Crackle said:
adds21 said:“Women may also have less time than men, she says, because they tend to have the responsibility of looking after children before and after work, and are often carrying shopping.”
That just made me cross, because, believe it or not, us men sometimes have responsibilities too.
There are no national figures but there's little reason to think it is any different. In August, a 27-year-old woman died in Leeds after her bike was in collision with a lorry.
HJ said:It is a start but there was a lot in it which as ill-informed, such are the myth that women are more likely to filter up the left side of lorries and that RLJing is "safer". Shame they don't seem to have any journalists who cycle to work and know what they are writing about...
Having seen the way cyclists ride in London, I'm not surprised many are involved in accidents. They ride without lights after dark, ignore traffic lights and ride aggressively as if they own the road. Apparently that is how the LCC want it in parts of London - pedestrians and cyclists only (and I'm sure they would prefer not to have pedestrians in their way as they cycle along the pavement).
Iain, Scotland
Kaipaith said:I don't think that was a troll post Crankers - People do think that way, and when they see cyclists behaving badly that's what sticks in their minds. Cyclists who stick to the rules don't really feature on some people's radars because we're not doing anything out of the ordinary. We just blend in.
In fact, I'm fairly confident (from personal experience only so this is subjective) that even by making ourselves more visible, by taking the primary for example, we "blend in" even more, because we are traffic. Of course people see us doing that, but its just something they can prepare for, and overcome.
Its the exceptional actions that people "see" and remember. The cyclist who has a near miss after running a red light. The cyclist who appears "out of nowhere" because he didn't have lights or fluorescent clothing.
I don't think that was a troll post, but potentially a very valid view of someone outside looking in.
Crankarm said:I tink it was a trollas it is written as sweeping generalisation in emotive terms. Unless ALL cyclists do ride as he states then he is trolling IMHO. I ain't going to lose sleep about it. Perhaps the reason his post is argumentative is because he is a Scot in London. I notice in your post you don't comment on the substance of the article but instead choose to seize on my belief that the post is by a troll.
Crackle said:Did someone mention sweeping generalisations?