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I think that it's not that bikers are too preachy it's that many/most people are. On average people are very quick to tell you how they have been imposed upon. It takes some patience to put up with all the other people in the world, when a person is doing something imposing (even if unknowingly) you can A) say something B) grit and let it slide.
Many/Most(?) people are of group 'A' where they need to tell the other person why they have been slighted or put upon. When a person is being an idiot and you take route 'B' you are made powerless for a moment as you bend to accommodate the other person. This ensures a functioning civilization but on an individual level it can get irritating. Just 10 minutes ago I was at the maxwell street market and 3 women where side by side with their rolling roadblock of pushing baby strollers. On one hand they were impervious to the people getting clogged behind them but on the other hand I'm going go out of my way to say something to some moms on their day out with their babies? I let it slide but was quietly irked.
It actually goes one level past that, where a person blareing music at full volume feels imposed upon if someone asks them to turn it down "It's my music, don't you tell me to turn it down, who do you think you are? You're not my mom."
There was/is the whole thread here of people wanting to bust people wrongly parked in bike lanes. It's the same "What? I have to go all the way out of the lane? Call the cops and get that person towed" Meanwhile someone somewhere else is developing an app to bust cyclists doing all the dumb stuff we do, (I am forever going the wrong way down one way streets and rolling through the red at dead intersections) and this just ends up with people being all short and pissy and getting indignant on each other and making the world more crass and rude.
It also odd in that it removes ones own personal power, if rather than talking to the person about parking in the bike lane and zip a pic off to the cops then you are placing cops as the arbitrator, the authority figure. Then the drivers snap pics of bikers and send them to the cops and everyone becomes like squabbling children complaining to the adults.
I don't think its cyclists that are hard on each other but its a common trait across society.
That was a very wise post VW.
For me it's more about safety -- people expect me to pass on the left, so I would just wait until I could pass on the left. If I'm being honest, I'm patient for my own sake -- I've seen people swerve all over the place, so I'd rather not creep up on someone on the right only to have them barge into me. I feel like one of the biggest parts of defensive cycling (and driving, and walking..) is to be predictable. Passing on the left helps with that!
Great post. In short, don't sweat the small things!
VW? Well dude, I drive a BMW, and as an owner of the Ultimate Driving Machine, I own the road and nobody tooling around in a mere VW is gonna tell a BMW driver what to do. Geez, the preachiness of some people. Now if you had called yourself Porche or Audi, I might grant you a little more credence here.
I wouldn't hold out much hope about the Creedence
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