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Daily Mail stages another London commuter race - and bashes cyclists again

The cyclist didn't come first for once ... but apparently number of people pedalling and infrastructure are to blame for slowness of other modes...

For the second time in 18 months, the Daily Mail has staged a commuter race across London, and as before the result is an article that reinforces prejudices against those who choose to get around on two wheels – although unusually for this type of challenges, for once the cyclist didn’t win.

The latest piece was penned by Sarah Rainey, who took part in the race from Victoria Coach Station to Jermyn Street – a straight-line distance of just one mile – as a pedestrian, the other participants using a motorbike, car, bus and, of course, a bicycle.

> 10 of the most hysterical anti-cycling Daily Mail headlines

The article notes that London “is the world’s most congested city,” with factors behind that including “a proliferation of roadworks — construction here has increased by 362 per cent since 2012 — as well as a rise in the number of vans (online shopping and supermarket deliveries) and widespread Uber use.”

However, it’s clear to see where the Daily Mail believes most of the blame should lie, with the article stating:

But cycle lanes, built across the capital as part of a £913 million ‘cycle superhighway’ scheme, remain motorists’ biggest bugbear, with many complaining about ‘Lycra louts’ clogging up a city that wasn’t designed for bikes.

It’s an argument repeated nationwide, with Liverpool, Manchester and Birmingham also boasting millions of pounds’ worth of cycle lanes.

With less than a third of rush-hour journeys carried out on two wheels, has a small but vocal group hijacked major infrastructure?

That “small but vocal group,” as the Mail puts it, accounts for 1 in 3 rush hour journeys in Zone 1 – indeed, it was recently revealed that bikes are now the most common vehicle type in the Square Mile of the City of London.

> Bikes now most common vehicle type in City of London rush hour

But according to the Mail, “For those who rely on public transport to get around — the elderly, disabled and those who can’t afford a car” cycling infrastructure is “wreaking havoc on their daily commute.”

Meanwhile, “with so many alternative ways of getting around, driving is reserved for those who don’t have a choice — such as the elderly or disabled, or those who do it for a living,” drive in Central London.

In the nice, shiny Range Rovers, BMWs and other high-end marques that abound in the capital presumably.

.Participants could choose their own routes, and each of the four not relying on pedal power highlighted cyclists as something that impeded their journey.

The motorcyclist who arrived first at Jermyn Street, his time of 7 minutes 15 seconds beating the cyclist by just 8 seconds, said: “Bus lanes are confusing for motorcyclists. There are some you can use and others you can’t — the rules don’t seem clear.

“Generally speaking, I hate buses. They’re normally half-empty, they stop too often and they block the roads.

“I’m not a fan of cyclists, either. They pull up in front of you at traffic lights and then can’t get away fast enough. I find it very frustrating and unsafe.”

Of course, one reason cyclists end up ahead of motor vehicles at traffic lights is that Advanced Stop Lines permit them to do so, although that does not discourage riders of scooters or motorbikes from being there, too. And increasingly, cyclists benefit from early-start traffic lights which enable them to move off well before the motorised traffic.

In second place, just 8 seconds behind was the cyclist, who said: “I got caught at several sets of traffic lights and ended up beside the car challenger, so I knew I was making slow progress.”

A particularly disappointing result for the Mail, presumably, given that it highlighted that critics of cyclists emphasise their disregard for the law.

Cyclist Dan said: “Rather than face gridlock on The Mall, I took the cycle lane through Green Park” – one, it should be noted, that being off-road takes no space away from motor traffic. “Though it was swarming, this bought me crucial time and I crossed the finish eight seconds after the motorbike.

“If I’d pedalled a tiny bit faster, I could’ve won,” he added.

Third home was the article’s author in 16 minutes 58 seconds, despite claiming that “on The Mall, I was nearly run over by a gaggle of cyclists who whizzed through a red light without a backward glance,” something she said cost her “five minutes recovering from the shock.”

She certainly seemed composed though in a photograph accompanying the article snapped as she stood in the middle of the very same street without a cyclist in sight. Perhaps it was taken afterwards?

Fourth was the motorist, clocking an improbable 17 minutes 41 seconds, given that 10 minutes of which was apparently spent looking for a parking space.

He complained that “London is becoming impossible for motorists” because “roads that used to flow freely have been narrowed so much by cycle lanes that there’s always solid traffic” – even though none are directly on the route he took.

“I felt like my car was surrounded by a swarm of cyclists, cutting me up at every corner. You can’t take your eyes off the road for a second, even to check the sat nav,” he added – not that you should take your eyes of the road while driving, anyway.

The final participant to arrive was the bus passenger in 18 minutes 20 seconds, who said: “I’m not surprised I came last,” she said. “But it does seem unfair that bus routes are clogged with cyclists — they should stick to their own lanes.”

Something that’s difficult to do when there aren’t any on the route in question.

So, blocking the road ahead of motorcyclists at traffic lights, almost mowing down people on foot, swarming around cars and using bus lanes instead of cycle lanes that aren’t there in the first place. It doesn’t seem that cyclists can do much right … well, in the Daily Mail’s eyes, anyway.

You could be forgiven for wondering if BBC broadcaster and daily cycle commuter Jeremy Vine had actually read the article in question when he tweeted this earlier today.

The last time the Mail conducted a similar exercise, in October 2016, the disdain for cycling was rather less thinly veiled – the article appeared under the heading, Cycle Lane Lunacy.

> Daily Mail stages race to highlight “cycle lane lunacy” – and proves bikes are quicker than cars in cities

On that occasion, it held commuter races in Bristol, Manchester and London – and in the capital, on a longer route that time of 4.25 miles from the Tower of London to Tate Britain, most of it on the segregated East-West Cycle Superhighway, the cyclist of course won.

And as we pointed out in our coverage of that article, cyclists have been winning these challenges (at least when there's not a motorcyclist involved) for years, and well before decent infrastructure came along.

Perhaps riding a bike is just a quick and efficient way of getting round?

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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38 comments

Avatar
Bill H | 6 years ago
0 likes

The DM doesn't slag off cyclists for fun, well maybe just a little. While we're cycling we're not reading their rag and are thus not giving them any money, or availing ourselves of the bountiful advertising contained there-in.

By pedaling to work we save money, keep fit and enjoy our independence. Now imagine what would happen if it really took off and everyone started doing it?

People who feel good about themselves won't need the vicarious pleasure of looking down on others, bang goes a good chunk of the DM's content about Love Island et al. The same goes for articles about dubious diets and health fads. Not to mention the dodgy financial advice / offers in the back pages. 

 

 

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Daveyraveygravey | 6 years ago
3 likes

The walker started running! "....broke into a jog"!!!  The whole "test" is invalid...

 

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ChrisB200SX | 6 years ago
1 like

I had to get from Camberwell to Paddington at rush hour this afternoon to catch a specific train. I missed it because my progress was frequently impeded by selfish thundertwats breaking the rules/laws and blocking the roads/cycle lanes for everyone else. I suggest this is the main reason why London's roads are so slow. I usually leave a bit later, the traffic volume seems about the same, just a higher proportion of idiots breaking the system just after 5pm  22

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OldRidgeback | 6 years ago
4 likes

By the way, the stuff about London being the world's most congested city is complete and utter bollocks. London isn't even anywhere near the most congested cities. Anyone who has ever been to Delhi, Bangkok, Istanbul, Mexico City, Los Angeles, Beijing or Shanghai for instance will know that commuting by road in London is a breeze. I can attest to all of those cities being absolutely horrendous at rush hour. Also amongst the most congested cities are Jakarta, Chongqing (in China), Chengdu (in China), Bucharest, Rio de Janeiro and Tainan. 

London comes in at 25th.

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brooksby replied to OldRidgeback | 6 years ago
6 likes
OldRidgeback wrote:

By the way, the stuff about London being the world's most congested city is complete and utter bollocks. London isn't even anywhere near the most congested cities. Anyone who has ever been to Delhi, Bangkok, Istanbul, Mexico City, Los Angeles, Beijing or Shanghai for instance will know that commuting by road in London is a breeze. I can attest to all of those cities being absolutely horrendous at rush hour. Also amongst the most congested cities are Jakarta, Chongqing (in China), Chengdu (in China), Bucharest, Rio de Janeiro and Tainan. 

London comes in at 25th.

Don't forget that this particular article came from the Daily Mail.  I don't think any of those other cities therefore count, because they're full of brown people...

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Dnnnnnn replied to brooksby | 6 years ago
2 likes
brooksby wrote:
OldRidgeback wrote:

By the way, the stuff about London being the world's most congested city is complete and utter bollocks. London isn't even anywhere near the most congested cities. Anyone who has ever been to Delhi, Bangkok, Istanbul, Mexico City, Los Angeles, Beijing or Shanghai for instance will know that commuting by road in London is a breeze. I can attest to all of those cities being absolutely horrendous at rush hour. Also amongst the most congested cities are Jakarta, Chongqing (in China), Chengdu (in China), Bucharest, Rio de Janeiro and Tainan. 

London comes in at 25th.

Don't forget that this particular article came from the Daily Mail.  I don't think any of those other cities therefore count, because they're full of brown people...

Most Daily Mail readers think the same about London... 

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handlebarcam | 6 years ago
0 likes
Quote:

For the second time in 18 months...

Is it any wonder they've stepped up their anti-cycling campaign? After all, they reckon they've won the fight to get "their" country back, so now they want to get "their" roads back too. And they're using the same sort of scapegoating and ahistorical bullshit to reel in the suckers...

Quote:

But cycle lanes remain motorists’ biggest bugbear, with many complaining about ‘Lycra louts’ clogging up a city that wasn’t designed for bikes.

So it was designed for cars was it? Christopher Wren and countless generations of medieval builders must've been geniuses to foresee that.

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Steve Cooper | 6 years ago
1 like

"It’s an argument repeated nationwide, with Liverpool, Manchester and Birmingham also boasting millions of pounds’ worth of cycle lanes"

 

When did this happen in Brum?

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ChrisB200SX | 6 years ago
3 likes

So 1 in 3 journeys are made by bike, but those are the vocal minority?

Are more than 1 in 3 journeys made by underground?
Are more than 1 in 3 journeys made by motorbike?

Are more than 1 in 3 journeys made by overground?

Are more than 1 in 3 journeys made by taxi?

Are more than 1 in 3 journeys made by walking?

Are more than 1 in 3 journeys made by private car?

Are more than 1 in 3 journeys made by HGV?

Are more than 1 in 3 journeys made by other, skateboard, rollerskates, jetpack, helicopter, etc?

Ah, so 1 in 3 is actually probably the largest modal share?

 

 

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PRSboy | 6 years ago
7 likes

Bus routes clogged by cyclists?

I think you'll find bus routes are clogged by buses.

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Beecho replied to PRSboy | 6 years ago
1 like
PRSboy wrote:

Bus routes clogged by cyclists?

I think you'll find bus routes are clogged by buses.

And a whole load of shit which shouldn’t be there.

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Crippledbiker | 6 years ago
7 likes

With less than a third of rush-hour journeys carried out on two wheels, has a small but vocal group hijacked major infrastructure?
For those who rely on public transport to get around — the elderly, disabled and those who can’t afford a car — it’s wreaking havoc on their daily commute.

Oh, do get fucked.

Many disabled people who cycle in London only do so because there is the infrastructure to support it.

Avatar
brooksby replied to Crippledbiker | 6 years ago
2 likes
Crippledbiker wrote:

With less than a third of rush-hour journeys carried out on two wheels, has a small but vocal group hijacked major infrastructure? For those who rely on public transport to get around — the elderly, disabled and those who can’t afford a car — it’s wreaking havoc on their daily commute. Oh, do get fucked. Many disabled people who cycle in London only do so because there is the infrastructure to support it.

Isn't there some horrendous stat about how many underground stations have no disabled-support infrastructure at all...? Clue: It's practically all of them (edited - I c*cked up my double negatives).

Avatar
brooksby | 6 years ago
4 likes

So you don't have to go there yes:

Quote:

Which mode of transport is the fastest way to cross gridlocked London? A cyclist, pedestrian, motorcyclist, car driver and bus passenger put it to the test... so who do YOU think won?
Motorcylist, cyclist, pedestrian, driver and bus passenger did experiment to see who could travel the quickest
The group of five travelled from London's Victoria Coach Station to Jermyn Street as quickly as they could
Results revealed cycling was quickest taking seven minutes while riding a bus was the slowest at 18 minutes
By Sarah Rainey For The Daily Mail
Published: 22:49, 25 June 2018 | Updated: 13:09, 26 June 2018

Gridlocked traffic, irate drivers and a dawn chorus of honking horns... travelling in London is a nightmare.
The capital is the world’s most congested city, with drivers spending 101 hours in traffic jams every year and vehicles crawling along at an average speed of 8mph — slower than a horse-drawn carriage in the 18th century.
As presenter and avid cyclist Jeremy Vine commented recently on Twitter: ‘On a cycle, a mile takes five minutes in London. On a motorbike, a mile takes 11 minutes. On foot, a mile takes 18 minutes. In a car, a mile takes 14 years.’
Drivers blame a proliferation of roadworks — construction here has increased by 362 per cent since 2012 — as well as a rise in the number of vans (online shopping and supermarket deliveries) and widespread Uber use.
But cycle lanes, built across the capital as part of a £913 million ‘cycle superhighway’ scheme, remain motorists’ biggest bugbear, with many complaining about ‘Lycra louts’ clogging up a city that wasn’t designed for bikes.
It’s an argument repeated nationwide, with Liverpool, Manchester and Birmingham also boasting millions of pounds’ worth of cycle lanes.
With less than a third of rush-hour journeys carried out on two wheels, has a small but vocal group hijacked major infrastructure?
For those who rely on public transport to get around — the elderly, disabled and those who can’t afford a car — it’s wreaking havoc on their daily commute.
Cyclists, in turn, say motorists are polluting the air and contribute to far greater numbers of accidents and road deaths.
Put simply, there is less space on the roads than there once was —and tensions are running high.
So just how long does it take to get from one London location to another? Is Jeremy Vine right that a car really would come last?
We set five commuters the challenge: to travel one mile, as the crow flies, across the city during morning rush hour — and see who reached the finish line first.
The race route was from Victoria Coach Station, currently surrounded by an impenetrable maze of roadworks that causes traffic to snarl up, to Jermyn Street just off Piccadilly, where a £14 million project to reduce congestion — and increase cycle lanes — appears to have made tailbacks worse.
Our racers? A cyclist, a motorcyclist, a driver, a bus passenger and a pedestrian (me).
Each participant was given a map and told to take the route they thought would get them from start to finish in the shortest time.
We synchronised our watches, powered up our navigation devices — and set off at 8am, the busiest hour on the capital’s roads.
On your marks, get set... let the Great London Race begin!

MOTORCYCLIST: 7 MINS 15 SECS

With the huge rise in takeaway delivery bikes and courier services, it’s no surprise our roads are overrun by motorbikes.
Numbers are increasing at a faster rate than cars, with 12.3 million registered across the country and 4.8 million whizzing around London over the past decade.
Not only can they circumvent jams by zipping through gaps in traffic and travel on the narrowest of streets, but since 2009 motorbikes have been permitted in bus lanes on London’s major roads.
There’s even an environmental benefit: riders say pollution would be reduced by 40 per cent if just 10 per cent of drivers switched to two (very speedy) wheels.
The downside? The danger. Deaths of motorcyclists on London’s roads are rising, with 33 killed in 2016 alone.

The challenger: Max Cisotti, 48, a photographer from South-West London, who navigates the capital on two wheels.

I’ve always biked to work — I do it for convenience and speed. My job can take me anywhere, so I need to be ready to go at a moment’s notice.
I can definitely get around faster on a motorbike than in a car, even though the speed limit is the same at 30mph.
There are lots of cut-throughs that cars would get stuck in — and if I find myself in gridlock, I can normally weave my way out or turn down a side street.
Bus lanes are confusing for motorcyclists. There are some you can use and others you can’t — the rules don’t seem clear.
Generally speaking, I hate buses. They’re normally half-empty, they stop too often and they block the roads.
I’m not a fan of cyclists, either. They pull up in front of you at traffic lights and then can’t get away fast enough. I find it very frustrating and unsafe.
I know this route well and, as I expected, the worst stretch was outside Victoria Station, where there are lots of traffic lights heading north.
I tried to skip the queues by going through Belgravia and around Hyde Park Corner, but then I hit traffic on Piccadilly, which was nose-to-tail.
I turned off the main road and dodged slow-moving cars in side streets to reach the finish line.
I was always going to win the race. Cars have no hope — the only way to get around London is by motorbike.

CYCLIST: 7 MINS 23 SECS

With roaring HGVs, treacherous roundabouts and red-faced motorists to contend with, cycling in Central London is not for the faint of heart.
But that doesn’t deter the vast number of bike-owners who make their commute on two wheels. Cycle journeys in the capital have doubled in a decade, with 730,000 trips — totalling half a million kilometres — made every day.
In Zone 1, during morning rush hour, 32 per cent of vehicles on the road are bikes. Eight cycle superhighways — 1.5-metre chunks of road preserved exclusively for cyclists — are in operation, with the first dating back to 2010.
Lycra-lovers insist it’s the fastest way to get around, but critics say cyclists are dominating our streets and disregarding traffic laws.

The challenger: Dan Ashley, 41, who works as head of communications at a trade union and lives in South-East London. He’s been commuting by bike for 20 years.

My commute takes an hour — from my home in Bromley in South London to Camden in the north of the city — so I spend two hours every day in the saddle.
I do it to keep fit and because I know how stressful it is to get around any other way.
I’ve spent too many unpleasant journeys under someone’s armpit on the Tube. You always get a seat on a bike!
I’ve seen London’s cycling scene change dramatically: there are so many more of us around now.
However, cyclists who ride on the pavement or jump red lights give us a bad reputation.
The biggest dangers are drivers who don’t indicate — you risk being hurled from your bike if they cut you up — and pedestrians who walk into the road with their eyes glued to their phones.
It’s brilliant to see so many cycle lanes springing up, but they need to be more clearly demarcated, otherwise cars veer into them. I’d like to see even more — car drivers don’t own the road, after all!
My journey to Piccadilly was stop-start. I’d plotted my route and wrote it on a piece of paper, which I kept in my pocket.
I got caught at several sets of traffic lights and ended up beside the car challenger, so I knew I was making slow progress.
Rather than face gridlock on The Mall, I took the cycle lane through Green Park. Though it was swarming, this bought me crucial time and I crossed the finish eight seconds after the motorbike.
If I’d pedalled a tiny bit faster, I could’ve won.

PEDESTRIAN: 16 MINS 58 SECS

At this time of year, there’s nothing more pleasant than a gentle stroll to the office in the sunshine.
As we become more health-conscious, and sales of fitness trackers soar 20 per cent year on year, more people than ever are commuting on foot.
Brits walk an average of 28 minutes a day, with millions completing the equivalent of a marathon every fortnight to and from work.
London Mayor Sadiq Khan wants 80 per cent of journeys to be made on public transport, bike or foot by 2041, and Transport for London recently issued a ‘walking Tube map’. It’s good exercise, there are no traffic jams or timetables — and you can fill your lungs with fresh (-ish) London air.

The challenger: Me. My home is in South-East London and my daily commute takes an hour by train, Tube and on foot.

Swapping my heels for comfy trainers, I strode confidently out of Victoria Station.
I don’t walk to work as I live 9.1 miles away, which would take three hours — but I have started getting off the Tube a stop early and walking. It’s an easy way of keeping fit, especially when you have a sedentary job, and there’s no gridlock on the pavements.
I put the finish line in Citymapper — a smartphone app which uses satellite technology to plot the fastest route — and followed the flashing blue dot.
Both Dan (on the bike) and Vittorio (in the car) passed me at a roundabout near the start, but I gave them a smug wave as they got stuck in traffic seconds later.
I navigated the roadworks around Victoria, took a right onto Petty France and then strolled through St James’s Park, with so much time to spare that I stopped to take a photograph by the lake.
On The Mall, I was nearly run over by a gaggle of cyclists who whizzed through a red light without a backward glance.
I lost five minutes recovering from the shock and broke into a jog to the finish line (thank God for those trainers). I was delighted to make the podium, proving the power of two legs.

DRIVER: 17 MINS 41 SECS

Two-and-a-half million Londoners own cars — but car ownership is declining.
With so many alternative ways of getting around, driving is reserved for those who don’t have a choice — such as the elderly or disabled, or those who do it for a living.
Not only are there strict speed limits (most roads are 20mph or 30mph), speed cameras and a hefty £11.50 congestion charge between 7am and 6pm, but there’s also the headache of parking. Motorists in the city spend 67 hours a year searching for a spot. Added to the 101 hours spent in traffic, that’s an awful lot of wasted time.

The challenger: Vittorio Frediani, 43, a security driver from South-West London

I’m behind the wheel all day, every day. I see the best and worst of the city’s roads — and there are definitely more bad than good.
London is becoming impossible for motorists. Roads that used to flow freely have been narrowed so much by cycle lanes that there’s always solid traffic.
London might be cyclist-friendly, but it’s becoming car-unfriendly.
I started neck-and-neck with Dan’s bike and we followed the same route past Buckingham Palace. Then he veered off onto his (rather empty) cycle lane.
I felt like my car was surrounded by a swarm of cyclists, cutting me up at every corner. You can’t take your eyes off the road for a second, even to check the sat nav.
Unlike them, I couldn’t cut corners, and instead ended up in gridlock on The Mall.
Then I spent another ten minutes in search of a parking space before sprinting to the finish line. What a nightmare!

BUS PASSENGER: 18 MINS 20 SECS

London’s public transport system is its beating heart, so heavily do its residents rely on buses, Tubes and trains.
But travelling this way doesn’t come cheap — with a Tube journey costing £2.90 with an Oyster or contactless card, or £4.90 with cash.
For large families, those on a lower income or children travelling alone — who only get free Tube travel until the age 11 — buses are the only way to get around, with a single fare costing just £1.50. However, cyclists can use bus lanes, too, slowing them down.
There are 8,000 buses on 700 different routes in London, and commuters take 1.8 billion journeys every year.
Every day, the network carries 6.5 million people. Despite their many stops and roundabout routes, buses have designated lanes on most main roads, spanning 240 kilometres city-wide.

The challenger: Vicky Allen, 24, an office manager from South-East London. She’s lived in the capital all her life but only started commuting, to a new job in the City, last month.

I used to work near to where I live, so I’m new to this route — and that means I don’t have the patience of someone who’s done this for years.
There’s nothing worse than having to stand the whole way while a bus driver jerks round corners and stops abruptly — it makes me feel ill.
The No. 38 bus goes from Victoria to Piccadilly, so my route was straightforward. Buses come every 20 minutes and I got lucky, with one pulling up minutes after I had arrived at the stop.
I even got a seat — a miracle in rush hour! — but it soon filled up with grumpy-looking commuters, many of whom were forced to stand.
The journey was smooth until we reached Hyde Park Corner, when we started crawling at a snail’s pace. This continued the whole way along Piccadilly — I thought we’d never get there!
I’m not surprised I came last. But it does seem unfair that bus routes are clogged with cyclists — they should stick to their own lanes.  

Avatar
freespirit1 | 6 years ago
2 likes

Dacre is leaving or has left the editor's chair at the Daily Mail.

Avatar
Legs_Eleven_Wor... replied to freespirit1 | 6 years ago
0 likes
freespirit1 wrote:

Dacre is leaving or has left the editor's chair at the Daily Mail.

 

I know.

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Paul_C replied to freespirit1 | 6 years ago
0 likes
freespirit1 wrote:

Dacre is leaving or has left the editor's chair at the Daily Mail.

 

but not quickly enough, he's still in place until November...

Avatar
Kendalred replied to Paul_C | 6 years ago
0 likes
Paul_C wrote:
freespirit1 wrote:

Dacre is leaving or has left the editor's chair at the Daily Mail.

 

but not quickly enough, he's still in place until November...

I wouldn't hold my breath for the next chief to be any better - they'll still have to pander to the pondlife that is their readership.

The Fascist King is dead, long live the Fascist King!

By the way, organising a 'race' on open roads? Did the police give their blessing to this?

Avatar
Legs_Eleven_Wor... | 6 years ago
4 likes

The knob on the motorcycle might want to reflect on the fact that if cyclists 'pull up in front of [you] at traffic lights', it's because you systematically stop inside the fucking ASL.  

But anyway, we would do well not to dismiss articles like this one.  It would be easy to wave a hand and say that well, it's only the Daily Mail, but Paul Dacre is almost certainly the most powerful man in Britain, and when that power is held by a far-right reactionary, we cannot dismiss him.   Every single anti-cyclist hate article empowers white van man, or white tattooed man in his silver Audi, or pouty, orange bimbo in her black Clio.  And the only reason that we still get to ride our bicycles on the public roads is because Dacre hasn't yet decided to whip up public opinion enough for the public clamour to demand that they be banned.

The Daily Mail is owned, written and read by kooks.  But they're dangerous kooks, and the time is close when its readership has to learn that a close pass or a right hook, or a deliberately aimed wing mirror come with consequences.

Avatar
Simon E replied to Legs_Eleven_Worcester | 6 years ago
0 likes
Legs_Eleven_Worcester wrote:

The knob on the motorcycle might want to reflect on the fact that if cyclists 'pull up in front of [you] at traffic lights', it's because you systematically stop inside the fucking ASL.  

But anyway, we would do well not to dismiss articles like this one.  It would be easy to wave a hand and say that well, it's only the Daily Mail, but Paul Dacre is almost certainly the most powerful man in Britain, and when that power is held by a far-right reactionary, we cannot dismiss him.  

Every single anti-cyclist hate article empowers white van man, or white tattooed man in his silver Audi, or pouty, orange bimbo in her black Clio.  And the only reason that we still get to ride our bicycles on the public roads is because Dacre hasn't yet decided to whip up public opinion enough for the public clamour to demand that they be banned.

The Daily Mail is owned, written and read by kooks.  But they're dangerous kooks, and the time is close when its readership has to learn that a close pass or a right hook, or a deliberately aimed wing mirror come with consequences.

Agree, though I'd say that the poison printed in the DM is only one of several influential sources of this kind of vitriol.

And Jeremy Clarkson, burnishing his 'bad boy' reputation yet again this week, has built an entire career - and made a tidy fortune - out of being a bully, belittling anyone within range and propagating some idea that he and his ilk have a greater right to the road than others, ensuring that the rights and safety of others can be ignored or trivialised.

Whethere it's cyclists or any identifiable 'group' which they feel is ripe for bashing. It's sickening.

Avatar
wycombewheeler | 6 years ago
6 likes

a third of journeys by bike, despite having probably less than 5% of the space, imagine if they doubled the cycle lanes, we could half the number of motorised vehicles on the road while only removaing about 5% of their space.

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Awavey | 6 years ago
2 likes

newspaper in publishes article that appeals to the views of its core readers shock,are we really surprised by this stuff anymore ?  it maybe a sweeping generalisation but I suspect a large amount of the readership of the Mail in London, is your average London cabbie, who if youve had the (dis)pleasure of using their services lately will unprompted wax lyrically and provide a running commentary on your journey about TFL and those <bleep> cyclists and <bleep> cycle lanes causing all the congestion and traffic problems holding them up, and Id expect the average London journalist use cabs more often to get around, than perhaps they hop on the tube to commute about

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Burke | 6 years ago
7 likes

The "small but vocal group" account for 1 in 3 rush hour journeys. What do these fatuous idiots think will happen if those 1 in 3 commuters jump back in their cars and rejoin the commute? A 33% increase in vehicle volume will have them popping a vein on their way to work.

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ooldbaker | 6 years ago
1 like

But cycle lanes, built across the capital as part of a £913 million ‘cycle superhighway’ scheme, remain motorists’ biggest bugbear, with many complaining about ‘Lycra louts’ clogging up a city that wasn’t designed for bikes.

Their own test seemed to suggest that parking was much more of an issue, something that more people cycling could help with, not contribute to. Even motoring at the speed of light and taking 10 minutes to park would see it taking longer than the winners.

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brooksby | 6 years ago
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So the motorcyclist was unhappy because buses are usually half empty...? Must be absolutely furious about all those private cars which are typically 75-80% empty, then.

(My commute takes me 35-40 minutes on a bike, door to door ; the bus takes about the same but I have to make sure that I'm out waiting for it as there's only one bus every half hour from my village into the city. I could drive a 75% empty car which takes less time, but then I'd have to store it in a n NCP for the day, and I only have one spare kidney...).

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crazy-legs | 6 years ago
2 likes

Same experience for me.

Car can be anything between 40 - 75 minutes. No telling from day to day. Free parking at work though.
Train is possible (with a drive at one end and a 1-mile walk at the other) but it costs a lot of money and is prone to delays, cancellations, overcrowding...
Bus - never even considered it, doubt there's actually a direct bus.
Bicycle is 65 minutes every time with the option of several routes including a couple of near traffic-free options (canal towpaths, off-road cycle paths on old railway lines etc). And it's basically free.
 

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MrGear | 6 years ago
7 likes

I commuted by motorcycle today: Teddington to Waterloo, which equates to 13 miles. It took exactly the same amount of time on a motorcycle as it usually does on a bicycle, despite me taking a slightly longer route when I pedal.

Two wheels is always better. Always. Cars and trains and buses are a horribly indigent waste of time, space and resources.

But I find the bicycle even more liberating than a motorbike as I can take a lovely route through Richmond park and I always know exactly how long it's going to take to the minute.

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OldRidgeback replied to MrGear | 6 years ago
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MrGear wrote:

I commuted by motorcycle today: Teddington to Waterloo, which equates to 13 miles. It took exactly the same amount of time on a motorcycle as it usually does on a bicycle, despite me taking a slightly longer route when I pedal. Two wheels is always better. Always. Cars and trains and buses are a horribly indigent waste of time, space and resources. But I find the bicycle even more liberating than a motorbike as I can take a lovely route through Richmond park and I always know exactly how long it's going to take to the minute.

 

I like commuting by motorbike and bicycle. Shorter commutes in London are best on the 2 wheeler without a motor, longer ones on the 2 wheeler with a motor. Driving a car in London is an exercise in frustration. I own a car but cannot for the life of me imagine why anyone with any braincells to rub together would want to commute in one in London. And yet every day when I go to work, I see people oin cars, most often sitting by themselves. It makes no sense.

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ChrisB200SX | 6 years ago
2 likes

Paddington to Camberwell (Denmark Hill campus, there is a train station there). It's got a mix of everything. Hyde Park, horses, closed cycle lanes, getting through/around Victoria, straight road, one way systems, asl boxes that everyone uses, zombie pedestrians, bus lanes, plenty of traffic lights, getting across Vauxhall, motor-biased traffic lights, dodgy ignored mandatory cycle lanes, inability to take the turnings you want... 6 miles. 23 mins on a Brompton  1

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Beecho | 6 years ago
9 likes

How about an actual commute for a test? Should have tried mine: Public transport on a good day, 75 mins; car, 60-90 mins (not a clue when you set off); bike, 50-55 mins every time and that’s pootling along, going the mile longer nice way. 10 miles.

But that would be a proper test...

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