Monday, May 19, 2008 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 15 Eco-overdrive A new shade of blue J decided last week that for the first time in my life, I was ready to give in to peer pressure. Considering the degree to which I harp on my family and friends to turn the lights off and unplug I appliances, I KATE harbor a pretty TRUESDELL incriminating skeleton in my closet - I drive an SUV. To be fair, it's a small one. But my fine ride of a beige 1999 GMC Jimmy is enough to qualify me for hypocrite status. For years, I've. endured unending heckling on this point, the disparity between my words and my actions a glar- ing point of contradiction. To ease my mind, I rationalized that I was way too broke to afford making a switch. But with a bit of gradua- tion money tucked away- not to mention, in the face of $4-a-gal- lon gas at 16 miles per gallon - I finally decided my friends were right. It was time to put my money where my mouth was. So I turned to my trusted friend Google, the omnipotent source of information in my life, sure that after a few hours searching I would be ready to sign a check and drive off into the sunset, guilt free. But instead of winding up with a new car, what I wound up with was a headache. My first goal was high fuel economy, so I set my sights on hybrid technology. Now, I con- sider myself a simple Midwest girl - I don't need a lot of bells and whistles or even power win- dows for that matter. So I figured I would find a nice used Prius, perhaps a little well-worn but still functional, no problem. Wrong. A used 2001 Toyota Prius will cost you somewhere in the ball- park of $10,000-$11,000. For a car only two years newer than the one I have, that meant I would pay three times as much as I paid ini- tially for my current vehicle. I was- disheartened to say the least. Frazzled, I typed furiously, searching the dark corners of cyberspace, desperate for a bet- ter deal. But the more information I came across, the less sure I was of what I was looking for. Hybrids are nice, but maybe cost-pro- hibitive. And getting kick-ass gas mileage is good, but what about alternative fuel? If oil is really the source of our sins overseas, maybe my money says more if I forget gas altogether. Sure, ethanol is a crock, but what about biodiesel? Turns out that's tricky too. At first glance it seems great, and people are certainly jumping on the bandwagon quickly. Accord- ing to the National Biodiesel Board, sales per gallon for the fuel increased 500-fold between 1999 and 2006. But there's more to it: Making a car biodiesel-ready involves complicated technical conversions way beyond my abili- ties, considering I view being able to read my tire pressure a shining achievement. Plus, biodiesel is typically more expensive than regular diesel - or is it? Considering the average cost of regular already sits well above the wallet-squeezing $4 mark, that'. But allowing for tax credits, it might end up a wash, as long as you are willing to carry around a calculator to figure out what the hell you are actually paying. How reducing footprints causes headaches. And, of course, there's the problem of needing to have a reli- able source of specialized fuel, not easy considering I have no idea where I'll end up come fall. If I were stuck somewhere I couldn't get what I needed, I'd be stuck with a diesel engine, forced to buy the regular stuff, making my carbon footprint decidedly on par with Sasquatch. By the end of my afternoon spent searching, instead of feel- ing satisfied and eco-savvy, I felt hurt, confused and ready for some serious antihypertensives. As I find is often the case, in trying to make conscientious life choices even the best of intentions didn't get me to where I wanted to go. Kate Truesdell is the summer editorial page editor. She can be reached at ketrue@umich.edu. Rl BLOGS Read more up-to-date opinion at michigandaily.com/ thepodium Travis Childers is not Ann Arbor's idea of a Demo- crat. Although his party s associated with the liberal left, the future Mississippi representa- tive is socially conservative. For instance, Childers is HARUN both pro-life BULJINA and a staunch advocate of gun rights. If he wanted to run for Congress around Washtenaw County, it's doubtful he'd even make it to the ballot. But Travis Childers is not running anywhere near here. Instead, he just won a special election in Mississippi's lst Congressional District - one of the most conservative, and Republican dominated corners of the country. By any account, the Republi- cans should have had an easy time with this district. Rural and con- servative, it's a region that, in the last presidential election, voted by a 25-point margin to reelect Presi- dent Bush. Statistically, it's about as safely Republican as Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti's district is Demo- crat. As if that all wasn't enough, Childers's opponent Greg Davis was a perfectly decent GOP can- didate, free from any of the usual sex scandals or racial slurs caught on videotape. So what gives? Leading Repub- licans were quick to rationalize the defeat, claiming that Childers won by relying on traditional Republicanissues. Inthisview, the Republicans could accept defeat without conceding problems with their platform. The party had sim- ply been outfoxed by a Democrat in Republican clothing - one that, as Republican representative Tom Cole explained, was not "in step with ... the Democratic majority." In fact, it is Cole and the Republi- can Party who are not in step with a changing political reality. Travis Childers represents a newbreed of Democrat- one that can challenge the GOP in even the most conservative regions of the country. Although his views on certain social issues like abor- tion and gun control break from Democratic tradition, they were hardly the focal point of his cam- paign Instead, Childers offered Mississippi voters a platform centered on economic populism and ending the unpopular war in Iraq. In short, he won because he addressed topics of immediate concern to the daily lives of Mis- sissippi voters. Davis and the Republicans, on the other hand, lost because they didn't. Rather than distanc- ing themselves from President Bush's foreign policy or offering concrete solutions to the region's economic malaise, they resorted to their traditional name-call- ing. In a desperate attempt to mar Childers's image, everyone from Dick Cheney to Mike Huckabee was flown into the district to chastise him. He was a liberal, they claimed, running to be Nancy Pelosi's pawn and somehow tied to Barack Obama and his scary black preacher. None of it worked. When the dusthad settled, Childers had won the district by a hefty 7 percent.. Childers's social conserva- tism didn't carry him to victory; it merely neutralized the typical Republican route of attack. With- out abortion and gun control,what was left for conservative critics to latch onto? They certainly tried to find alternative targets, but lacked any cohesive strategy against this new breed of Democrat. Childers'svictoryis a testament to just how frustrated voters are with the Bush administration and a Republican party that refuses to jump ship from its agenda. Even in the reddest parts of the nation, voters are fed up enough to see past the mud-slinging. Dems change politcial map with new breed. The aftershock of Childers's victory will be felt far outside of northern Mississippi. He offers a new sort of blueprint, one that Democrats can now follow in near- ly any part of the country. In fact, the last two years have already seen this happen elsewhere: Socially conservative Democrats have now been elected governors and senators everywhere from Montana to Louisiana. United around such issues as the war in Iraq, health care and Social Security, Democrats are strong, organized and offering vot- ers comprehensive change. If they play their cards right, the party may not only be headed for short- term electoral victory, but to a major realignment of our country's political landscape as well. Harun Buljina is the summer associate editorial page editor. He can be reached at buljinah@umich.edu. JASON MAHAKIAN E-MAIL MAHAKIAN AT MAHAKIANJ@UMICH.EDU. 'nWi& the 2ic f-h ji liUke r~ C S c rit -V Sfr iSe ri_ whaut's n ext . ?E I - { K~15 ;,' Zi~' ~... t4P Write for Daily- Opinion. E-mail Kate Truesdell at ketrue@umich.edu