brokenbetty said:
......And I'm very conscious that all that seems to come from cyclists is demands and criticism. More cyclepaths! More road space! Punish the bad drivers! Let us jump red lights and go against one way streets! Give us the pavements as well!
....
All that seems to come from cyclists. A bit sweeping that one? Lets take each demand and criticism at a time.
More cyclepaths! Not by me. Not really by many cycling organisations. Good cycle paths have their place. Poor cycle paths are dangerous. In this country, we have more poor than good, so simply calling for 'more' means more 'poor'.
More road space! It's the motorists' entitlement thing again. I have greater rights on the road as a cyclist than I do as a motorist. In exercising that right, I only ask for as much space as keeps me safe. The same as a reasonable motorist. I don't like to be tailgated while driving on the motorway and I don't like close passes while riding, because both put my life at risk.
Punish the bad drivers! Errrr yes - so bad drivers should be given even more leeway than at present?! Motorists responsible for the deaths of others are almost always given lighter sentences (often non-custodial!) than for any other offence leading to death. See this
fella for a coal-face discussion of the law and motoring.
Let us jump red lights and go against one way streets! Err No. Cyclists do it, but even those that do probably aren't seeking a law change. Cyclists breaking the law should be punished to a degree commensurate with the crime.
Give us the pavements as well! - Hell no. Pavements are for pedestrians. If a cyclist rides on a non-shared use path, see the answer above about punishment. Shared use paths are a sop to remove cyclists from the road without spending anything on an alternative. They create confusion about where cyclists belong - "If I can ride on this bit of pavement because there's paint on it, why can't I ride on that identical bit of pavement with no paint?"
Finally, the general statement that cyclists are critical and demanding. I'll issue a challenge. You find published articles that demand or criticise cycling provision and opine the poor treatment of cyclists, and I'll do the same for motoring. Before you start, I'll let you know that I'll be looking at sites for the Road Hauliers' Association, the CBI, the AA and RAC, Safespeed who now have the ear of the conservative transport minister, the Countryside Alliance, the Vehicle Manufacturer's Association, fuelprotest.com, the Express, Mail, Telegraph, Times, Sun, specialist motoring publications and the online musings of TV personalities such as Clarkson and Littlejohn. For starters. I'll take a bet that cyclists come pretty low down on the whingometer compared to that lot.