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![]() "DirtRoadie" wrote in message ... On Dec 11, 1:06 pm, Frank Krygowski wrote: On Dec 11, 1:38 pm, "Duane Hebert" wrote: It would have been quite easy to say "Roughly six feet from the curb," or "Four feet" or "One foot" or whatever. I don't recall getting that from anyone. Mostly because nobody here is so stupid as to think that the "footage" measurement has much relevance to safe and/or legal riding. +1 I got lots of "It depends," or "I'd get out of there" or (from DR) "**** you." Let's stop right there. That's a lie, plan and simple. If you are not "making this up out of whole cloth," you should readily be able to find where I (1) responded to you (2) in this thread (3) regarding your hypothetical (4) with the quote you claim. Frank has problems with words - either reading them or writing them, I don't know for sure. But I was the one that told him to get ****ed. Not you. I'll give you until tomorrow morning to come up with a link. And, no, something similar doesn't count. We need a direct quote or an acknowledgement that your misquote is the result of your biased/sloppy paraphrasing and/or misinterpretation of what your read. Nothing new there. Have at it. |
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On Dec 11, 6:22*pm, Jay Beattie wrote:
On Dec 11, 10:35*am, "Duane Hebert" wrote: "Phil W Lee" wrote in messagenews:g677g6hv7o6vkvspreldpdoec1hcbholb1@4ax .com... DirtRoadie considered Fri, 10 Dec 2010 22:01:42 -0800 (PST) the perfect time to write: On Dec 10, 10:09 pm, Frank Krygowski wrote: Look: *When I take a typical bike ride, I'm probably passed by hundreds of motorists. *I know all about that situation. *The typical motorist around here probably doesn't pass even one cyclist per day. Holy crap! *No wonder you think you can get away with the **** you do. On many of the roads around here a half hour drive would probably take a driver past 50 or more cyclists. If even a few of them tried your antics regularly there would be an army of hostile drivers. It may seem strange, but it seems that the more cyclists there are on the road, the more willing motorists are to give them proper consideration. Maybe it's just that as cycling increases, the chances of any individual motorist being a cyclist as well also rise, along with the chance of them knowing or being related to some number of cyclists. It may also be that when there are a lot of cyclists, it becomes obvious to more people that the road would not have the capacity for the same number of cars, and it's the bikes they have to thank for keeping the roads moving at all. Bingo.- Hide quoted text - Not really. *I ride to work every morning in heavy traffic with lots of bikes in the mix, and they can really, really slow things down because the promenaders (Bohemian chics with bag dresses and sandal, dudes on Schwin Suburbans, etc.) sit in the middle of the lane and ride slowly. *They ride the speed of traffic because they are dictating the speed of traffic -- including my speed because I get boxed in behind everyone dodging these fools. *It takes me a while to salmon by, but ultimately I do. *These bicycles take more than the space of a car with all the gaps that open up, so really, if people car-pooled, you could get four people in that same space in a car. Now if we were bunched together in a lane going a decent speed, then yes, it would be space saving. -- Jay Beattie. The point being that it is not motor vehicles vs. cyclists, especially legally speaking. I drive a motor vehicle, but probably less than most because I have no commute at all. I ride a bicycle quite a bit but most of that is for my own enjoyment and/or fitness. Let me offer for discussion a cycling related non-commuting hypothetical based up a real world bicycle/motor vehicle occurrence. Let me know your thoughts. I will also say that I have my own observations, but no agenda. To the extent possible I will answer factual questions based upon the event as I know it to have occurred. If you'd like I can even provide a location via Google Earth "street view." Heres the event: 1. Bike club conducts a low-key time trial series several times a month on open public roads. Participants range from newbies/casual to categorized/pro racers. 2. During one such event one rider is proceeding (probably 30+ mph) S on a long, straight, open stretch of false flat downhill on two lane county road (think "rural"). No shoulder. 3. There is rarely any notable traffic on the road in question. (Generally it is at least "minutes" between vehicles. 4. A car traveling the opposite direction pulls off toward its LEFT side (USA) of the road and stops (to check mailbox located at road edge). 5. Cyclist collides head-on with the stopped car, cartwheels over the car and suffers injuries. 6. Car sustains damage in the form of right front dents, broken headlight/windshield. So is there fault? One party? Both parties? Neither party ("**** happens")? Try to avoid speculation about facts. As I said I will do what I can to fill in anything missing without making it up. And if you feel compelled to claim "racers are idiots" or "motorists are idiots" at least be prepared to show how that applies to the event. DR |
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On Dec 11, 12:06 pm, Frank Krygowski wrote:
On Dec 11, 1:38 pm, "Duane Hebert" wrote: Apparently you're either in the middle of the lane or hugging the curb. Boolean logic. You know, black/white, true/false no gray. I tried mightily to get a non-Boolean answer out of several of you. The question was: ten foot lane, 8.5 foot truck behind, where would you ride? It would have been quite easy to say "Roughly six feet from the curb," or "Four feet" or "One foot" or whatever. I don't recall getting that from anyone. Initially, that's because - unless your primary objective is some screwball thing like deliberately blocking traffic - it entirely depends on infinite unspecified circumstances. Since it is not my objective to block traffic, when another vehicle comes up behind, I'm going to assess conditions to the right and ride as far that way as is practicable. Where exactly this is really depends. Is there debris over there? What kind? Generally, I prefer not to ride in road debris if I can help it, but I can handle some if it gets a big truck off my back.. It depends. You say only 10 feet, no more, of the lane is usable, but you don't say the other lane is not usable. If the truck itself is almost as wide as the lane there's no way he's going to try to drive it around me in that lane no matter where I am (duh!) If he can leave the lane, we'll both approeciate the extra space to work with me further right. If he can't leave the lane but I can get off the road (e.g. onto the shoulder), that works, too. Then you added the curb, and I then said very specifically in that case I'd probably be about one to two feet off the curb (basic space to avoid storm drains, gutter seam, and have some wiggle room), and sizing up bailout options. He's not going to pass in that circumstance unless he can leave the lane, and while most drivers do leave the lane pretty much completely, many do not, and we'll both appreciate the extra space between us if I am using less of the lane. (In my experience, if the truck does mean to pass, he often *does* move at least a little into the oncoming lane even when there is other traffic there, anticipating that they see what is going on and will accomodate.) Do you see how long this is getting trying to account for all the unknown variables, and I'm still heavily generalizing. The answer is: It depends. That you seem to be able to say pretty much absolutely where you would be - conditions notwithstanding - shows that your intention. (Hallelujah, Krygowski's here to instruct everyone the right proper way!) Then you scorn and ridicule us for not having the same agenda. http://groups.google.com/group/rec.b...ef1058ba963b78 I got lots of "It depends," or "I'd get out of there" or (from DR) "**** you." Neither Duane nor Dan nor DR nor Robert wanted to discuss specifics. Barry did, and the conversation was amicable. It *does* depend. And what's wrong with getting out of there? (Doesn't that best solve the *real* problem for everybody?) I never even mentioned a sidewalk, but when you did, and I said it would be a considerable option, I get, "So we can put you down [ha-ha] as a sidewalk cyclist", and "just so everybody knows whether or not to take you seriously". That you treat it as utterly out of the question says way more about you than me. Why don't you just say there's only one lane, nobody can get out of it, and there's a big truck coming behind with only eighteen inches to work with. In that case it doesn't matter where I am in the lane and I'm just gonna go ahead and take what I think is the optimal line as if there was no truck - but only until one of us *can* get out of there. Seems to me the Boolean logic you're using is this: Whatever I say must be totally condemned... Paranoid much? ... , despite my data, citations or corroboration. Substantially inane. Whatever the four of you say... Wow! You actually enumerate the dissent. ... must never be disagreed with, whether or not you have facts to back it up. You've got it completely ass-backwards, man. *We're* not superciliously pronouncing from on high the one proper way, taking inventory of dissent, and then obsessively heaping derision trying to cover every trace of it with ****. (Heck, even Andre has mostly let up on that.) If you want to offer helpfull suggestions FWIW without denouncement to anyone's particular way of life - great. Got data and/or reasoning to explain *your* perception of their worth - fine. Knock yourself out. Just don't expect that should make any of it necessarily relevent to me. Have a little respect for your fellow man. There's a million things to be; you know that there are. |
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On Dec 11, 8:38*pm, Dan O wrote:
On Dec 11, 12:06 pm, Frank Krygowski wrote: On Dec 11, 1:38 pm, "Duane Hebert" wrote: Apparently you're either in the middle of the lane or hugging the curb. Boolean logic. *You know, black/white, true/false no gray. I tried mightily to get a non-Boolean answer out of several of you. The question was: ten foot lane, 8.5 foot truck behind, where would you ride? It would have been quite easy to say "Roughly six feet from the curb," or "Four feet" or "One foot" or whatever. I don't recall getting that from anyone. Initially, that's because - unless your primary objective is some screwball thing like deliberately blocking traffic - it entirely depends on infinite unspecified circumstances. Since it is not my objective to block traffic, when another vehicle comes up behind, I'm going to assess conditions to the right and ride as far that way as is practicable. *Where exactly this is really depends. *Is there debris over there? *What kind? *Generally, I prefer not to ride in road debris if I can help it, but I can handle some if it gets a big truck off my back.. *It depends. You say only 10 feet, no more, of the lane is usable, but you don't say the other lane is not usable. *If the truck itself is almost as wide as the lane there's no way he's going to try to drive it around me in that lane no matter where I am (duh!) *If he can leave the lane, we'll both approeciate the extra space to work with me further right. If he can't leave the lane but I can get off the road (e.g. onto the shoulder), that works, too. Then you added the curb, and I then said very specifically in that case I'd probably be about one to two feet off the curb (basic space to avoid storm drains, gutter seam, and have some wiggle room), and sizing up bailout options. *He's not going to pass in that circumstance unless he can leave the lane, and while most drivers do leave the lane pretty much completely, many do not, and we'll both appreciate the extra space between us if I am using less of the lane. (In my experience, if the truck does mean to pass, he often *does* move at least a little into the oncoming lane even when there is other traffic there, anticipating that they see what is going on and will accomodate.) Do you see how long this is getting trying to account for all the unknown variables, and I'm still heavily generalizing. *The answer is: *It depends. That you seem to be able to say pretty much absolutely where you would be - conditions notwithstanding - shows that your intention. (Hallelujah, Krygowski's here to instruct everyone the right proper way!) *Then you scorn and ridicule us for not having the same agenda. http://groups.google.com/group/rec.b...ef1058ba963b78 I got lots of "It depends," or "I'd get out of there" or (from DR) "**** you." *Neither Duane nor Dan nor DR nor Robert wanted to discuss specifics. *Barry did, and the conversation was amicable. It *does* depend. *And what's wrong with getting out of there? (Doesn't that best solve the *real* problem for everybody?) *I never even mentioned a sidewalk, but when you did, and I said it would be a considerable option, I get, "So we can put you down [ha-ha] as a sidewalk cyclist", and "just so everybody knows whether or not to take you seriously". *That you treat it as utterly out of the question says way more about you than me. Why don't you just say there's only one lane, nobody can get out of it, and there's a big truck coming behind with only eighteen inches to work with. *In that case it doesn't matter where I am in the lane and I'm just gonna go ahead and take what I think is the optimal line as if there was no truck - but only until one of us *can* get out of there. Seems to me the Boolean logic you're using is this: *Whatever I say must be totally condemned... Paranoid much? ... , despite my data, citations or corroboration. Substantially inane. Whatever the four of you say... Wow! *You actually enumerate the dissent. ... must never be disagreed with, whether or not you have facts to back it up. You've got it completely ass-backwards, man. **We're* not superciliously pronouncing from on high the one proper way, taking inventory of dissent, and then obsessively heaping derision trying to cover every trace of it with ****. *(Heck, even Andre has mostly let up on that.) If you want to offer helpfull suggestions FWIW without denouncement to anyone's particular way of life - great. *Got data and/or reasoning to explain *your* perception of their worth - fine. *Knock yourself out. Just don't expect that should make any of it necessarily relevent to me. Have a little respect for your fellow man. *There's a million things to be; you know that there are. + 1 With an edit Wow! *You actually enumerate the dissent. That's "Majority" Frank Krygowski is the SOLE member of the dissent/minority DR |
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On 12/11/2010 6:13 PM, DirtRoadie Who?:
On Dec 11, 4:50 pm, Phil W wrote: considered Sat, 11 Dec 2010 09:17:20 -0800 (PST) the perfect time to write: On Dec 11, 9:39 am, Frank wrote: On Dec 11, 2:14 am, Phil W wrote: But there IS a clear distinction between the use of "vehicles" which is all encompassing, and "motor vehicles" which is not. The statute you quote says you must conform to the requirements for vehicles, but does not say that you must conform to those requirements for motor vehicles. Sadly, (and maybe not surprisingly) English is a foreign language to Americans, so maybe that's why their lawyers have difficulties in understanding it. It is amazing that such a simple point causes confusion, isn't it? Only for those who have no grasp of how law is written and interpreted. You would do well to do some reading about statutory interpretation and how the result of an appellate decision interpreting a term forecloses rehashing arguments about what the term means. Simple example: Older laws are often referred to as "motor vehicle codes" and contained references to "motor vehicles." As those evolved typically they dropped the title "motor vehicle code" in favor of the more complete and/or accurate "vehicle code" or "traffic code." But sometimes the older term "motor vehicle" still lingers in sections of law that were not completely revised or rewritten. But, as we have seen, the newer laws typically provide that bicycles are subject to the same rights and responsibilities as any other vehicle. So that, and an appellate court saying "yes, the term 'motor vehicle' in that section means bicycles, too," that's the end of it. "Motor vehicle" means bicycles too. You can legislate that horses are dogs, but it still doesn't make it correct. One does not find typically legislation that dictates the equivalent of "horses are dogs." But much legislation says the equivalent of "wherever the term 'dog' appears it shall be understood to include all four legged animals, including horses." Wrong is wrong, no matter what seniority of judge said it. Yes, wrong is wrong and you are wrong. YANAL. And have proven it. Legal does not mean moral. Legal means what the authorities impose on the people. -- Tēm ShermĒn - 42.435731,-83.985007 I am a vehicular cyclist. |
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On 12/11/2010 6:46 PM, RobertH wrote:
On Dec 11, 4:52 pm, "Duane wrote: "T m Sherm n _ " wrote in ... On 12/11/2010 4:18 PM, RobertH Who?: [...] It's particularly fun when he [Frank Krygowski] starts making **** up, out of whole cloth, and gets called on it. [...] Citation? At least twice in a thread about helmets (you were prominent in that discussion with your foam hat repertoire), he accused me of verbally attacking him. This was more annoying before I actually did but still. I called him on it and he admitted that he was "mistaken" He admitted he was mistaken? That's a new feature! Once he accused me of making up sockpuppet identities to agree with myself. I called him on it, and he then made up an entire backstory with posters and threads that did not exist to cover his original lie. Good times! Typically his dishonesty is less blatant, making up fake quotes and arguing against them rather than what someone actually says. It's good to see he still can't go two posts without doing that. Convienently located in the thread already linked: http://groups.google.com/group/rec.b...2b6cbcf5152adf Yet "RobertH" aka "r15757" has no comment when another poster in this very thread has repeatedly falsified quotes! Why is this, the world wonders? -- Tēm ShermĒn - 42.435731,-83.985007 I am a vehicular cyclist. |
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On 12/11/2010 7:15 PM, DirtRoadie WHO? ANONYMOUSLY SNIPES:
On Dec 11, 4:52 pm, "Duane wrote: "T m Sherm n _ " wrote in ... On 12/11/2010 4:18 PM, RobertH Who?: [...] It's particularly fun when he [Frank Krygowski] starts making **** up, out of whole cloth, and gets called on it. [...] Citation? I presume you are "Goggle capable." Find references in this group to "Danger! Danger!" or claims that cycling is "Extremely dangerous". Frank has repeatedly claimed that others have said such things. It simply isn't so. DR This is rich, coming from a poster who has falsified quotes on multiple occasions. Frank Krygowski was making a judgment about the implied meaning of what others were writing, not claiming exact quotes that were never made. Does DirtRoadie not understand this, or is he merely, once again, trolling? -- Tēm ShermĒn - 42.435731,-83.985007 I am a vehicular cyclist. |
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On Dec 11, 10:26*pm, Tēm ShermĒn °_° ""twshermanREMOVE\"@THI
$southslope.net" wrote: On 12/11/2010 6:13 PM, DirtRoadie Who?: On Dec 11, 4:50 pm, Phil W *wrote: *considered Sat, 11 Dec 2010 09:17:20 -0800 (PST) the perfect time to write: On Dec 11, 9:39 am, Frank *wrote: On Dec 11, 2:14 am, Phil W *wrote: But there IS a clear distinction between the use of "vehicles" which is all encompassing, and "motor vehicles" which is not. The statute you quote says you must conform to the requirements for vehicles, but does not say that you must conform to those requirements for motor vehicles. Sadly, (and maybe not surprisingly) English is a foreign language to Americans, so maybe that's why their lawyers have difficulties in understanding it. It is amazing that such a simple point causes confusion, isn't it? Only for those who have no grasp of how law is written and interpreted. You would do well to do some reading about statutory interpretation and how the result of an appellate decision interpreting a term forecloses rehashing arguments about what the term means. Simple example: Older laws are often referred to as "motor vehicle codes" and contained references to "motor vehicles." As those evolved typically they dropped the title "motor vehicle code" in favor of the more complete and/or accurate "vehicle code" or "traffic code." But sometimes the older term "motor vehicle" still lingers in sections of law that were not completely revised or rewritten. But, as we have seen, the newer laws typically provide that *bicycles are subject to the same rights and responsibilities as any other vehicle. So that, and an appellate court saying "yes, the term 'motor vehicle' in that section means bicycles, too," that's the end of it. "Motor vehicle" means bicycles too. You can legislate that horses are dogs, but it still doesn't make it correct. One does not find typically legislation that dictates the equivalent of *"horses are dogs." But much legislation says the equivalent of "wherever the term 'dog' appears it shall be understood to include all four legged animals, including horses." Wrong is wrong, no matter what seniority of judge said it. Yes, wrong is wrong and you are wrong. YANAL. And have proven it. Legal does not mean moral. *Legal means what the authorities impose on the people. What's your point? That it is immoral that bicycles may be subject to the same rights and responsiblities as motor vehicles? Yes it's probably time to see if the Pope can arrange for divine intervention. DR |
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On Dec 11, 10:34*pm, Tēm ShermĒn °_° ""twshermanREMOVE\"@THI
$southslope.net" wrote: Yet "RobertH" aka "r15757" has no comment when another poster in this very thread has repeatedly falsified quotes! *Why is this, the world wonders? The world? To the extent that there is any evidence of such a concern it would seems to be just one old fat cult member who has these irrational delusions. DR |
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On Dec 11, 9:07*pm, DirtRoadie wrote:
I'll give you until tomorrow morning to come up with a link. And, no, something similar doesn't count. Turns out Hebert originated and you immediately piled on. From http://groups.google.com/group/rec.b...9df3afaded37c4 ====================== Duane Hebert wrote: ... **** you. +1 DR ===================== I suppose we'll hear now that "+1" means something different than what I thought. But it goes well with the month-long steady stream of content-free abuse you've spewed whenever I post. I'm talking about your grade- school-bully insults, and your threats to attack me professionally. Also it's incredibly stupid of you to pretend I misrepresented your statement, after the countless times you've deliberately forged or falsified what I've said. - Frank Krygowskii |
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