My local landscape is changing again. A farm here has moved out all of its horses, the survey stakes are in the ground, and the "presentation center" is being erected to sell the cookie-cutter houses that will go up on the land. This is now a regular occurrence in the rural area where I live.
If it's like every other subdivision around here, it will consist of hundreds of single-family houses (and will be named for the farm/creek/forest/orchard it destroyed). Any non-house land use will be restricted to schools, parks, and perhaps a church. There will be no stores or businesses within the maze of cul-de-sacs. Public transit may run up and down the main street outside, but not within the development itself. If you want a quart of milk, you'll need to get into your car and drive to get it.
My area isn't unique. This is happening in areas all over North America, and it's why fuel economy standards and hybrid cars and electric vehicles are never going to be enough. For some reason, we only look at the puzzle pieces, and we never try to put them all together.
We complain about pouring tax dollars into truly improving public transit. We let various municipalities work against each other, rather than harmonizing their systems, effectively preventing the seamless bus and train service that we need to get from one end of a huge metropolitan area to the other. We've gutted our railways, making highways the only options between towns. We refuse to give up portions of our roads to bicycle lanes, making it dangerous and inconvenient to use them as serious transportation.
Our municipal governments bend over backwards to (or more likely in front of) developers, giving them access to huge tracts of unserviced rural land, while city lots surrounded by infrastructure stay vacant because it's not as easy to build on them. Adding insult to injury is zoning that prevents people from being able to work or shop within walking distance of their houses. If you want to live in a subdivision, you have to own a car.
And yet, the only ones held accountable in all of this are the automakers, who are under ever-increasing government pressure to squeeze out another quarter-mile per gallon, and keep in another gram of CO2.
We've put a Band-Aid on the bruised finger. The problem is, we then just keep hitting it with the hammer.