Anonymous wrote:There's an intersection near my house that always has a million bikers around on weekends. At the light I stop as far right as possible so that bikes cannot pass me, it really pisses them off!
Anonymous wrote:I do it because I feel more visible there. Cars pass me regardless. I worry about cars turning right at the intersection not seeing me otherwise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh get off your high horse. There's no moral obligation to criticize all people equally.
Good, because I save my harshest criticism for jerkoff motorists who make whiny complaints about seeing a bicycle not stop fully for some stop sign. Whoop-de-shit.
Anonymous wrote:I ride on my bike, in traffic, a fair amount and I don't understand why so many cyclists do this. If I approach a traffic light, I get in my place directly behind the car in front of me. If I were to go to the front of the line, then all the cars I passed in order to do so would then have to re-pass me once the light changes. It seems like that is the more dangerous approach for everyone involved - or am I missing something?
Anonymous wrote:I think because they CAN.
Still, it doesn't make it right.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's an intersection near my house that always has a million bikers around on weekends. At the light I stop as far right as possible so that bikes cannot pass me, it really pisses them off!
Why would you choose to be intentionally obnoxious like that?
Anonymous wrote:Because they have a death wish?
Anonymous wrote:There's an intersection near my house that always has a million bikers around on weekends. At the light I stop as far right as possible so that bikes cannot pass me, it really pisses them off!
Anonymous wrote:I love cyclists who act like cars. That is what they are supposed to do, and I respect and appreciate those who do.
The problem is the 85% of cyclists who don't. They ride the wrong way on one-way streets, run stop signs, run red lights, weave through traffic, etc.
I once almost hit a cyclist (downtown - Dupont area). It was totally my fault - I just wasn't paying close enough attention. The guy absolutely chewed me out - went on a huge rant about how drivers in DC are terrible about cyclists. I held my tongue, but I often wish I had chewed him out right back.