Conservative Cyclists Transcend Cultural Stereotypes
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March-April 2009
by Jake Mohan
The impression that biking is a political activity, and a liberal one at that, is reinforced by the most vocal members of bike culture. These are the folks who corner the media spotlight (and draw drivers’ resentment) with high-profile events like Critical Mass, a group ride that floods downtown streets in many cities as riders zealously reassert their right to the road. Similarly, when the price of gas climbed to four dollars a gallon last summer, the media couldn’t run enough stories about the unprecedented popularity of bike commuting. Activist bikers leveraged the newfound media attention to promote certain messages: that bicycling is an inherently political activity; that cyclists care about traditionally progressive causes like environmental protection; that more tax money should be allocated for bike paths and a transportation infrastructure not focused on cars.
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In fact, bicycle advocacy is not a necessarily partisan issue. In Colorado, Republican state senator Greg Brophy, an avid cyclist, worked with Bicycle Colorado to pass Safe Routes to School, an initiative that teaches bike skills and safety in schools. Brophy and his colleagues are also discussing a “Green Lanes” bill to give bicyclists safer routes through metro areas.
Conservatives on bikes represent the breakdown of clichéd culture-war stereotypes that so often keep people of different political stripes from connecting. Berg says he has made liberal friends based on a common love of cycling, and so has William Bain, a retired naval officer in the Pacific Northwest whose bike commute is a 43-mile round trip. “Cycling is the common bond I have with my liberal friends,” Bain says. “We can get in a heated passionate argument about politics and then go out and try to ride each other into the ground. Good clean fun.”
They also, of course, represent more bikes on the road—something all of us on two wheels, regardless of our political idiosyncrasies, can agree is a good thing.
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