AndyB
New Member
- Location
- Heathrow / Staines
we certainly need to get rid of this image of there being a 'war' and it being 'cyclist v's driver'.
Hrmm I'm getting Deja vu all over again. Wasn't almost the exact same feature with the same video clips on about 2-3 weeks ago? I'm not sure where, BBC London News or Breakfast TV or something.
<br /><br /><br /><br />To be fair, I was surprised that the One Show went ahead with this as a similar feature was shown on BBC breakfast a couple of weeks back. My tanker footage was shown in both.<br />
I've just watched that, and whilst it wasn't terrible it still leaves a bad taste in the mouth. Citing this as a war/battle/fight etc just adds more fuel to the fire.
There is no, battle between cyclists and drivers. It does not exist.
The vast, VAST majority of my interactions with drivers are positive. In fact yesterday I had at least 4 occasions where I thanked or was thanked by another road user. As I tried to get across on the Five live interview is that the battle is against bad road users, and I think this is where our focus needs to go, and exactly why it is important that we make sure cyclists clean up their act as well.
I've heard many cyclists say, 'what's the point in stopping at reds etc... it does no-one any harm'. Yes it does. It perpetuates the us v's them mentality. The more non-cyclists see cyclists breaking the rules the more they feel anger towards us as a group. The problem with RLJing and pavement cycling is it is very visible, and so it is easy to incorrectly conclude that all cyclists do it.
So to change that focus, we have to accept that RLJing, pavement cycling (I know this is a tough one as I can understand why some do it) is wrong and stop the petty arguments surrounding it.
Unintentionally - and I fully accept you use your helmet cam defensively - the increasing media attention given to on-road video, as well as exposing incidents in an educational sense, also serves to fuel the debate and further polarise opinion.
I've just watched that, and whilst it wasn't terrible it still leaves a bad taste in the mouth. Citing this as a war/battle/fight etc just adds more fuel to the fire.
There is no, battle between cyclists and drivers. It does not exist.
The vast, VAST majority of my interactions with drivers are positive. In fact yesterday I had at least 4 occasions where I thanked or was thanked by another road user. As I tried to get across on the Five live interview is that the battle is against bad road users, and I think this is where our focus needs to go, and exactly why it is important that we make sure cyclists clean up their act as well.
I've heard many cyclists say, 'what's the point in stopping at reds etc... it does no-one any harm'. Yes it does. It perpetuates the us v's them mentality. The more non-cyclists see cyclists breaking the rules the more they feel anger towards us as a group. The problem with RLJing and pavement cycling is it is very visible, and so it is easy to incorrectly conclude that all cyclists do it.
So to change that focus, we have to accept that RLJing, pavement cycling (I know this is a tough one as I can understand why some do it) is wrong and stop the petty arguments surrounding it.
I can only speak for myself, but I don't use my camera as a weapon against drivers, it is a weapon against bad road user, whoever they may be, and that on occasion includes me.