On boycotts and lower gas prices

I received a forwarded e-mail exhorting Filipinos to boycott Shell and Caltex in order to force the two companies to lower their gas prices, and thus affect gas prices everywhere.

Something about that approach strikes me as wrong.

First, it ignores the law of supply and demand. If all the faithful boycotters get their gas from independent gasoline stations (of which there aren't that many, especially along the highways), what's to prevent those gas stations from raising _their_ prices?

Second, it feels like a solution from the wrong side of consumerism. Let me quote a segment from the e-mail:

With the price of gasoline going up more each day, we consumers need to take action. The only way we are going to see the price of gas come down is if we hit someone in the pocketbook by not purchasing their gas!

And we can do that WITHOUT hurting ourselves. How?

Since we all rely on our cars, we can't just stop buying gas. But we CAN have an impact on gas prices if we all act together to force a price war.

There are two ways to reduce your gas expenses. Hold your breath and wait for the company to lower its prices, or look for ways to use less gas. Which do you think would be better for you in the long run?

Many people don't like being responsible consumers because it HURTS. It requires sacrifices. It requires change. They'd rather complain about rising gas prices and traffic and a lot of other things than take action to help solve the problems themselves.

What's missing from that forwarded e-mail?

RESPONSIBILITY.

By boycotting Caltex and Shell, all these consumers would be doing is passing the responsibility off to the gasoline companies to lower the prices. Gas companies charge too high, they say. It's the gas companies' fault.

But we are responsible for this crisis. We with our SUV-choked streets and our gimmick addiction, with our overcrowded cities and underdeveloped provinces; WE bear some responsibility for this mess.

We should accept that responsibility. Instead of asking gas companies to give us lower gas prices, we should look for ways to minimize our dependence on gasoline.

Here are a few concrete, common-sense ideas for reducing dependence on gasoline. You know this already. You just have to LIVE it.

- Walk instead of taking the tricycle.

- Bike.

- Carpool.

- Take public transportation instead of your car.

- Take fewer trips. Spend more time in your neighborhood. Spend more

time at home.

You are NOT powerless. You are NOT dependent on your car. You are NOT dependent on the gas companies. You are the lucky few who actually have a choice. The people who are going to get hit hardest by rising gas prices aren't the ones with SUVs. They're the ones who can't afford a peso increase in the cost of food, the jeepney drivers whose margins are devastated by the increase in costs, the low-paid workers whose raises will lag behind any increase in the cost of transportation.

You are NOT just a consumer. You are a CITIZEN. You bear a responsibility not only to yourself but also to the people around you, to the people who are tied to their long commutes and low wages. Help create local opportunities! You bear a responsibility to the children who will live in this world long after you have passed away. Help preserve the environment!

Are you going to be a consumer and just wait for lower gas prices to be given to you, or will you reduce your gas consumption and work on making a difference to your community?

ARGH. And yes, you can forward this to whomever you want.


Note: This rant is about the content of the forwarded e-mail, not the writer. The writer and the people who forwarded this acted in good faith, but it's easy to overlook things in the knee-jerk response of consumerism. One of the things I do is point out uncomfortable truths from time to time. I'm not right all the time and I do miss some things, but I like helping us stay human.

Watched improv comedy

Bill Thanis of the Toronto Linux Users Group invited me to the pay-what-you-can improv comedy show at Bad Dog Theatre. It was fun! The actors were really creative, and the long-form improvised comedy totally rocked.

Synchronicity

Life happens when you open yourself to unexpected things.

Today I talked to James, Greenpeace volunteer in front of Graduate House. I mentioned Greenpeace's initiatives to publicize the staggering volumes of E-waste each year. James told me about http://www.rebootcanada.ca , a non-profit foundation that provides hardware, training and support to charities and people with needs.

I like what they're doing. Pity they're Microsoft-sponsored, though; I don't suppose they'll let me get away with volunteering to teach open source software...

Today I also chatted with Mike Chi. See, I was reading the paper in the 5th floor common area when he asked me if he could read the sections I finished. I couldn't help but overhear and get drawn into a conversation he had with someone who was visiting Grad House. After the conversation, we swapped names and courses. I told him I'm taking my master's in HCI, and he was, like, "No way." Turned out that he's also from HCI, but part of a different lab. We chatted about memory aids and PIM, del.icious and flickr, lots of other cool things...

Anyway, he told me he's taking this awesome course on computer-supportive collaborative work, which sounds exactly like what I should be getting into. It conflicts with the MIE class I'm taking, though. Tough decisions! Really tough decisions! I want to take it up. I need to make sure I'm not past the deadline yet, and I need to run it by Mark tomorrow morning to see what he thinks.

I like this. Meeting totally random strangers is like opening a treasure box...

Not joining the Rotary Club

Frank Adamo suggested joining the Rotary Club or the Rotaract Club, so I filled out the online application form for the Rotary Club of Toronto.

They politely suggested that I check out the Rotaract Club at the University of Toronto because I'm still young and unaccomplished (that is, I haven't yet completed my education and I'm not working full-time). I wrote them asking if I could attend as a guest anyway, and they said they don't allow guests because then there would be no reason to pay membership. They also pointed out that I probably won't be able to afford the rates unless I have a full-time job.

I can't afford their rates, and I'm not going to make joining them one of my financial goals. $175 per quarter + $30 per week is a whole lot of water systems for villages, hot meals for the homeless, books for kids... I'll focus on making the most of Toastmasters (I'd like to participate at higher levels). I'm also looking for a foundation that helps the homeless get back on track. Does anyone have a favorite Toronto-based charity that does that kind of work?

More about lectures

Today's class in Engineering Psychology and Human Performance was a lot more engaging. Prof. Milgram walked us through a typical problem, and there were plenty of opportunities for class interaction.

I talked to Prof. Milgram after the class, thanking him for the exercise. I told him about my difficulties with lectures, and he knows that I'm tring all sorts of tricks to keep myself tuned in. I told him how I need to be writing, doing things, explaining things, trying things out...

Today's new trick: mentally repeating, "I love lectures. I love lectures." Didn't really work. Ah well.