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marmar

(77,053 posts)
Tue May 5, 2015, 12:37 PM May 2015

Bikes vs Cars: why it’s war between cyclists and drivers on city streets


Bikes vs Cars: why it’s war between cyclists and drivers on city streets
In Toronto, they’ve painted over the bike lanes. And in São Paulo, a cyclist got his arm torn off by a car that didn’t even stop … We knew it was bad on the world’s crowded roads, but a new film reveals it’s a fight to the death


(Guardian UK) Fredrik Gertten is a Swedish documentary-maker: he made a film about the banana industry, and then he made a film about being sued by the banana industry. He has recently been anointed one of Sweden’s “top environmentalists” – which, although the title is fairly broad, has got to be good. And he has now made Bikes vs Cars, which is as confronting – though I don’t think you’d call it exactly confrontational – as you would expect.

I have, give or take, mainly peddled the line that it’s not a war between the two-wheeled and the four-wheeled: how could it be, when a lot of us are both drivers and cyclists (and sometimes, inevitably, also pedestrians)? It seemed to me, much as it does on the road itself, safer not to be adversarial. This film’s message – from the streets of São Paulo to Los Angeles, via the toxic situation in Toronto – makes it plain that a war is exactly what it is: cities are designed for cars and are hostile to bikes. And cars are not designed for life.

“Car dependency,” Gertten says, “is a disease for society. If you’re dependent on having a car every day, you have lost your freedom. It’s very sad. Most people are unhappy in traffic. The people who bike their cities, they become city-lovers. When you’re in a car, you don’t see the city, you are only watching the road. On a bike, you can see the sky, you can see the trees. People get to know their countries in a different way.”

The way he describes it, which comes across even more intensely in the film, is not so much a clash between bikes and cars as a battle of love and hate. How do you know the contours of where you live? Do you dart across them like an urban hummingbird? Or do you crawl sightlessly along them in a tank? .....................(more)

http://www.theguardian.com/film/2015/may/03/bikes-vs-cars-film-war-cyclists-drivers-fredrik-gertten-interview




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Bikes vs Cars: why it’s war between cyclists and drivers on city streets (Original Post) marmar May 2015 OP
Both sides are at fault. SheilaT May 2015 #1
fewer bikers would be injured/killed if they spent less time looking at the sky/trees and more msongs May 2015 #2
And drivers? daleanime May 2015 #3
 

SheilaT

(23,156 posts)
1. Both sides are at fault.
Tue May 5, 2015, 12:53 PM
May 2015

I'm constantly amazed at the truly stupid thing cyclists do. Some of them seem to think that stop signs or stop lights are just pretty decorations, to be admired while whizzing by. They wear dark clothes at night, riding a bike with no lights. Bike against traffic rather than with it.

While I never ride a bike myself, I do try to be aware of them, and I count myself lucky that I haven't even had a close call.

msongs

(67,360 posts)
2. fewer bikers would be injured/killed if they spent less time looking at the sky/trees and more
Tue May 5, 2015, 02:27 PM
May 2015

looking "at the road". every day I see bikers doing incredibly stupid things on streets around here

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