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Cycling版 - Hey, drivers, can we talk?
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【转贴】an open letter from one Toronto cyclist to anotherFirst bike commute in 2008
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相关话题的讨论汇总
话题: bike话题: war话题: car话题: toronto话题: cars
进入Cycling版参与讨论
1 (共1页)
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发帖数: 19210
1
It’s not really a war if the casualties are only on one side
By Ashley Botting
There is no “War on the Car.” War implies a fair fight.
The conflict between bikes and cars is more like a skirmish between a weak
civilian militia and a military giant. The giant has heavy artillery, while
the militia is armed only with rocks and a whole lot of pent-up anger.
I’ve been an April-to-November cyclist for 10 years. I always ride
defensively. I keep a full door-length between parked cars and myself. I
wear a helmet. I can’t bring myself to wear that crossing-guard vest thingy
at night, but I’ve got back and front lights. I do all this because I am
mere flesh on a titanium frame, and a car is steel with a fossil-fuelled
engine. If a bike battles a car, the car always wins. Always.
But these battles can be avoided. Motorists, I ask you: why do some of you
oppose improving bike infrastructure? Don’t you want us out of your way?
Wouldn’t you prefer that a chunk of concrete separate us? Sure, you’ll
lose a lane of traffic, but you won’t have to worry about killing someone.
And if we weren’t riding bikes, we’d be in cars, further clogging your
roads. Or we’d be in buses to which you’d have to yield. Or on foot,
pounding on the hood of your car, aggressively letting you know, “I’m
walkin’ here!”
I freely admit that the two-wheeled are not always perfect. On behalf of all
Toronto cyclists, I apologize for the terrible things we do. That last-
minute left-hand turn from the right-hand lane was a bad decision. We should
have stopped at that stop sign. We should not have darted out in front of
you, and after you rightfully yelled at us for it, we should have chosen a
different finger to give you.
Motorists, we cyclists can be awful people to share your roads with, but I
think we subconsciously do some of those terrible things to gain just a
little bit of ground on streets where we have so little.
Our own mayor calls us a “pain in the ass,” and bike lanes are nothing
more than slivers of road delineated by white paint that morons often used
as idling zones. They’re so poorly maintained, riding along one can feel
like it’s getting you pregnant. (I’m lookin’ at you, Sherbourne).
Throwing around the word “war” makes for good rhetoric on both sides, but
the sad irony is that people are actually dying, and it’s not a war if the
casualties are almost exclusively on one side. You don’t see too many white
ghost cars marking the spot where a motorist was slain by a cyclist.
I have many friends who believe in the cyclist cause. They want to join our
fight but will only help by supporting bike-friendly candidates and tweeting
angry bursts at Mayor Ford because they’re too afraid of injury or death
to actually mount a bike and take up some space on the road.
Biking scares me, too. Car doors open too quickly, and streetcar tracks are
like slippery little threads. I hate being honked at simply for being there,
and I have visions of flying over my handlebars and knocking all my teeth
out every time I swerve through one of Toronto’s many archipelagos of
potholes. But for now, the pros greatly outweigh the cons. I love that I’m
fit. I love that I can turn down any street on a whim and discover a new
Toronto treasure. I love that being on my bike always makes me feel like I’
m nine years old.
Yet I won’t bike forever if something doesn’t change. Eventually, I will
have children and will need to take them places, and I will not have my
children separated from traffic only by the canvas of their chariot and a
line of paint.
I very much want my children to live in a city where everybody can cycle
safely, but if the infrastructure doesn’t improve, I won’t be willing to
take the risks.
This isn’t an eons-old battle over ancestral lands; it’s a tussle over tar
. There will be more lives lost while Toronto’s council insults its
citizens by refusing to accept the natural evolution of a modern and viable
city. This isn’t a war that needs mediation; it’s a city that needs
separated bike lanes. If we can just make that happen soon, everybody wins.
http://www.nowtoronto.com/news/story.cfm?content=186891
1 (共1页)
进入Cycling版参与讨论
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fixie quiz【转贴】an open letter from one Toronto cyclist to another
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More France必读:YOU OWN YOUR SPACE: Tips from a former bike courier on staying alive as a Toronto cyclist
骑车上班, 再写几句。。。Central Park的crash
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开汽车的急性子人滴我,加速超我,被警察逮了骑车袜子为啥是高腰的不是矮帮的?
相关话题的讨论汇总
话题: bike话题: war话题: car话题: toronto话题: cars