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"Chris Zacho "The Wheelman"" wrote in message ... I have been riding for over 30 years now. I've been the member of many clubs, large and small, on both coasts and in the middle. I've been to and done many organized rides (short, long and "are you nuts?") and bike rallies boasting attendances ranging from the hundreds to the thousands. Yet at any one of these organizations or events, I could count the total number of "Afro-American" riders with the fingers of one hand. And yet, riding to and from work every day (which is as organized as *I* ever get about riding) I see blacks represented in roughly the same proportion as they exist in the general local population. The portion of South Carolina where I live now, according to the latest census, has a population that is about 60% black. Yet the local club, which has nearly 100 members, to my knowledge has only one black cyclist. Hardly an accurate representation of the population at large. In fact, I'll be willing to bet, that out of all the posters on this board, only one, maybe two, max. are black. If indeed anybody here is. Where are all the black riders? What is it about our sport that makes it so unappealing to an entire race of people? Anybody have any theories? My theory is that some people don't find it necessary to pay dues, join organizations, and wear uniforms in order to ride a bicycle. And the more I ride, the less time I spend talking about it. RichC |
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