Author Topic: An Homage to Hummer  (Read 3183 times)

Ben

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An Homage to Hummer
« on: April 18, 2010, 10:46:38 AM »
Great article by Penn Jillette. It covers more than cars, but one of my more favorite lines in the article:

Quote
American auto manufacturers are thinking in terms of electric vehicles so the disgusting smoke will come out of coal smokestacks many, many miles away, and not right out of the tailpipe where you can see it, smell it and enjoy it.

Also I think it's a crack-up that he drives a Mini. :)

Link to WSJ Article

An Homage to Hummer
Comedian Penn Jillette laments the passing of the 'big, stupid' vehicle

 
By PENN JILLETTE
[hummer] Bloomberg/Getty Images

Hummers stacked in transit.

There's a feeling one gets when one sits behind the wheel of a really big stupid military-lite American Hummer. You have that feeling of being strong and safe, high on your pleather throne, above the fray, above the danger, not having to listen to anyone or anything, the rumble of a too-big motor giving you a wiggle and jiggle and tickle inside you. You have the power to run over anyone else on the road, if they dare monkey with you and your Hummer. Don't tread on you. Kill one of ours, we'll kill 100 of yours. You're Arnold Schwarzenegger before he was a wimpy whining begging politician in a state where he has to smoke his cigars in a tent. Put the Hummer bumper against a small building, put the lead Terminator foot down on the Hummer pedal, and the Hummer will move that small building. The Hummer is the four-wheel "heavy metal thunder" that Steppenwolf (the band, not the book or the artsy Chicago theater company) sang about. The Hummer is "Born in the U.S.A.," not the ambivalence that Springsteen slid into the lyrics, but the "Born in the U.S.A." we all knew from the straightforward title and the 2 and 4 of the drums. Do you know that feeling?

I don't. I don't know that feeling at all. I got my Massachusetts driver's license the day I was legally able, but only so I could safely drive my mom's little Ford Falcon 100 miles to see Zappa and the Mothers of Invention in Boston. I like Steppenwolf, the band, the book and the artsy Chicago theater company. I liked Springsteen right up until "Born in the U.S.A.," and I drive a little tiny pink Mini Cooper. The Cooper is engineered for 6'6" max, so I have only one extra inch to squeeze in. I didn't even get the stick shift. My little Mini doesn't go way fast, but even in drive-fast-take-chances Nevada I rarely go faster than 55 miles per hour.
Big, Stupid and Proud: Five Cars That Shook the Earth

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AFP/Getty Images

International CXT

WSJ car columnist Dan Neil picks five of the biggest, stupidest cars in American history.

The Mini has a comfortable heated seat and I had some guy in a heavy-metal T-shirt add in a great after-market stereo. I can ride my 20 minutes to work and back contentedly. I can pull into my "Penn & Teller" designated parking space at any sloppy angle I happen to land at, and the Mini fits easily with plenty of space all around. It fits sideways in my big stupid garage. I never have to back up and straighten it out. I never scrape the side mirrors. My Mini gets high enough MPG that I never get dirty looks…for that. My license plate reads "ATHEIST" and when friends drive my car, they report plenty of dirty looks, but I've never seen any of that. I drive oblivious. I don't ever notice the world around me. I'm in a little moving chair with loud music, nut talk or slanted news.

View Full Image
hummer
Getty Images

The Hummer H1 is the consumer model most like the military Humvee.
hummer
hummer

Cars mean nothing to me. I'm not a car guy. I let my motorcycle license lapse as soon as I could afford something more comfortable than my Vespa motor scooter to get me to gigs. I don't need the top down and the wind in my hair. I don't desire fast and furious or low and slow as the tempo. I don't crave rumble. I've never revved my car at a light for an attractive woman or an auto-rival, not even as a joke. I've painted most of my cars bright pink. My heart is so much closer to multilevel-marketed Mary Kay pink than speed-freak Motörhead chrome and black. I don't even know which "O" to put the umlaut over in "Mötorhead." I've seen Mötörhead live a couple times, but I couldn't get the exact pronunciation from Lemmy at that glorious ear-ringing volume.

Now it looks like the Hummer will be no more. General Motors has set a deadline of May 1 for any last-minute bids to save the brand, but it seems unlikely anyone will step up. Meanwhile President Obama has taken over GM and is jacking fuel economy standards up to 35 miles per gallon. The Hummer gets like 10 miles per gallon. The new standards would barely allow a Hummer unicycle. American auto manufacturers are thinking in terms of electric vehicles so the disgusting smoke will come out of coal smokestacks many, many miles away, and not right out of the tailpipe where you can see it, smell it and enjoy it.
What's a He-Man to Drive?
[hummerSide] Porsche

Here are our top five Hummer alternatives , based on analysts' research and the opinions of industry insiders and everyday drivers.

Having a Hummer is stupid. It's stupid to waste that much gas. It's stupid to waste that much money on gas. It's stupid to parade your insecurities on public roads. Hummers are stupid looking. You don't need an attack vehicle for the Krispy Kreme drive through. My wife and I saw Adrien Brody in a Hummer at the Beverly Hills Four Seasons and it made him seem less like an eccentric pianist and more like a…Hummer. When Carrot Top came by my house to do my radio show, he drove up in a Hummer. It fit well with his big muscles. I have a friend who made his father turn around and take his new Hummer right back to the lot. My friends have to be able to take a great deal of embarrassment, but even they have to draw the line somewhere.

Hummers are stupid and wasteful and if they go away because no one wants to buy one, that'll be just a little sad. It's always a little sad to lose some stupid. I love people doing stupid things that I'd never do—different stupid things than all the stupid things I do. It reminds me that although all over the world we humans have so much in common, so much love, and need, and desire, and compassion and loneliness, some of us still want to do things that the rest of us think are bug-nutty. Some of us want to drive a Hummer, some of us want to eat sheep's heart, liver and lungs simmered in an animal's stomach for three hours, some us want to play poker with professionals and some of us want a Broadway musical based on the music of ABBA. I love people doing things I can't understand. It's heartbreaking to me when people stop doing things that I can't see any reason for them to be doing in the first place. I like people watching curling while eating pork rinds.

But if any part of the Hummer going belly-up are those government rules we're putting in on miles per gallon, or us taking over of GM, then I'm not just sad, I'm also angry. Lack of freedom can be measured directly by lack of stupid. Freedom means freedom to be stupid. We never need freedom to do the smart thing. You don't need any freedom to go with majority opinion. There was no freedom required to drive a Prius before the recall. We don't need freedom to recycle, reuse and reduce. We don't need freedom to listen to classic rock, classic classical, classic anything or Terry Gross. We exercise our freedom to its fullest when we are at our stupidest.

There's a lot of bad stupid around. Really bad stupid. But we can't stop the real horror by stopping just-plain-stupid stupid. We're not going to stop overseas wars by stopping people from driving big stupid cars. As long as we think that "nation building" is part of our destiny, no amount of independence from foreign oil is going to stop us from getting into meddling, expensive, immoral foreign wars. As long as we let terrorism fill us with terror, we're not going to get our nonstupid freedoms back. Our government declaring that we need alternative energy sources, and betting our money on who might get a smart idea, is not going to give smart people smart ideas. It's really easy to see stupid all around us, but I don't think we want to be too quick to stop it. We need to protect other people's stupid to save freedom for all of us.

Yeah, Adrien Brody and Carrot Top wasted gallons of gas driving their stupid cars. I can feel smug about my Mini Cooper's sexy 37/28/32 MPG measurements. But I don't think we should be too quick to feel happy about the stupid Hummers going away. We're all making bad choices all the time, and most of mine are way stupider than driving a Hummer. I love my freedom of stupid. I bumped into Adrien one time and had a great talk with him, we got along great. I know Carrot Top well enough to call him "Scott." I know that they're both a lot thinner than me. They're both in a lot better shape. They eat better than me, and they can do a lot more push-ups and sit-ups. They can run farther and faster than me. So, in the near future, with us all being involved in each other's health care, Adrien and Scott might make up for their wasted gas mileage paying for my high-blood-pressure meds. If we're all getting together to stop the stupidity of driving a Hummer, will we have to stop the stupidity of eating Krispy Kreme doughnuts and pie? Freedom is freedom to be stupid.

They came first for the Hummers.

Then they came for the pie.
"I'm a foolish old man that has been drawn into a wild goose chase by a harpy in trousers and a nincompoop."

Bogie

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Re: An Homage to Hummer
« Reply #1 on: April 18, 2010, 11:04:51 AM »
All in all, I'd like a Diesel H1, except that I think I could probably tow more with a regular 1 ton dually pickemup...
 
Most of the folks who make the decisions about automobiles never have to tow things, or haul stuff, and then they assume that they can have that 48" television delivered to their apartment.
 
Let's fill the back of that Mini with aged manure (did that once with my VW van, with a tarp lining...), and then fertilize the garden... Commonly hauled firewood from the back portions of the farm to the houses.
 

 
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Tallpine

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Re: An Homage to Hummer
« Reply #2 on: April 18, 2010, 11:25:10 AM »
Quote
Most of the folks who make the decisions about automobiles never have to tow things, or haul stuff, and then they assume that they can have that 48" television delivered to their apartment.

Don't you just love it when people rag on you about driving a "gas hog" and then in the next breath ask to borrow your 3/4 ton pickup to help them move this weekend?  ;/

Some of us don't ask others for help all the time  ;)
Freedom is a heavy load, a great and strange burden for the spirit to undertake. It is not easy. It is not a gift given, but a choice made, and the choice may be a hard one. The road goes upward toward the light; but the laden traveller may never reach the end of it.  - Ursula Le Guin

kgbsquirrel

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Re: An Homage to Hummer
« Reply #3 on: April 18, 2010, 12:20:36 PM »
H1? Pah, too small.

BridgeRunner

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Re: An Homage to Hummer
« Reply #4 on: April 18, 2010, 02:09:41 PM »
We finally figured out that it's pretty quick and easy to rent a pickup from Home Depot for moving stuff.  It costs $20, or $40 if we're going to Detroit to pick up something big (usually Ikea is involved).  A pickup as a daily driver would cost more than that every week.  But then, I don't rag on anyone for their choice of vehicle. 

Ok, so two weeks ago I had to spend three hours in the backseat of someone's Prius, and I bitched about that one, but I bitch about being stuck in any backseat, anywhere, anytime.

grampster

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Re: An Homage to Hummer
« Reply #5 on: April 18, 2010, 02:51:00 PM »
I want the Hummer pickup.  My neighbor, a forty something, tree hugging, liberal, poop on the end of his nose, left wing, hybrid driving, hiking catalogue clothing wearing, white wine sipping, Colorado touristy, Democrat tax and spend, vegan, academia fantasy living, close, warm, personal friend of mine needs to borrow it to haul his 2 stroke, dirty, smoke belching, gas hog outboard motor driven pontoon boat in and out of seasonal storage.

He broke the rear springs on my petite Nissan 4X4 pkp.
"Never wrestle with a pig.  You get dirty, and besides, the pig likes it."  G.B. Shaw

grampster

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Re: An Homage to Hummer
« Reply #6 on: April 18, 2010, 02:53:23 PM »
"...but I bitch about being stuck in any backseat, anywhere, anytime."

Hah!  But he married you anyway!! =D =D :P
"Never wrestle with a pig.  You get dirty, and besides, the pig likes it."  G.B. Shaw

Ben

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Re: An Homage to Hummer
« Reply #7 on: April 18, 2010, 03:07:55 PM »
I want the Hummer pickup.  My neighbor, a forty something, tree hugging, liberal, poop on the end of his nose, left wing, hybrid driving, hiking catalogue clothing wearing, white wine sipping, Colorado touristy, Democrat tax and spend, vegan, academia fantasy living, close, warm, personal friend of mine needs to borrow it to haul his 2 stroke, dirty, smoke belching, gas hog outboard motor driven pontoon boat in and out of seasonal storage.

He broke the rear springs on my petite Nissan 4X4 pkp.

Al Gore is your neighbor?
"I'm a foolish old man that has been drawn into a wild goose chase by a harpy in trousers and a nincompoop."

wmenorr67

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Re: An Homage to Hummer
« Reply #8 on: April 18, 2010, 06:58:15 PM »
but I bitch about being stuck in any backseat, anywhere, anytime.

Really?
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BridgeRunner

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Re: An Homage to Hummer
« Reply #9 on: April 18, 2010, 07:06:51 PM »
Hah!  But he married you anyway!! =D =D :P

Quote
Really?

He had a pickup at the time.  There was no backseat involved.  But get yer minds out of the gutters!  :laugh:


Tallpine

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Re: An Homage to Hummer
« Reply #10 on: April 18, 2010, 07:22:38 PM »
What I really want is one of those Navstar or Freightliner crew cab custom 5th wheel/gooseneck trailer haulers  :P
Freedom is a heavy load, a great and strange burden for the spirit to undertake. It is not easy. It is not a gift given, but a choice made, and the choice may be a hard one. The road goes upward toward the light; but the laden traveller may never reach the end of it.  - Ursula Le Guin

lupinus

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Re: An Homage to Hummer
« Reply #11 on: April 18, 2010, 08:42:18 PM »
He had a pickup at the time.  There was no backseat involved.  But get yer minds out of the gutters!  :laugh:


Nice thing about pickup trucks, the bed never needs to be made.
That is all. *expletive deleted*ck you all, eat *expletive deleted*it, and die in a fire. I have considered writing here a long parting section dedicated to each poster, but I have decided, at length, against it. *expletive deleted*ck you all and Hail Satan.

wmenorr67

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Re: An Homage to Hummer
« Reply #12 on: April 19, 2010, 04:06:49 PM »
Nice thing about pickup trucks, the bed never needs to be made.

And the seat is usually a bench so no need for a backseat. >:D
« Last Edit: April 19, 2010, 05:54:02 PM by wmenorr67 »
There are five things, above all else, that make life worth living: a good relationship with God, a good woman, good health, good friends, and a good cigar.

Only two defining forces have ever offered to die for you, Jesus Christ and the American Soldier.  One died for your soul, the other for your freedom.

Bacon is the candy bar of meats!

Only the dead have seen the end of war!

Bogie

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Re: An Homage to Hummer
« Reply #13 on: April 19, 2010, 05:13:37 PM »
What I want...
 
A Volvo with an automatic tranny.
 
Bob the back axle to lose the requirement for a CDL, and you can tow darn near anything.
 
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