Tom
I am a FH squatter
- Joined
- Dec 22, 2003
- Messages
- 17,463
Bikes ran red lights with abandon, cars didn't.
Running a red light means not observing the stop line once the traffic signal has turned red. Anyone who does that has committed the offence. Yes, some cyclists will go through well after the light has changed, but they risk nobody's life but their own and generally do it at about 10-15mph. Your so-called "amber gambler" will be racing through at 30mph (often faster) and if that person hits another road user not also in a car, chances are someone will die. That never happens with a bicycle, the energies involved are too low.
It isn't difficult to understand that a cyclist who runs a red light and gets into difficulty can very easily extricate themselves from the situation, because the bike can be picked up and carried away. You can't do that in a car. Christ, that's why red lights exist - because cars are big, bulky things that carry inherent risks. Nobody needed red lights before they came along, not even cyclists.
Thankfully, some people get it.
Junction Malfunction and a New Dawn
WMP said:Cyclists don’t cause us, as an organisation, problems, that’s because they aren’t causing our communities problems, they aren’t killing nearly 100 people on our regions roads as mechanically propelled vehicles currently do. Yes we do get complaints of the “nuisance” variety, pavement cycling, some anti-social behaviour (usually yobs on bikes rather than “cyclists”), red light running etc. but you get the idea, most peoples interpretation of “1st world problems” or the “modern day blues”, nothing that’s a priority for a force like our own in a modern day society. Bad cycling is an “irritant” to the wider community rather than a danger, and maybe an improvement in infrastructure and policing may alieve many of the reasons that cause a very small minority of cyclists to be an “irritant”