenpeace UK has just released a new video ad about SUVs in urban areas. "Using the language, style and production values of traditional car adverts, the film challenges the image portrayed by the advertising industry of 4x4 drivers escaping their urban environment for the freedom of the open road. Greenpeace took advice from advertising industry insiders before producing the film." Some might find the video a bit over the top, but considering that the auto industry spends more on marketing (especially for SUVs) than almost all other industries combined and that their adverts are often just as over the top in the opposite direction, we think it's only fair.
The film urges car buyers to think about the consequences of their choices and not be suckered by car industry advertising.
From that link:...
This is demonstrably a lie.many of the SUVs on Britain’s roads:
- Consume around 300% more fuel than an efficient family car
Damn, I was beginning to be sold by all the advertising for hybrid vehicles. That settles it, no way am I going to be suckered by car industry advertising. They just want me to buy their hybrids so I can't haul anything home back from The Home Depot and have to pay for some huge-ass truck to bring that lumber to my door. Yeah, that'll save the planet!Another quote from the press release:
The film urges car buyers to think about the consequences of their choices and not be suckered by car industry advertising.
From that link:...
This is demonstrably a lie.
Question: If an efficient family car takes ten gallons of fuel to go 250 miles, how much fuel does an SUV that consumes 300% more need to travel the same distance?
Answer: Forty gallons.
Question: How many miles per gallon does that translate to?
Answer: 250/40 = 6.25.
Question: Anyone know an SUV that gets only 6.25 miles per gallon?
Answer:
From that link:...
This is demonstrably a lie.
Question: If an efficient family car takes ten gallons of fuel to go 250 miles, how much fuel does an SUV that consumes 300% more need to travel the same distance?
Answer: Forty gallons.
Question: How many miles per gallon does that translate to?
Answer: 250/40 = 6.25.
Question: Anyone know an SUV that gets only 6.25 miles per gallon?
Answer:
It details how vehicles designed for offroad terrain consume 300% more fuel, emit 300% more pollution and, in an accident, are three times more likely to kill a pedestrian than an ordinary passenger car.