Why Americans Are Obsessed With Huge Cars It Isn’t Toxic Masculinity

<p><em>A sweeping aerial shot of a mountain landscape cascades downwards. The setting sun bathes the Earth in its glow.</em></p> <p><em>A deep, authoritative voice booms, &ldquo;In a world where adventure begins where the road ends&hellip;you need options.&rdquo; A truck barrels through a dirt road. Its all-terrain tires grip the ground and splash the mud away.</em></p> <p><em>Cut to a shot of the truck&rsquo;s bold grille and muscular lines. Cut to a shot of the Ford logo. Cut to a shot of Brett Favre in jeans smirking at the camera. Cut to a shot of the exhaust pipe blowing black smoke rings at the sun.</em></p> <p><em>&ldquo;Built to conquer any terrain, the Ford XXXL&sup2; EcoTrash will trigger them alarmist hippies.&rdquo;</em></p> <p>But seriously. I finished researching this article and groaned, &ldquo;Have we learned nothing?&rdquo;</p> <p>American vehicles are only getting bigger. The top three selling vehicles in the US in&nbsp;2023 are all&nbsp;enormous pickup trucks.</p> <p><a href="https://seanjkernan.medium.com/we-americans-are-obsessed-with-huge-cars-it-isnt-toxic-masculinity-47351f1aeda4">Click Here</a></p>