Indeed - there are a lot of things that cyclists as a whole need to be doing/not doing for the 'anger' to go away*. Problem is we are not an organised collective (nor would I wish it so) and making sweeping changes that are taken notice of would be difficult.It is an interesting video and the comments at the bottom of it just reinforce what I keep saying, and that is that cyclists have to put their own house in order before accusing motorists of all evils on the road.
You can forget about helmets because we are not obliged to wear them, it is a personal choice (I do). But when it comes to cyclists riding through red lights, not having lights on the bikes, riding on pavements etc, etc. Until all these types of things are sorted out then there will always be this war of words between motorists and cyclists in the UK.
We all need to look at the things we can change, not the things we can`t.
Steve
Interesting link z0mb13e, thanks!
It also led me to view the appropriately titled Beauty and the Bike video clip.
I wish we could make ourselves into a better travelling public, but I also know that we just are what we are. Human. So:
Keeping Motorists separate from Cyclists is THE simple recipe for safety (and if done well, for fun too!).
Sadly, the result is often ridiculous, like painted bicycles on roadside car parking (pretence of creating cycle lanes).
Our councillors probably feel good about such 'green' projects. If only they realised where the real glory lies of becoming the cyclist's saviour...
If a fatal incident between a cyclist and motorist would have been preventable with improved infrastructure, and this fact had been knowledge, would this be a case of manslaughter?