Exactly. You chose a lifestyle that requires gasoline to be a convienence. The important part being that you chose that lifestyle. It was not forced upon you.
Oh really? Do you have the date? 'Cause I seriously don't know anyone who has ever sat down and decided "Ok, am I going to buy gas or not? That's what we're having this family meeting about tonight. What do you guys think?" Nobody CHOOSES a lifestyle.
But I just had a train of thought go through my head though. It started with the phrase "People just emulate what they see" and it progressed through "that's how we were raised" and that's a hot button phrase for me in the religious discussions. Most people when asked "Why are you a baptist or a christian" will instantly say, "Well that's just how I was raised". That's not true of every baptist or christian, of course, but that's the predominant answer I have gotten.
And so, if I am to hold those people accountable for their beliefs they've never questioned, where do I get off acting like I can't just decide to not buy gas? I could do that. I know I could because I have made an equally disruptive decision early in my life when I came to the understanding that theism was just incongruous with my nature and how I perceived the universe. Figuratively speaking, I "moved away" from many of my friends and family when I became more open about my atheism.
So, by that measure, if I were really dedicated to my belief that gas companies were holding us hostage and their true concern was not in making the world a better place for everyone but only for the owners of the companies, then I would make that radical change and make those major moves to either a dense urban city like NY where I could ride the train or to a rural area where I could grow everything I need and earn a living growing a crop.
But having come to that realization, it still only re-inforces my belief that, in order to do stop buying gasoline, I would have to make these radical changes. I would have to invest hours and hours in planning for the moves, in attempting to create viable options to every aspect of my life in order to disassociate from buying gasoline. It's still a mountain to be climbed.
It seems to me that "We have no choice but to buy gas" is now equivalent in my mind with theists who say, "That's just how we were raised." And I can't let that stand, can I? What would that make me?