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Village Squire, 1976-10, Page 34My rusty car keeps the economy going BY KEITH ROULSTON was looking at the car (the one I should have been washing and waxing) on one of those last lovely lazy days of autumn when I saw a tiny bubble beneath the paint. Oh no, I said to myself in a state of shock as if someone had just told me I had a terminal illness. Heck, it was worse. It was rust. "What do you expect", my wife said when I pointed to the cancerous growth. "The car's almost paid for, isn't it?" As usual, she had come right to the point. I mean what can you expect, you might get by for a year or two without having car payments? How un -Canadian. There's an unwritten North American law in the 20th century that a majority of people have to be in debt for a car at all times. This of course leads to that marvellous technique called built-in-obselecence. If the normal term for repayment of a car is three years, then a car should be designed to fall apart in three years plus one month. I suspect a giant conspiracy here somewhere but not, being Ralph Nader or Ken Dryden, 1 can't prove it. Still, I'm suspicious. Now it's in the best interest of the car companies as mentioned to have cars fall apart in short order. If they didn't, the unions would be up in arms because there would be fewer cars needed and therefore fewer car workers. There would also be fewer truckers needed to truck the cars,from the factories to the showrooms, fewer new car salesmen needed to sell new cars, fewer junk dealers to smash up the old cars and recycle them, and fewer steel workers to take those smashed up old cars and turn them back into metal for new cars. There would be fewer pretty girls hired to sell cars in TV commercials and fewer photographers to take the pictures for glossy magazine articles. Of course if cars lasted, say six or seven years instead of three or four, the financial institutions would also be harmed because suckers like me wouldn't always be in hawk for a new car. If they didn't lend so much money they wouldn't be able to hire so many secretaries and tellers, there wouldn't be so many sky-skraper office towers built in downtown Toronto and thus the construction business would slow down. In short, the economy would be ruined if cars lasted longer. Now in some parts of the world, people manage to survive the winter without salting • streets and roads, but not in Ontario. There are some' places such as Toronto and Goderich, where it seems the whole winter snowremoval program involves trying to salt the snow to death (why bother to buy snow plows when you have your own salt mine like Goderich does). This means that when you're stuck up to your axles, you're never quite 32, VILLAGE SQUIRE/OCTOBER 1976 sure whether the white stuff you're stuck in is snow or salt. Some people think this salting is for safety, but again I have my suspicions. It fits too nicely into the overall scheme of things to make me believe it. I mean at 27 cents a household box, the saltmines wouldbe a long time making money. But by using tons and tons on the roads, well the profit margin simply soars. The salt 'in turn keeps the -car makers, U.A.W., car transporters, car salesmen, junk dealers, steel workers and the pretty girls in the new car ads happy because it means cars rust out in no time and the mighty economy rolls on But somewhere along the line, I think somebody miscalculated a couple of years back. So intent on keeping the merry circle going were they that they got too good at this built-in obselecence bit: Cars started falling apart before they were paid for. It was a serious situation. With the price of cars soaring, it meant nearly everyone who bought a car had to finance it over the longest period Ldeiak �lljhsfstoKs WATC}IMAKEii G jEWE LLEA� possible. But if the cars. rusted away to a clump of bolts in two years, it was a real problem. Who would bother finishing paying for their car if it had already gone to that junkyard in the sky? The banks and finance companies were in trouble. But galloping to the rescue came yet another beneficiary of the system: the rustproofing company. Have you noticed in the last couple of years that the fastest growing business around seems to be the ,rust-proofers? So now, for a measly few hundred dollars on top of the price of your new car you can have it rustproofed and be guaranteed (well almost) that it won't fall to pieces before the last payment is due. Then, on signal, it will collapse and you can help the economy by buying a new car. Now I'd lov‘to find away out of this mess. I hate spending money on cars. It seems like such a vicious circle. But in my job, I need a car. Besides, at $1.00 a bale for hay, horses aren't too cheap either. Besides, if I did find a way out, I'd feel like a traitor for wrecking the economy of the whole country. 166 The Square Goderich 524-6572 If you ore looking for a Quality Wedding Gib with lasting Beauty, Rick Whetstone will be pleased to show you a fine collection of China, Silver and Crystal Rick also handles a wide select ion of Watches for the Bride & Groom, with a price range to suit all tastes Whatever your desire - You can be assured of Personalized attentim at Rick Whetstone Jewellers peeate eosste u,:....' Je'€t ta4e case of you/