A 1954 General Motors propaganda film, long dismissed as mere corporate fluff, is revealed by Jason Slaughter to be a chillingly accurate blueprint for the financial and urban crises facing North American cities today. Slaughter doesn't just critique the film; he uses it to expose a half-century-old lie: that building more roads solves traffic, when in reality, it guarantees a cycle of debt and congestion that cities can never afford to fix.
The Myth of the Infinite Road
Slaughter opens by dissecting the film's core message, which frames the automobile not just as a vehicle, but as the engine of American destiny. He highlights the film's claim that "we have become the nation on wheels with more motorized Mobility than ever dreamed of before," only to immediately undercut it with the reality of induced demand. The author points out that the film's solution to congestion—building wider roads—was a known fallacy even in the 1930s, yet the narrative persisted because it served a specific commercial interest. "This film doesn't talk about induced demand because it was made by GM and they love the idea that more people will drive because then they'll sell more cars," Slaughter writes. This reframing is crucial; it shifts the blame from poor planning to intentional corporate strategy. The film's assertion that "our growing greatness" requires more concrete is exposed not as a civic necessity, but as a sales pitch that ignored the diminishing returns of infrastructure investment.
The fundamental fallacy here though is that you can't build enough parking to replace the number of customers you would get from foot traffic in a walkable neighborhood.
The Hidden Cost of "Farm to Market" Roads
The commentary takes a sharp turn when analyzing the film's focus on "Farm to Market" roads. Slaughter notes that while these were originally intended for trucking, they became the arteries for suburban sprawl, transforming into what urban planners now call "stroads"—a hybrid that fails at being both a safe street and an efficient road. He observes that "suburbs and excerbs get built along the road and this induces huge amounts of traffic from personal vehicles," effectively strangling the very commercial traffic the roads were meant to serve. The film's warning that "two-thirds of the way is now obsolete worn out inadequate" is reinterpreted by Slaughter as a preview of the maintenance crisis facing modern municipalities. The real tragedy, he argues, is that cities are paying for the construction of infrastructure that will inevitably become a financial liability. "It's not the cost of building the roads that is the biggest problem it's the ongoing maintenance expense especially the replacement cost of the infrastructure that tends to happen after about 30 years," he explains. This insight lands hard because it connects the abstract concept of infrastructure debt to the tangible reality of crumbling bridges and potholes that taxpayers face today.
Critics might argue that in the 1950s, the economic benefits of connecting rural areas to markets justified the investment, regardless of the long-term maintenance costs. However, Slaughter counters that the shift from mixed-use neighborhoods to car-dependent sprawl fundamentally altered the economic model, turning profitable local economies into unmanageable liabilities.
The False Promise of the Elevated Highway
Perhaps the most damning section of the analysis focuses on the film's celebration of elevated highways as futuristic miracles. Slaughter contrasts the film's vision of "free-flowing channels of concrete and steel" with the reality of gridlock and the destruction of neighborhoods. He specifically calls out the film's praise of Robert Moses, noting that "Robert Moses was the infamous Transportation planner in New York who destroyed huge swaths of the city mostly neighborhoods of people of color in order to build wide roads and highways." The author argues that the film's confidence in engineering solutions was misplaced, as these structures often made congestion worse by inducing more traffic. "Of course with the power of hindsight we know that this Expressway did not solve New York's traffic problems in fact it likely made it worse by inducing more driving," Slaughter asserts. The film's prediction that "50 percent More Than Before the War by 1975 they say we will be driving 85 million" is revealed to be a gross underestimation, with the actual number reaching 106 million. This overestimation of the solution's capacity versus the reality of demand underscores the futility of the approach.
The way that highways are talked about in this video as some kind of future technology that will solve all traffic problems is exactly the same way that self-driving cars are talked about today.
Bottom Line
Jason Slaughter's analysis is a masterclass in connecting historical propaganda to modern policy failures, proving that the road to bankruptcy was paved with good intentions and bad data. The piece's greatest strength is its ability to show that the current infrastructure crisis is not an accident of history, but the direct result of a deliberate, decades-long strategy that prioritized car sales over urban viability. The biggest vulnerability in the argument, however, is the difficulty of reversing these entrenched systems; while the diagnosis is clear, the prescription of viable alternatives remains politically elusive.