This book demands each of us look in the mirror and get real before we
get behind the wheel.
When fragile human bodies have to occupy the same spaces as big, heavy,
complex machines that can travel at high speeds, the outcome is
inevitable. Some people will die. So why do we identify with the driver
in the car rather than the person they have killed? Would you still
shrug and chalk it up to random bad luck if that dead person was someone
you loved?
Using the comic book format, this book vehemently dispels the notion
that traffic accidents are inevitable and/or acceptable on any level,
insisting that drivers own their responsibility, and consider the
consequences of careless and dangerous behavior. It is part thought
experiment, part testimonial, and part indictment of a dysfunctional
transit environment that puts convenience for drivers ahead of logic,
natural resources, and even ahead of human life. Crash Course questions
the decisions that shape all our lives. Why don't roads serve everyone
who needs to use them? What makes some people not worth protecting?
Where do we start in fixing a broken system that facilitates the use of
vehicles as murder weapons in places like Charlottesville, VA?