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Police officer lecture (via Twitter video)
Police officer lecture (via Twitter video) (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

Live blog: Boss defends NYPD officer who knocked cyclist off then told him it was “for your safety”; Yellow jersey confusion for Giulio Ciccone + more

All the cycling news from this site and beyond…
  • by Alex Bowden
Fri, Jul 12, 2019 21:01
23

SUMMARY

  • "No, sorry mate, you are the second"
  • The ITV commentators raced up La Planche des Belles Filles
  • Today's stage
  • No gravel bikes for La Planche des Belles Filles, but Lightweight wheels for Team Ineos
  • Attention Brighton cyclists
  • Andre Greipel's cyclo-cross finish yesterday
  • They're underway
  • Yellow helmet for someone special today
  • Helmet cam cyclist Dave Sherry says he reports 70 drivers a week
  • “I am going to use whatever means necessary to stop you. And that is for your safety”
  • Difficult to unsee...
  • London’s going to get £2.5m worth of bike parking
  • Land art!
  • Police commissioner defends NYPD officer
  • "I'm nicking your bike mate," says bike thief (entirely accurately)
  • Passers-by lift car off trapped cyclist
  • Not entirely surprisingly, the escapees didn't make it
  • Last kilometre. Not exactly a huge margin of victory...
Police officer lecture (via Twitter video)
Police officer lecture (via Twitter video) (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)
12 July 2019, 21:01

"No, sorry mate, you are the second"

New Tour de France race leader Giulio Ciccone gives an effervescent account of how he thought he was race leader, then thought he wasn’t, then found out he was.

When your dreams come true.

Congrats @giuliocicco1 and @treksegafredo! pic.twitter.com/4ygZty7Ewd

— Trek Race Shop (@TrekRaceShop) July 12, 2019

12 July 2019, 21:01

The ITV commentators raced up La Planche des Belles Filles

But they ran it, so this video can’t get a mention in the headline.

It was for Ned Boulting’s 50th. Happy birthday, Ned.

12 July 2019, 21:01

Today's stage

Longest of the race and, other thanthat, possibly also a candidate for least remarkable.

Stage 7 / Étape 7

 Belfort –  Chalon-sur-Saône

 Discover the 3D route of Stage 7.
 Découvrez le parcours 3D de l’Étape 7.#TDF2019 pic.twitter.com/QYBDOAG1xH

— Tour de France (@LeTour) July 12, 2019

12 July 2019, 21:01

No gravel bikes for La Planche des Belles Filles, but Lightweight wheels for Team Ineos

The first tough mountain stage of this year’s Tour de France culminated with the ascent of La Planche des Belles Filles, a super steep climb with 900m of gravel track at the summit.

cpeng90.002
cpeng90 (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)
cpeng90.002
cpeng90 (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

The expectation of riders switching to gravel bikes for this stage proved unfounded – the gravel track resembled smooth dirt – with all riders appeared to stick with regular bikes, instead, the 22% gradient proved the biggest challenge. As such the most obvious change was shallower carbon wheels with regular 25-26mm tyres, and Team Ineos using their Lightweight wheels that we scooped last weekend.

12 July 2019, 21:01

Attention Brighton cyclists

On the left, @BrightonHoveCC telling people not to cycle on the pavement.
On the right, a new scheme from, err, @BrightonHoveCC, putting cycling on the pavement, right in the city centre pic.twitter.com/4p4VRqXAyh

— Mark Treasure (@AsEasyAsRiding) July 12, 2019

12 July 2019, 21:01

Andre Greipel's cyclo-cross finish yesterday

 Arrivé d’André Greipel en mode cyclo-cross pic.twitter.com/opPosSdKwh

 Actu Cyclisme [TdF] (@ActuCyclismeFra) July 11, 2019

12 July 2019, 21:01

They're underway

230km and – as it stands – a two-man break…

They’re off ! Stage 7 is underway with already  Stéphane Rossetto and  Yoann Offredo on the attack.
 L’Etape 7 est lancée !  @StephanRossetto et  @OffredoYoann
attaquent dès le départ.#TDF2019 pic.twitter.com/wwL3i6MI04

— Tour de France(@LeTour) July 12, 2019

12 July 2019, 21:01

Yellow helmet for someone special today

As has become almost boringly common in the Tour de France, new race leader Giulio Ciccone has got some yellow tat to match his yellow jersey. Here’s a question for you, when did this trend for yellow parts begin?

 
 
 
 
View this post on Instagram
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Yellow @ridebontrager Velocis for the team today.

A post shared by Matt S (@mpshriver) on Jul 12, 2019 at 12:14am PDT

12 July 2019, 21:01

Helmet cam cyclist Dave Sherry says he reports 70 drivers a week

He was on a Good Morning Britain segment asking “should cyclists shop motorists?”

Full story here.

12 July 2019, 21:01

“I am going to use whatever means necessary to stop you. And that is for your safety”

Streets Blog NYC reports that an NYPD officer used his SUV squad car to stop a Citi Bike rider who went through red lights with headphones on.

The Citi Bike ended up jammed inside the squad car’s rear wheel arch.

According to the police officer wearing headphones while bike riding is reckless driving and reason to run the rider off the road for running a red light @NYPDnews #citibike #bikenyc pic.twitter.com/SOWnRDhiUn

— Garvey Rich (@Garvey_Rich) July 6, 2019

The officer responsible said the move was because the NYPD “vigorously supports Vision Zero” – which is the city’s big thing about protecting vulnerable road users.

#NYPD run over #nyc #bicycle to stop them from running a red light ton”prevent reckless driving.” pic.twitter.com/AITjqNwYiZ

— Garvey Rich (@Garvey_Rich) July 5, 2019

“I put out my hand for you to stop,” he told the cyclist. “You acknowledged me, but continued to keep going.

“I yelled out, ‘Stop,’ and you looked back at me and continued to keep going.

“Then, we entered the car to stop you after viewing what I believe to be reckless activity: going through red lights, wearing two earphones.

“I followed you down St Marks Place and then you run another red light.

“Then I go over the loudspeaker and say, ‘Bicyclist, stop!’ Again, you look over and acknowledge and continue to keep going.

“Now, at this point, you’re forcibly stopped. Because now you’re riding recklessly, and you’re refusing to stop after multiple lawful orders that you acknowledged. So I am going to use whatever means necessary to stop you, OK? And that’s for your safety.”

12 July 2019, 21:01

Difficult to unsee...

In case anyone was wondering how we warm up for stages at the Tour de France #TDF2019 #FridayMotivation pic.twitter.com/OlkkGk8f0x

— Team INEOS (@TeamINEOS) July 12, 2019

Team Ineos awkwardly dancing to techno while seated, everyone. Still, nowhere near as cringe-inducing as Astana’s excruciating Cycling Rap…

12 July 2019, 21:01

London’s going to get £2.5m worth of bike parking

Plan includes improved parking outside 10 stations in the next 12 months plus 1,400 new spaces in residential areas.

Full story here.

12 July 2019, 21:01

Land art!

 Magnificent land art

 Magnifique réalisation #TDF2019 cc @FNSEA pic.twitter.com/iwnRrxbWJx

— Tour de Franc (@LeTour) July 12, 2019

12 July 2019, 21:01

Police commissioner defends NYPD officer

Regarding the story below about the New York police officer who knocked a cyclist off and then told him he did it for his own safety, Police Commissioner James O’Neill has now said that officers have the discretion to use their police vehicle to cut off a cyclist.

“NYPD officers have to use their best judgment,” he told Streets Blog NYC. “It’s not always easy to make the best decision possible when the situations are ongoing.

“Like I said before, these are very difficult jobs. It’s up to the individual officer to make that decision. Do we want them to use force? No. We want cyclists to comply.”

He added: “I understand that there is a difference between a 3,000 pound vehicle versus a 20- to 30-pound bike but there is an onus on everyone involved to operate whatever they’re driving and riding responsibly.”

12 July 2019, 21:01

"I'm nicking your bike mate," says bike thief (entirely accurately)

The Liverpool Echo reports on an unusually upfront bike theft. Asked what he was doing by the victim after being caught in the act, the man raised his middle finger and said, “I’m nicking your bike mate,” before riding off down the road doing a wheelie.

The incident occurred outside a Co-op on Lark Lane in Liverpool at 3.55pm yesterday afternoon.

A spokesman for Merseyside Police, said: “We can confirm that an investigation is underway following the theft of a bicycle in Aigburth yesterday, Thursday 11 July.

“At 3.55pm, officers were called to Lark Lane to reports of a mountain bike being stolen from inside the Co-Op convenience store when an unknown person stole it.

“The suspect is described as white, 17-21 years old, 5ft 10in, of skinny build, short brown hair and wearing an orange t-shirt and green tracksuit bottoms. He made off on the bike in the direction of Sefton Park.”

CCTV and witness enquiries are ongoing and anyone with information or who witnessed the incident can contact @MerPolCC, call 101 with reference 19100372674 or Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.

12 July 2019, 21:01

Passers-by lift car off trapped cyclist

Plymouth Live reports that passers-by lifted a car off an injured cyclist yesterday morning.

A spokesman for Devon and Cornwall Police said: “Police and ambulance were called at 7.35am today, July 11,  following a collision between a car and a cyclist on Glenfield Road/Plymbridge Road, Plymouth.

“The male cyclist has sustained shoulder and chest injuries – severity not yet known. He has been taken to Derriford Hospital.

“The cyclist was initially trapped under the car. The vehicle was lifted off the man by members of the public.”

12 July 2019, 21:01

Not entirely surprisingly, the escapees didn't make it

Long day for the two of them.

 12 Km

 End of the adventure for the breakaway.

 Fin de l’aventure pour les 2 échappés. #TDF2019 pic.twitter.com/fWnpDXLbGV

— Tour de France (@LeTour) July 12, 2019

12 July 2019, 21:01

Last kilometre. Not exactly a huge margin of victory...

 @GroenewegenD claims the win !

 What a sprint ! We definitely have to take a close look back at this last kilometre !

 VICTOIRE de Dylan Groenewegen !

 Quel sprint ! Il faut revoir cet incroyable dernier kilomètre ! #TDF2019 pic.twitter.com/fu0txmmqOJ

— Tour de France (@LeTour) July 12, 2019

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Alex Bowden
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Alex has written for more cricket publications than the rest of the road.cc team combined. Despite the apparent evidence of this picture, he doesn’t especially like cake.


23 Comments

23 thoughts on “Live blog: Boss defends NYPD officer who knocked cyclist off then told him it was “for your safety”; Yellow jersey confusion for Giulio Ciccone + more”

  1. EddyBerckx
    July 12, 2019 at 12:33 pm
    0

    NTPD are pretty shocking in

    NTPD are pretty shocking in their attitude to cyclists (unfortunately some police inc the met can be as bad over here too) but if what he said is true,  you can sort of understand why he did it. If the police are ordering you to pull over….you pull over. If you repeatedly ignore this then are you carrying drugs? Guns? Probably not but honestly, I can’t imagine a reason not to pull over as instructed.

     

    But maybe there’s more to it? And couldn’t he not simply have pulled over and blocked the cycle lane to force him to stop?

    Log In or Register to post comments
  2. Rick_Rude
    July 12, 2019 at 1:09 pm
    0

    After watching endless

    After watching endless encounters of american motorists with the police on Youtube, it seems to me that the average American copper wouldn’t get near the door of the job (probably need to be able to read for a start) in the UK. They mostly can’t be reasoned with and carry out the job like a badly written computer program, with no deviation from their instruction set. Replacing them with actual robots would be a positive step.

     

    Log In or Register to post comments
    • steampie
      July 12, 2019 at 1:50 pm
      0

      Rick_Rude wrote:

      After watching endless encounters of american motorists with the police on Youtube, it seems to me that the average American copper wouldn’t get near the door of the job (probably need to be able to read for a start) in the UK. They mostly can’t be reasoned with and carry out the job like a badly written computer program, with no deviation from their instruction set. Replacing them with actual robots would be a positive step.

       

      — Rick_Rude

      As an American who’s lived over here the past 15 years, I can certainly back this up. The USA policing system is about half a step below a paramilitary unit, and there is very little requirement for any sort of reasoning, rational thinking or actual situation de-escalation. It is about rigid law enforcement and punishment (without even getting into the racial aspects). As someone who is friends with UK cops, I am constantly in awe of their ability to assess a situation and react APPROPRIATELY and at a level commensurate with the incident. 

      Log In or Register to post comments
    • Butty
      July 12, 2019 at 3:17 pm
      0

      Rick_Rude wrote:

       Replacing them with actual robots would be a positive step.

      — Rick_Rude

      Like an ED-209?

      I’m surprised the cyclist wasn’t shot to a halt TBH.

      Log In or Register to post comments
      • brooksby
        July 13, 2019 at 11:50 am
        0

        Butty wrote:

         Replacing them with actual robots would be a positive step.

        — Butty

        Like an ED-209?

        I’m surprised the cyclist wasn’t shot to a halt TBH.

        — Rick_Rude

        “I am only shooting you for your own safety, citizen”

        Log In or Register to post comments
        • Rick_Rude
          July 13, 2019 at 2:59 pm
          0

          brooksby wrote:

           Replacing them with actual robots would be a positive step.

          — brooksby

          Like an ED-209?

          I’m surprised the cyclist wasn’t shot to a halt TBH.

          — Butty

          “I am only shooting you for your own safety, citizen”

          — Rick_Rude

          https://i.pinimg.com/originals/3b/19/44/3b19442b3c6415d27edb5349267e7f56.jpg

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  3. hawkinspeter
    July 12, 2019 at 1:23 pm
    0

    Looks like the cyclist got

    Looks like the cyclist got off easy with that treatment after reading this: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/police-us-planted-evidence-meth-marijuana-cars-florida-zachary-a9001961.html

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  4. Biggus-Dickkus
    July 12, 2019 at 3:06 pm
    0

    There are always two sides to

    There are always two sides to any story. In this case, the cyclist broke several laws including going through several red-light situations. He was told to stop on numerous occasions, not sure what he expected to happen. Looks like he got what he deserved… 

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    • brooksby
      July 12, 2019 at 3:18 pm
      0

      Biggus-Dickkus wrote:

      There are always two sides to any story. In this case, the cyclist broke several laws including going through several red-light situations. He was told to stop on numerous occasions, not sure what he expected to happen. Looks like he got what he deserved… 

      — Biggus-Dickkus

      The cyclist apparently went through two red lights (illegal).

      He was wearing headphones (illegal, apparently).

      He was not wearing a helmet (not illegal).

      He did not stop for a gesturing police officer shouting out of his SUV at him (stupid).

      Exactly which of those means that he “deserved” having a two-tonne bulletproof SUV driven into him?  Did you see the state of the bike?  Witnesses said the cyclist leapt from his bike as the SUV ran into him, so can you imagine what state he’d have been in if he hadn’t leapt to safety?

      Again – which of those offences meant that he deserved to be run down?

      Troll surprise

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    • hawkinspeter
      July 12, 2019 at 3:55 pm
      0

      Biggus-Dickkus wrote:

      There are always two sides to any story. In this case, the cyclist broke several laws including going through several red-light situations. He was told to stop on numerous occasions, not sure what he expected to happen. Looks like he got what he deserved… 

      — Biggus-Dickkus

      Yes, there are often two sides to a story, but I have trouble believing that the cyclist was endangering enough people to warrant being driven into, but maybe you have different priorities than most people.

      Also, was there video proof that the cyclist went through red lights as it has been known for U.S. cops to make things up. Here’s a classic example: https://www.thedrive.com/news/28865/incriminating-video-shows-cop-run-stop-sign-cause-crash-and-arrest-innocent-driver

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      • bigbiker101
        July 12, 2019 at 8:35 pm
        0

        hawkinspeter wrote:

        There are always two sides to any story. In this case, the cyclist broke several laws including going through several red-light situations. He was told to stop on numerous occasions, not sure what he expected to happen. Looks like he got what he deserved… 

        — hawkinspeter

        Yes, there are often two sides to a story, but I have trouble believing that the cyclist was endangering enough people to warrant being driven into, but maybe you have different priorities than most people.

        Also, was there video proof that the cyclist went through red lights as it has been known for U.S. cops to make things up. Here’s a classic example: https://www.thedrive.com/news/28865/incriminating-video-shows-cop-run-stop-sign-cause-crash-and-arrest-innocent-driver

        — Biggus-Dickkus

        Very simple really… you are breaking the law, you refuse to stop when asked, so you are foraceablly stopped… well done to the police, was the rider hurt, nope, so reasonable force was used.

        I find it ridiculous that we ignore the blatant law breaking acceptance because the police used force to stop an idiot on a bike that refused to stop, what should they do… just let him carry on and pray  he doesn’t kill himself when he runs the next red light, people on this forum make me sick as your attitude is simple… when I’m on a bike I am the most vulnerable person on the road and that gives me the right to do whatever I want, this guy deserved exactly what he got, bottom line, ride responsibly and you wouldn’t get stopped…. 45 years cycling and not once has a policeman ever had reason to stop and talk with me, maybe because I don’t run read lights and ride like an idiot.

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        • ConcordeCX
          July 12, 2019 at 10:33 pm
          0

          bigbiker101 wrote:

          There are always two sides to any story. In this case, the cyclist broke several laws including going through several red-light situations. He was told to stop on numerous occasions, not sure what he expected to happen. Looks like he got what he deserved… 

          — bigbiker101

          Yes, there are often two sides to a story, but I have trouble believing that the cyclist was endangering enough people to warrant being driven into, but maybe you have different priorities than most people.

          Also, was there video proof that the cyclist went through red lights as it has been known for U.S. cops to make things up. Here’s a classic example: https://www.thedrive.com/news/28865/incriminating-video-shows-cop-run-stop-sign-cause-crash-and-arrest-innocent-driver

          — hawkinspeter

          Very simple really… you are breaking the law, you refuse to stop when asked, so you are foraceablly stopped… well done to the police, was the rider hurt, nope, so reasonable force was used.

          I find it ridiculous that we ignore the blatant law breaking acceptance because the police used force to stop an idiot on a bike that refused to stop, what should they do… just let him carry on and pray  he doesn’t kill himself when he runs the next red light, people on this forum make me sick as your attitude is simple… when I’m on a bike I am the most vulnerable person on the road and that gives me the right to do whatever I want, this guy deserved exactly what he got, bottom line, ride responsibly and you wouldn’t get stopped…. 45 years cycling and not once has a policeman ever had reason to stop and talk with me, maybe because I don’t run read lights and ride like an idiot.

          — Biggus-Dickkus

          you and the cops in question seem to have no sense of proportion.

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        • brooksby
          July 13, 2019 at 6:25 am
          0

          bigbiker101 wrote:

          There are always two sides to any story. In this case, the cyclist broke several laws including going through several red-light situations. He was told to stop on numerous occasions, not sure what he expected to happen. Looks like he got what he deserved… 

          — bigbiker101

          Yes, there are often two sides to a story, but I have trouble believing that the cyclist was endangering enough people to warrant being driven into, but maybe you have different priorities than most people.

          Also, was there video proof that the cyclist went through red lights as it has been known for U.S. cops to make things up. Here’s a classic example: https://www.thedrive.com/news/28865/incriminating-video-shows-cop-run-stop-sign-cause-crash-and-arrest-innocent-driver

          — hawkinspeter

          Very simple really… you are breaking the law, you refuse to stop when asked, so you are foraceablly stopped… well done to the police, was the rider hurt, nope, so reasonable force was used.

          I find it ridiculous that we ignore the blatant law breaking acceptance because the police used force to stop an idiot on a bike that refused to stop, what should they do… just let him carry on and pray  he doesn’t kill himself when he runs the next red light, people on this forum make me sick as your attitude is simple… when I’m on a bike I am the most vulnerable person on the road and that gives me the right to do whatever I want, this guy deserved exactly what he got, bottom line, ride responsibly and you wouldn’t get stopped…. 45 years cycling and not once has a policeman ever had reason to stop and talk with me, maybe because I don’t run read lights and ride like an idiot.

          — Biggus-Dickkus

          “just let him carry on and pray he doesn’t kill himself when he runs the next red light” – I know, we’ll run him over (and try to kill him ourselves) to make sure that doesn’t happen!

          There are lots of posts on here saying he got what he deserves because he didn’t comply with police instructions (which he may not have heard, wearing headphones)… Proportionate response, people! If I asked you to move out of my way because you were blocking, say, a train aisle and you refused or were rude back, so I stabbed you- you can see that’s not a proportional response, can’t you?

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          • FluffyKittenofTindalos
            July 13, 2019 at 8:25 am
            0

            brooksby wrote:

            There are always two sides to any story. In this case, the cyclist broke several laws including going through several red-light situations. He was told to stop on numerous occasions, not sure what he expected to happen. Looks like he got what he deserved… 

            — brooksby

            Yes, there are often two sides to a story, but I have trouble believing that the cyclist was endangering enough people to warrant being driven into, but maybe you have different priorities than most people.

            Also, was there video proof that the cyclist went through red lights as it has been known for U.S. cops to make things up. Here’s a classic example: https://www.thedrive.com/news/28865/incriminating-video-shows-cop-run-stop-sign-cause-crash-and-arrest-innocent-driver

            — bigbiker101

            Very simple really… you are breaking the law, you refuse to stop when asked, so you are foraceablly stopped… well done to the police, was the rider hurt, nope, so reasonable force was used.

            I find it ridiculous that we ignore the blatant law breaking acceptance because the police used force to stop an idiot on a bike that refused to stop, what should they do… just let him carry on and pray  he doesn’t kill himself when he runs the next red light, people on this forum make me sick as your attitude is simple… when I’m on a bike I am the most vulnerable person on the road and that gives me the right to do whatever I want, this guy deserved exactly what he got, bottom line, ride responsibly and you wouldn’t get stopped…. 45 years cycling and not once has a policeman ever had reason to stop and talk with me, maybe because I don’t run read lights and ride like an idiot.

            — hawkinspeter

            “just let him carry on and pray he doesn’t kill himself when he runs the next red light” – I know, we’ll run him over (and try to kill him ourselves) to make sure that doesn’t happen!

            There are lots of posts on here saying he got what he deserves because he didn’t comply with police instructions (which he may not have heard, wearing headphones)… Proportionate response, people! If I asked you to move out of my way because you were blocking, say, a train aisle and you refused or were rude back, so I stabbed you- you can see that’s not a proportional response, can’t you?

            — Biggus-Dickkus

             

            Probably all either Americans, or the kind of Brit who has pleged allegiance to Trump (of which there seem to be a distressing number, including our next PM, it seems).

            US cops have a long history of killing people who fail to carry out a complex list of ambiguously-expressed instructions.  Encounters with them can become a lethal game of Simon Says.  I guess it’s an intrinsic part of gun-culture.  

             

            Americans have built themselves a prison and called it liberty. 

  5. Xena
    July 12, 2019 at 10:47 pm
    0

    You do not knock someone off

    You do not knock someone off their bike . He could easily  have pulled up to him and had a word ,the cyclist would have eventually stopped. Policeman just pissed off because he feels that it’s his right to dictate to a cyclist a stupid fucking law , that thousands of people are breaking anyway . If the guy wants to wear headphones then he has to face the consequences of his actions if he did cause a accident. But the chances are slim . So the knob end police decided to knock him off his bike .  His he going to smash into cars when their drivers are on the phone. Is he going to run over a jaywalker . Police in the states are out of hand . They are supposed to help you not run you over.

    GO take a look at this https://youtu.be/Q9SZlypyK-

    police are out of fucking control and here to take a look at this .

    Moment man is fined £90 for hiding face from police facial recognition cameras

     

    wake up people ,the Orwellian nightmare is here. Stop looking at your phones and start looking at what is really going on in the world and it’s not the BS the MSM are shoving down your face 

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  6. Xenophon2
    July 13, 2019 at 3:01 pm
    0

    The usual polarization here

    The usual polarization here regarding the cop stop thing, I’m getting a bit tired of reading endless variations on the  ‘if he was riding a bike then whatever happened, he’s the victim’ theme.  IF everything  happened as related by the police officer then  you can put me with the ‘all things considered the officer acted proportionately’ crowd.   Cyclist repeatedly ignored orders to stop, ran a red light, endagering himself and others.  There comes a moment that he has to be made to comply.  I’m waiting for all the armchair specialists who weren’t there to explain how he should have handled it.

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    • Rick_Rude
      July 13, 2019 at 7:01 pm
      0

      Xenophon2 wrote:

      The usual polarization here regarding the cop stop thing, I’m getting a bit tired of reading endless variations on the  ‘if he was riding a bike then whatever happened, he’s the victim’ theme.  IF everything  happened as related by the police officer then  you can put me with the ‘all things considered the officer acted proportionately’ crowd.   Cyclist repeatedly ignored orders to stop, ran a red light, endagering himself and others.  There comes a moment that he has to be made to comply.  I’m waiting for all the armchair specialists who weren’t there to explain how he should have handled it.

      — Xenophon2

      How about……he just overtook him……got a bit ahead and then got out…….and shot him?

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    • ConcordeCX
      July 13, 2019 at 8:38 pm
      0

      Xenophon2 wrote:

      The usual polarization here regarding the cop stop thing, I’m getting a bit tired of reading endless variations on the  ‘if he was riding a bike then whatever happened, he’s the victim’ theme.  IF everything  happened as related by the police officer then  you can put me with the ‘all things considered the officer acted proportionately’ crowd.   Cyclist repeatedly ignored orders to stop, ran a red light, endagering himself and others.  There comes a moment that he has to be made to comply.  I’m waiting for all the armchair specialists who weren’t there to explain how he should have handled it.

      — Xenophon2

      “There comes a moment that he has to be made to comply.”

      why? He’s not committing a major crime, why is it worth putting his life in danger to make him comply? It’s like transporting children to Australia for stealing a bread roll.

       

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      • brooksby
        July 13, 2019 at 9:26 pm
        0

        ConcordeCX wrote:

        The usual polarization here regarding the cop stop thing, I’m getting a bit tired of reading endless variations on the  ‘if he was riding a bike then whatever happened, he’s the victim’ theme.  IF everything  happened as related by the police officer then  you can put me with the ‘all things considered the officer acted proportionately’ crowd.   Cyclist repeatedly ignored orders to stop, ran a red light, endagering himself and others.  There comes a moment that he has to be made to comply.  I’m waiting for all the armchair specialists who weren’t there to explain how he should have handled it.

        — ConcordeCX

        “There comes a moment that he has to be made to comply.”

        why? He’s not committing a major crime, why is it worth putting his life in danger to make him comply? It’s like transporting children to Australia for stealing a bread roll.

         

        — Xenophon2

        I think Rees-Mogg is lobbying for the reintroduction of that law…

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      • Xenophon2
        July 14, 2019 at 6:02 am
        0

        ConcordeCX wrote:

         

        “There comes a moment that he has to be made to comply.”

        why? He’s not committing a major crime, why is it worth putting his life in danger to make him comply? It’s like transporting children to Australia for stealing a bread roll.

         

        — ConcordeCX

         

        Firstly, you weren’t there so can’t make a definite statement about ‘putting his life in danger’.  Second, I guess you’d feel better if your better half or kid got run over and seriously hurt by an idiot on a bike than if the same were to happen by a car driver who ran a red light?  Anecdotal but 30 miles from where I live a 68 year old woman on her bike was killed last week after being hit by a bike courier who ran a traffic light.  I commute daily by bicycle, don’t even own a car.  But damn, the way some of the cyclists whom I see every day behave themselves in traffic I can understand that we get a bad rep.  That’s not to say that car drivers are saints but when talking about traffic light infractions in the city, I witness more of them committed by cyclists than by cars.  Third, pray tell:  how was the cop supposed to have stopped him else than by cutting him off after he repeatedly refused to comply (supposing that the circumstances as related are correct).

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        • brooksby
          July 14, 2019 at 6:59 am
          0

          Xenophon2 wrote:

           

          “There comes a moment that he has to be made to comply.”

          why? He’s not committing a major crime, why is it worth putting his life in danger to make him comply? It’s like transporting children to Australia for stealing a bread roll.

           

          — Xenophon2

           

          Firstly, you weren’t there so can’t make a definite statement about ‘putting his life in danger’.  Second, I guess you’d feel better if your better half or kid got run over and seriously hurt by an idiot on a bike than if the same were to happen by a car driver who ran a red light?  Anecdotal but 30 miles from where I live a 68 year old woman on her bike was killed last week after being hit by a bike courier who ran a traffic light.  I commute daily by bicycle, don’t even own a car.  But damn, the way some of the cyclists whom I see every day behave themselves in traffic I can understand that we get a bad rep.  That’s not to say that car drivers are saints but when talking about traffic light infractions in the city, I witness more of them committed by cyclists than by cars.  Third, pray tell:  how was the cop supposed to have stopped him else than by cutting him off after he repeatedly refused to comply (supposing that the circumstances as related are correct).

          — ConcordeCX

          Firstly: you weren’t there either.

          And secondly, this was a bloke on a hire bike not a courier or racer.

          I really don’t imagine he was speeding along, just slow and steady (and not stopping at a red): those things aren’t renowned for their manoeuvrability or speed, y’know.

          How often does the NYPD ram cars which have jumped red lights?

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    • FluffyKittenofTindalos
      July 13, 2019 at 9:21 pm
      0

      Xenophon2 wrote:

      The usual polarization here regarding the cop stop thing, I’m getting a bit tired of reading endless variations on the  ‘if he was riding a bike then whatever happened, he’s the victim’ theme.  IF everything  happened as related by the police officer then  you can put me with the ‘all things considered the officer acted proportionately’ crowd.   Cyclist repeatedly ignored orders to stop, ran a red light, endagering himself and others.  There comes a moment that he has to be made to comply.  I’m waiting for all the armchair specialists who weren’t there to explain how he should have handled it.

      — Xenophon2

       

      For me it’s not so much about the cyclist thing, as just being cynical about the tendency of US cops  to leap straight to maximum violence, whether it’s commenserate with the offense or not.  

      Maybe in this case he could have just let the guy go?  He wasn’t escaping from a bank job or shooting as far as I can tell.  (Also, if it’s a hire bike, are there not records on who hires them and when, thus allowing them to summons him later if it’s really necessary?).

       

      US cops:

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shooting_of_Daniel_Shaver

      https://edition.cnn.com/2018/11/30/us/dallas-police-officer-botham-jean/index.html

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shooting_of_Justine_Damond

       

      …and many, many others

       

       

      British cop:

      https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/11167891/Sergeant-who-single-handedly-tackled-samurai-sword-attacker-wins-bravery-award.html

       

       

       

       

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    • Hirsute
      July 13, 2019 at 10:21 pm
      0

      Xenophon2 wrote:

      The usual polarization here regarding the cop stop thing, I’m getting a bit tired of reading endless variations on the  ‘if he was riding a bike then whatever happened, he’s the victim’ theme.  IF everything  happened as related by the police officer then  you can put me with the ‘all things considered the officer acted proportionately’ crowd.   Cyclist repeatedly ignored orders to stop, ran a red light, endagering himself and others.  There comes a moment that he has to be made to comply.  I’m waiting for all the armchair specialists who weren’t there to explain how he should have handled it.

      — Xenophon2

      I think he should have just run straight over him.
      There he won’t be doing that again.

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The next big thing in bike manufacturing? Flit claims adhesive bonding helped it to make a lighter and tighter folding e-bike
The next big thing in bike manufacturing? Flit claims adhesive bonding helped it to make a lighter and tighter folding e-bike
Flit has unveiled what it claims is the first folding e-bike to use adhesive bonding rather than traditional welds. So, is the future of bike building looking stickier? Flit's managing director certainly thinks so
tech news
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Latest Comments

chrisonabike 6 hours ago

"All that's required is an to roads policing" - that's a big all... Although no doubt the "idiots just keep coming" aspect does apply: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cz9lel2wz93o "Man charged after car crashes through bowling alley" - luckily they only skittled over skittles.

in: I was hit by an illegal e-biker who ran a red light. Tougher regulation can’t come soon enough
chrisonabike 7 hours ago

Almost any change to roads and streets is accompanied by a period of heightened danger, and in the UK "look out for cyclists" will need to be learned... practically. And over the time it takes for cyclists to become a regular feature. OTOH once (if...) good designs are in and frequent enough such that drivers encounter them AND the cyclists on them regularly (another big if) I don't think they should be much more difficult than a footway to deal with. These things are all over NL - don't have the collision stats but they should. (NL isn't perfect but collecting info on the safety of designs to feed back into better designs as required is part of the "sustainable safety" philosophy - if they're really a killer I think they'd be altering these.)

in: “The car park has been there for 30 years”: Car boot sale given go-ahead despite safety concerns over “high speed” cyclists on new bike path
wtjs 8 hours ago

I'm in the happy position of agreeing with everybody here! I've never considered a bike with a stand, yet I'm impressed by the ingenuity and adaptability of this axle. I tow a Yak Bob with a Robert Axle, employing my El Cheapo Vitus gravel bike and I just have to be very careful where I stop. Hedges are generally a dead loss, and I seek walls, telegraph poles and signposts and generally lean the widest part of the Bob against it. One very awkward task is removing the two steel pins which lock the trailer arms onto the special mounting slots on the Robert axle, and when you have one out, the sodding weight in the trailer can twist the whole caboodle and bend the Bob fitting before you can get the other out and unhitch. I doubt if a stand would help with that. You can imagine that this combo is a real pain when you have to get it over the bridge at railway stations, and it nearly resulted in Merseyrail nearly parting me and the trailer on the platform from the bike on the train. It's a long story for another time. Another axle example recently featured on here, with a 12mm front axle bearing the Herculean weight limit of a monster American front rack.

in: Steady Ride Universal Thru Axle Kids/Cargo
HoarseMann 10 hours ago

This has nothing to do with the type of bike - it's the type of behaviour that's the problem. Banning the sale of such bikes will not curtail the behaviour. They'll just find another type of vehicle and continue to drive dangerously as there's such a lack of enforcement. I'd sooner see them ban the bally. But really, all that's required is an improvement to roads policing.

in: I was hit by an illegal e-biker who ran a red light. Tougher regulation can’t come soon enough
AidanR 10 hours ago

The EAPC Bill is welcome, but full of holes. What's to stop an overpowered but temporarily limited e-bike being sold and subsequently delimited? This is often a trivial process.

in: I was hit by an illegal e-biker who ran a red light. Tougher regulation can’t come soon enough
Sredlums 11 hours ago

@KiwiMike Yeah, in my over four decades of riding all over Europe I've never 'been for a ride in the countryside'. That must be it. Or, and I know this is a wild concept, you just accept that I just voiced my personal experiences and never missed a kickstand, like I wrote. Anyway, what's the big horror of laying your bike on its side for the very few occasions where there is nothing to lean your bike against?

in: Steady Ride Universal Thru Axle Kids/Cargo
mdavidford 11 hours ago

They may have looked, but did they see?

in: “The car park has been there for 30 years”: Car boot sale given go-ahead despite safety concerns over “high speed” cyclists on new bike path
jackcycles 11 hours ago

Ds2025: where they are going wrong is that they are crushing the motorbike rather than the person sat on top of it. If they did the latter this issue would be solved in less than 24 hours.

in: I was hit by an illegal e-biker who ran a red light. Tougher regulation can’t come soon enough
Rod Marton 11 hours ago

I came this way today with the car boot sale in operation. There was a marshal at the entrance, who stopped a car turning right across the cycleway as I was approaching. So that certainly works. I think it necessary for the marshal to be there, I couldn't say if the driver would have turned if he hadn't been there but you always have to suspect the worst. Unfortunately there is no marshal at the exit, and there was certainly a car stopped across the cycleway as I was approaching it. But he pulled onto the road before I reached it, and the following car stayed off the cycleway as I went through. Ideally there should have been a marshal there too. On the whole, though, it's a really high standard piece of infrastructure. Just a pity it doesn't extend a bit further.

in: “The car park has been there for 30 years”: Car boot sale given go-ahead despite safety concerns over “high speed” cyclists on new bike path
eburtthebike 12 hours ago

“absolute carnage” So right! Just look at the bodies piled up, blood running in the gutters and injured people limping away. It's a bit of a problem with a road, delaying some people for minutes at a time: it isn't carnage, let alone 'absolute carnage'. Anyone who exaggerates so ridiculously really shouldn't be allowed to comment in public, unless they want to demonstrate their idiocy to all and sundry.

in: Reform UK accused of causing gridlock “chaos” and forcing rat-running drivers to “bomb” through narrow streets thanks to new cycle lane works

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