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“Many people may love a car-free lifestyle, but for most people it would be pure misery. The handicapped, the elderly, parents carrying kids and groceries, suburban residents getting to work, rural residents running their lives – all depend on cars,” said Sam Kazman, General Counsel at the Competitive Enterprise Institute. “The car-free lifestyle itself requires other motorized vehicles, which deliver everything from organic flour to the ingredients for lattes.”
People can freely choose not to use cars, of course, but those contemplating a Car-Free Day should acknowledge its implications. For a realistic day of car-free living, try it:
To enter, film your own video and post it as a response to CEI’s announcement on YouTube. The deadline for entries is October 1st. For more on CEI’s work on automobility, see “Cars, Women, and Minorities: The Democratization of Mobility in America,” by Alan Pisarski and “Car-Free Days? No, Thank You,” by Waldemar Hanasz. Or go to www.cei.org/issue/74.
CEI is a non-profit, non-partisan public policy group dedicated to the principles of free enterprise and limited government. For more information about CEI, please visit our website at www.cei.org.