Mitch Berg: Are conservatives allowed to ride bikes?
Over the years, this blog has had great fun bagging on conspiracy theorists.
I’ve mixed it up with 9/11 Truthers, Triggers (people who believe Bristol is really Trig Palin’s mother), Ronulans who think that there’s a conspiracy to build a trans-American highway, even people who believe (I’m not making this up) that Karl Rove sent a sniper team to shoot down Paul Wellstone’s plane.
But the most irritating conspiracy theory is one that I’ve encountered almost exclusively on the right – the theory that riding a bicycle unwittingly ties you into a shadowy international network of Fabian socialist Bilderberg cap-and-traders. All sorts of conservatives and “conservatives” believe this – from Jason Lewis, who is, bless his heart, the father of modern Minnesota conservatism, but is half-wrong at best on the “bikes and taxes” issue, all the way down to some of our “less-gifted” brethren.
So I want to establish two points before we move on:
- I ride bike. Lots. From March into December, I do most of my commuting by bike. I love it. It’s fun, it keeps me within shooting distance of “in shape”, and I just plain enjoy it. It’s also financially more efficient, which is an utterly conservative point as well.
- I am at least as conservative as you are, and probably more so. Whoever you are.
Which brings us to this piece, by one D. Dowd Muska. I’ll let you figure out which category D. fits into.
There is something profoundly wrong with a nation where more adults ride bicycles than children.
America might now be such a nation.
Along with every single nation in the world, really. Even in countries where biking isn’t the most affordable means of transportation for the regular schmuck, bikes are more common among adults everywhere.
While kids sit at home texting their friends and slaying computer-generated monsters, a growing number of their parents and grandparents are clogging the roads atop a contraption that was once considered a child’s toy.
Well, no.
The bike became a mass-market commodity item long before the automobile became affordable to most Americans. In many places, the bike was the first ticket the working stiff had to get off mass transit or quit walking, in those days before cars (and manufacturing jobs) became ubiquitous. In some parts of the country, the move to build paved roads was driven initially by the number of bicycles on the roads.
For the working stiff who couldn’t afford (and didn’t want to deal with the upkeep of) a horse, the bike was the original muscle car.
Two odious ideologies fuel the popularity of bicycling: anti-obesity extremism and eco-lunacy. Pedal power, we are told, will not only make you thinner, it will reduce your “carbon footprint.” (It’s a Nanny State twofer.)
Already slim, or pursuing other means to lose weight? Like your SUV, and don’t swallow the discredited theory that man is baking the planet? Then obviously you’re an idiot.
Well, then, by the opposite token – if I”m not already “slim”, prefer biking as a matter of personal choice (something most of us conservatives uphold!) to “other means of losing weight” (which are usually both less healthy for you and also bore me stiff), and don’t believe in global warming, does that make D. Dowd Muska an idiot?
In 2003, BusinessWeek asked Andy Clarke, director of state and local advocacy for the League of American Bicyclists, to respond to the fact that 500,000 Americans commute by bicycle. The figure was “pathetic,” he snorted, “for a nation that should be smarter and wiser.”
While this bit is utterly disconnected from the rest of Mr. Muska’s piece (it’s a non-sequitur, really), honestly, so freaking what?
A “community organizer” said something stupid yet arrogant and self-serving. This reflects on the individual biker exactly how?
Exactly the same way as some stupid quote from Pat Buchanan or David Vitter reflects on conservatives and conservatism at large; not a bit.
Feeling themselves superior to their countrymen [Objection: Assertion based on facts not in evidence - Ed.] in both health and environmental consciousness, many bicyclists flout road rules.
As opposed to “many” automobile drivers who…flout road rules. I mean, I”ve watched Cops; how many high-speed chases of bikers do you see?
Writing in the Rocky Mountain News, Arvada, Colorado resident J.M. Schell admitted that there was “a very, very good reason so many view those of us who are cyclists as rude, arrogant jerks. Most of us are.”
Which reflects perhaps on one J.M. Schell – for whom I don’t believe I ever voted as my spokesman, by your leave, Mr. Muska.
I personally find that rudeness and being the smallest vehicle on the road don’t go well together. There are ample reasons to amend motor vehicle laws so that bikes and cars can share the road better – but that’s the subject of a different post.
Recklessness and lawbreaking notwithstanding [Indeed, utterly logically unconnected - Ed.], Big Bicycle has attained the status of a lobby that cannot be ignored. “Bikes Belong,” an agitprop shop “sponsored by the U.S. bicycle industry with the goal of putting more people on bicycles more often,” boasts of “12 professional staff, 18 volunteer directors, and a $2 million annual operating budget.”
As a conservative, I personally am fine letting companies (and groups of companies) spend their own money their own way.
“Maximizing Federal Support for Bicycling,” a page on the organization’s website, explains that it spent $1 million on lobbying between 2002 and 2005, which ultimately produced “$4.5 billion for bicycling and walking in SAFETEA-LU, the … transportation law passed in August 2005.” Where did that money come from? You guessed it: the federal gas tax. (Four out of every ten dollars raised by the levy are diverted to non-highway expenses.)
OK, I’m confused here. Is Mr. Muska’s piece a slam on bikers as people, or a riff on transportation spending policy?
Because if it’s the latter, Mr. Muska is on to something. It’s the same “something” almost all conservatives have been on all along (gas tax funds should go to roads, not light rail or wind-powered pedestrian walkways or whatever. That is an actual policy discussion – as opposed to mindless and contrived name-calling.
Is bicycle-commuting a credible traffic-fighting tool? No, says Cato Institute scholar — and avid cyclist — Randal O’Toole. “I don’t think encouraging cycling is going to reduce congestion or significantly change the transportation makeup of our cities,” he said. “There really is very little evidence that any of [these efforts] are reducing the amount of driving. They’re just making it more annoying to drivers.” (O’Toole observes that telecommuting is far more common, and growing faster, than getting to work on a bike.)
And now we’re getting somewhere! Telecommuting is a response of the free market to the uptick in energy prices, to road congestion, and a slew of other motivations.
So, for that matter, is biking, for many of us.
Bicycles are wonderful, of course. For children. Only misanthropes complain about stopping or yielding to safely accommodate a couple of twelve-year-olds pedaling their way to the fishin’ hole.
For adults, bicycling has become a finger-wagging, revenue-pilfering, and increasingly obnoxious crusade.
If you buy into the conspiracy theory – that we bikers become tools of the vast two-wheeled conspiracy the moment we saddle up? Perhaps.
But as that noted conservative tool the Utne Reader noted, conservatives (including me – I’m quoted) ride, too - for impeccably free-marketeering, libertarian, conservative reasons.
John “Policy Guy” LaPlante focuses, unsurprisingly, on the policy side of things, for the most part, in his response to “D”.
This post was written by Mitch Berg and originally published on Shot in the Dark.
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Comments (10)
I've made the argument to some conservatives that initiatives like Complete Streets and even public transportation - which are often partially funded via gas tax - is really about personal choice.
I think some of the hardcore lifestyle bikers (bike everywhere! grocery shop! take your 6 kids to daycare! all by bike!) turn off a lot of people regardless of political stripe.
But when it comes down to it, the building of roadways in general is a subsidy for automobile use, and is rarely paid for en toto from gas taxes. So the 'it's subsidizing bikers/peds/transit!' argument is a lot less potent when you consider it that way.
Letting people have more legitimate choices, particularly for short journeys (trips to school, the park, soccer practice, church) doesn't take away the choice of a car. When given options, many people will take advantage. In many areas, though, riding a bike or even walking to school is not an option due to the ways in which roadways have been constructed.
And if it can help, even in a limited way, improve health (encourage activity) and decrease energy dependence (less gas used for 2-3 mile trips), this also has implications for economy and foreign trade that are compatible with conservative hopes.
Nice post, Mitch.
Nice piece. I think Mr Berg is seeing the inverse reaction that some of my peace, love & happiness friends get when they talk about their guns.
It's getting to the point that stereotypes just aren't useful anymore.
It's a point that's been made before, but it's always worth reminding people that when cars break road rules (and even when they don't, although speeding is almost completely ubiqitous) they have the capacity to kill, and do. Bikers breaking road rules almost exclusively endanger themselves.
I don't see that Mr Muska's piece, as related here, has anything to do with bicycling. It is a kneejerk feature of the ascendant and destructive form of Republicanism to favor bullying. This type views the world as a place of battle, where there must be the winners and the vanquished, and he/she lines up with the strong leaders, the authoritarians, and the bullies, and cheers when citizens expressing dissent are beaten by police in riot gear. Mr Muska is so pissed off that adults choose to ride bicycles that he publishes a rant about it? This is not reason in operation, it is just someone obsessed with the conviction that all human interaction must involve physical conflict and carrying around in his mind glorious images of bicyclists being flattened violently by white males in Hummers.
That tree, Mitch ... go ahead. Put your arms around it. Give it just a little hug. You know you want to! :-)
Julie,
Your point about the biking jihadis ("Do everythign by bike!") is dead on. I'm a single parent; a "transit-based" lifestyle and young children and/or having to work far from ones home neighborhood is absurd to the point of sisyphean.
Bob,
Thanks!
Brian,
"Stereotypes just aren't useful anymore"; from your lips to God's ears.
Jeff,
One of my great frustrations - trying to sell people on the idea of legalizing "Boise Stops" for bikes (bikes treat stoplights as signs, stop signs as yield signs) making traffic easier for cars and safer for all of us.
Mr. Holtman:
"I don't see that Mr Muska's piece, as related here, has anything to do with bicycling."
Ah! You found the clever diversion into dadaism! Splendid!
(?)
"It is a kneejerk feature of the ascendant and destructive form of Republicanism to favor bullying."
Interesting theory, but wrong. It is the point of view of one particular fella who, at least as re biking, is something of a "know-nothing".
The ascendant form of conservatism is deeply critical of the liberals' assumptions, intensely tolerant of political cognitive dissonance that leads toward a goal, and less tired and angry than bored with the constant we get from the just-off-the-mainstream left.
In other words, *I* am the ascendant, utterly constructive conservative.
Glad I could help.
Mr Berg - Thanks for your response. I think my point went by you. I know yours went by me (Dada?). PS Not a liberal, if that was your implication.
@ Julie..
The most important thing that a liberal needs to know in talking to conservatives about public transportation is not to use liberal arguments. On the other hand, when you start talking about things like promoting and shaping economic development and redevelopment, that’s a big interest to conservatives. When you talk about offering transit that is of a quality that conservatives would actually want to use–which usually means rail transportation–they’re interested, because conservatives are just as tired as everybody else of sitting stuck in traffic.
We have a world class trail system in the metro area. The Grand Rounds, Greenway, and east/west River Road trails provide safe and scenic trails for families and individuals to ride on.
There are also hundreds of miles of bike trails in the out-state region, many of which are converted railroad grades. Nearly all these trails are in the tourist based economies of northern MN.
My query would be this; how would a conservative bicyclist propose bicycle trails be paid for?
Is this for real?
Some of you guys need to turn off FOX news for a while, go outside, get on a bike, ride across town to a nice coffee shop and sip something cold.
Stop blaming every frustration in life on an imaginary group of "liberals" and pay some attention to your physical and mental health. It will pay off, big-time.