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Hummer Owners Claim Moral High Ground To Excuse Overconsumption

Hummer drivers believe they are defending America’s frontier lifestyle against anti-American critics, according to a new study in the Journal of Consumer Research.

Authors Marius K. Luedicke (University of Innsbruck, Austria), Craig J. Thompson (University of Wisconsin–Madison), and Markus Giesler (York University, Toronto) researched attitudes toward owning and driving Hummers, which have become symbols to many of American greed and wastefulness.

The researchers first investigated anti-consumption sentiments expressed by people who oppose chains like Starbucks and believe they are making a moral choice by shunning consumerism. To these critics, Hummers represent the ills of contemporary society. As one extreme example, on www.fuh2.com, people have posted thousands of photographs of middle fingers directed at Hummer vehicles.

They investigated various Internet expressions of anti-Hummer sentiment, but they were equally interested in the ways Hummer owners framed themselves as “moral protagonists” in the ongoing debate over consumer values. They conducted in-depth interviews with twenty U.S.-born and raised Hummer owners and found among these consumers an equally strong current of moralism.

“As we studied American Hummer owners and their ideological beliefs, we found that they consider Hummer driving a highly moral consumption choice,” write the authors. “For Hummer owners it is possible to claim the moral high ground.”

The authors explain that Hummer owners employ the ideology of American foundational myths, such as the “rugged individual,” and the “boundless frontier” to construct themselves as moral protagonists. They often believe they represent a bastion again anti-American discourses evoked by their critics.

“Our analysis of the underlying American identity discourses revealed that being under siege by (moral) critics is an historically established feature of being an American,” write the authors. “The moralistic critique of their consumption choices readily inspired Hummer owners to adopt the role of the moral protagonist who defends American national ideals.”

Mary-Ann Twist @ University of Chicago Press Journals

5 Comments

I don’t drive a Hummer (or an SUV), but please don’t think that anyone has a right to tell me what product I can or should buy (or not buy). I don’t know why a Hummer owner buys what he buys (and frankly don’t care because it’s none of my business)

This is a FREE country (at least for a little while longer), and it’s going to take more than some psycho-babble from some professor at UW to change that.

Is a Hummer owner’s waste really any more repugnant than a geek with multiple giant flat screen monitors and oversize PC power supplies? No, because I’m sure you feel you have some need to have them. Could you get by with a lot less? – ABSOLUTELY! So why don’t you get rid of them right now, and go to a single 15″ monitor instead?

Oh, that’s right, because you have the right of FREEDOM OF CHOICE – and that, my friend, is the moral high ground.

Who gives a care? Why is it that everyone is always looking at what other people are doing or buying and having something bad to say about it? Personally I think these people are just busy-body’s with nothing else better to do than pass judgement on others and raise a stink…..

There is no such thing as a ‘moral high ground’ when it comes to driving a Hummer, or any other car for that matter. Nor does driving a Hummer make you ‘represent a bastion against anti-American discourses’.

It’s just that sort of ideas that fuel anti-americanism and confirm prejudices that exist almost everywhere in this world of Americans being dumb, loud and arrogant.

Wanna drive a gas guzzler? Be my guest. Just don’t pretend you’re keeping the free world from from collapsing by doing so. Hypocrite.

It would seem the enviro-whackos aren’t going to be happy unless we revert to a frontier style of living. No cars. No electricity. Ultimately no humans. Just the planet and the animals. If I could afford one, I’d drive the biggest most gas-hungry Hummer I could find. As far as I know, it’s not aganst the law to drive one (yet), so leave the hummer owners alone.

Hey Dan, nice to meet you. How did you wind up here? Redneck bar closed?

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