“We didn’t learn to live without cars—we learned how quickly society breaks when you pretend people don’t need them. Until you redesign the world, ‘drive less’ isn’t policy. It’s fantasy dressed up as virtue.”
- adaptationguide.com
Autobahns Without Cars — And What That Says About Us
An unfiltered op-ed inspired by Switzerland’s oil crises
Let’s translate the polite, archival version first:
“The driving bans of 1973 made no significant contribution to overcoming the oil crisis.”
There. That’s the clean version.
Now let’s talk about what it actually means.
Switzerland Tried the “No Cars” Experiment — Twice
In 1956, while the Suez Crisis choked oil supplies and the Hungarian Uprising rattled Europe, Switzerland panicked. Oil imports were fragile. The economy looked exposed. So the government did something radical:
They banned cars on Sundays.
Not suggested. Not incentivized.
Banned.
Again in 1973, during the Yom Kippur War and the resulting oil shock, they doubled down. This time with massive fines and expectations of public backlash.
But here’s the twist nobody likes to admit:
There was almost no resistance.
People complied. Even enforced it socially—drivers who broke the rules were booed in the streets.
And Yet… It Didn’t Work
Let’s kill the myth right here:
- It didn’t solve the energy crisis
- It didn’t meaningfully reduce oil dependence
- It didn’t transform long-term behavior
It was symbolic. Emotional. Temporary.
A performance of sacrifice, not a structural solution.
But People Loved It — And That’s Where It Gets Weird
Here’s the part modern climate politics doesn’t know what to do with:
When the cars disappeared, people didn’t sit at home sulking.
They:
- Walked highways
- Rode bikes across motorways
- Skated, camped, socialized
- Turned infrastructure into public space
It was like a proto-urbanist fantasy. A spontaneous version of what cities now brand as “car-free days.”
People didn’t hate the absence of cars.
They hated being told what to do about it.
That distinction matters more than any climate policy paper.
Fast Forward: We Still Haven’t Figured It Out
Politicians keep recycling the same idea.
- Lisa Mazzone suggested partial car-free highways
- Cédric Wermuth pushed for nationwide seasonal bans
Same logic, new packaging:
“It’s for the climate.”
And sure—cutting emissions matters. No serious person disputes that.
But here’s where the conversation gets dishonest.
We Like Our Cars. Let’s Stop Pretending Otherwise.
You said it perfectly, so let’s not sugarcoat it:
- You need a car to carry groceries
- You need a car because transit is slow, broken, or nonexistent
- You need a car because your job depends on it
This isn’t ideology. It’s logistics.
Modern life was built around the assumption that you drive.
So when policymakers say:
“Just drive less”
What many people hear is:
“Just make your life harder.”
The Real Problem Isn’t Cars — It’s Dependency
The lesson from 1973 is brutally simple:
You cannot force people out of cars if the system still requires them.
Switzerland tried:
- Ban cars → People comply briefly
- Reality returns → Behavior snaps back
Because nothing underneath changed.
No:
- Better transit coverage
- Faster alternatives
- Structural redesign of daily life
So the bans became what they always become:
A moral gesture without material follow-through.
Climate Policy Keeps Repeating This Mistake
We’ve upgraded the language:
- “Sustainability”
- “Decarbonization”
- “Net zero”
But the underlying strategy often still boils down to:
Ask individuals to sacrifice while systems stay inefficient.
That’s why people resist—not because they “don’t care,” but because:
They’re being asked to absorb the cost of a system they didn’t design.
The Brutal Question: What Did We Learn Since 1973?
Here’s the uncomfortable answer:
Not much.
We learned:
- People will cooperate in a crisis
- People enjoy reclaiming public space
- Temporary restrictions create powerful imagery
But we ignored the hard part:
You can’t build a low-carbon society on high-friction daily life.
If You Actually Want Fewer Cars…
Then stop moralizing and start redesigning reality:
- Make transit faster than driving—not slower
- Make cities navigable without a car—not theoretically, but practically
- Make logistics (groceries, work, childcare) function without requiring a trunk and a commute
Until then, every “car-free Sunday” is just:
A nostalgic reenactment of a policy that already failed.
Final Thought
The empty highways of 1973 became iconic not because they solved anything…
…but because they revealed something dangerous:
People are willing to change—
but only if the world around them changes too.
Everything else is just political theatre.
yours truly,
Adaptation-Guide