Duncan Campbell (the Grauniad journo, not the Ricin Plot investigator) comes up with a fabulous idea today.
In Poland in the 60s,
according to a Polish woman who emailed me, "the authorities introduced
the Hitchhiker’s Booklet. Every hitchhiker who had it could write down
how many kilometres they covered. The booklet contained coupons for
drivers, so each time a driver picked up somebody, he or she received a
coupon. At the end of the season, drivers who had picked up the most
hikers were rewarded with various prizes. Everybody was hitchhiking
then."
Surely
here is an idea for any political party desperate for a bit of blue-sky
thinking. Such an initiative would seem to fulfil many of the
government’s current aims: it would increase respect by breaking down
barriers between strangers, it would help fight global warming by
cutting down on fuel consumption as hitchhikers would be using existing
fuels and not flying, and it would improve educational standards by
delivering instant lessons in geography, orienteering, history,
politics and sociology. What is New Labour waiting for?
From memory there are a number of places trying out variations of the American ride share schemes but this is inspired, goes well beyond any of them.
I would quibble a little over one point, that it should be a political party that proposes or the State that should fund such things. By using a prize system one would get vastly more activity per pound spent than one would with direct payment (people consistently over estimate the liklihood of winning something) and you could almost certainly get many of the prizes donated by chivvying companies into donating them for the reflected glory. But this is such a good idea that we shouldn’t wait for the State to lumber into action, rather, we should be looking to a private sector actor. Someone known to be worried about, involved in, actions to counter climate change. Someone with deep pockets (I reckon, indeed would be happy to come and set it up at such a budget, something like 500,000 a year would do it), someone with a brand that is already associated with such initiatives. Someone who in 2003 received 163 million euros in donations to save the planet perhaps?
Hellooo! Greenpeace? Care to actually do something useful?
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