Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope they never reopen it. It’s national park land, not a commuter route for Maryland drivers
White cyclists wealthy enough to live close to their jobs telling black drivers who live much farther away from their jobs that they can’t use their roads
You might want to show up at Beach Drive one day and tell all the black people biking, running, and walking that they are being oppressed.
Cyclists are almost 100 percent white: drivers here are disproportionately black.
It’s worse than that. It’s 100 white guys from Ward 3 telling hundreds of thousands of black and brown people in PG and Montgomery counties who need to go to work to support their families that they can’t use their roads.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope they never reopen it. It’s national park land, not a commuter route for Maryland drivers
White cyclists wealthy enough to live close to their jobs telling black drivers who live much farther away from their jobs that they can’t use their roads
You might want to show up at Beach Drive one day and tell all the black people biking, running, and walking that they are being oppressed.
Cyclists are almost 100 percent white: drivers here are disproportionately black.
It’s worse than that. It’s 100 white guys from Ward 3 telling hundreds of thousands of black and brown people in PG and Montgomery counties who need to go to work to support their families that they can’t use their roads.
You talk about these men often. Are they in the room with you right now?
People with jobs that can’t be Lance Armstrong LARPing in the middle of day?
They are everywhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope they never reopen it. It’s national park land, not a commuter route for Maryland drivers
White cyclists wealthy enough to live close to their jobs telling black drivers who live much farther away from their jobs that they can’t use their roads
You might want to show up at Beach Drive one day and tell all the black people biking, running, and walking that they are being oppressed.
Cyclists are almost 100 percent white: drivers here are disproportionately black.
It’s worse than that. It’s 100 white guys from Ward 3 telling hundreds of thousands of black and brown people in PG and Montgomery counties who need to go to work to support their families that they can’t use their roads.
You talk about these men often. Are they in the room with you right now?
Anonymous wrote:How does this work for federal employees who are in cities without a nearby federal building? Are they expected to return in person too?