Hans, the following link may or may not give you solace, but it does tongue in 
cheek give a new twist to the issue.  From Madison's own Bridget C. Brown (not 
the Brigit at DNR), who may be on one of these lists?

The Plight of The North American Bipeds
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nAEU0GjZorI

Arthur

Arthur Ross, Pedestrian-Bicycle Coordinator
City of Madison Traffic Engineering Division
215 Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd., Suite 100
PO Box 2986
Madison, WI  53701-2986
608/266-6225
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Hans Noeldner
Sent: Tuesday, June 14, 2011 11:03 PM
To: [email protected]; [email protected]; 
[email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: [Bikies] We are how we move

I live among a people who have become motor vehicles - our "carprint" on the 
landscape dwarfs the footprint of our feet.  Most residents of driving age have 
lost any sense of distinction between human self and motorized self.  Access IS 
automobility; freedom of movement IS driving whenever, wherever, and as much as 
one pleases - and then parking near the entrance for free.

Any threat to automobility is by nature existential; the reaction of many a 
motorist is primal and savage. To point out the obvious - that when most of us 
drive to most of our destinations, we make our community unsafe, impractical, 
and unpleasant for OTHER people to walk, roll wheelchairs, push baby strollers, 
pedal bicycles, and share transit - is to invite furious indignation.  "How 
dare you question my right to drive!"

But those who have intellectualized and rationalized their enslavement to the 
automobile may be the greatest obstacle to restoring the human scale in our 
community and ways of life.  Rants against evil corporations and the sprawl 
industry are welcome (naturally!); talking ABOUT the problems of automobile 
dependence are OK; but calls to action are nearly almost met with a stony 
silence.  The reasons for continuing to drive virtually everywhere are 
invariably excellent - not enough time, too hard, too dangerous, too hot, too 
cold, one person doing it won't make a difference.  "Why should I have to 
sacrifice?"

In places like Oregon, Wisconsin, our commitment to NOT having any choice but 
to drive appears to trump everything else.  What to do about it?  I am at a 
complete loss.

This is not happy talk.   Perhaps our collective insistence on "positive" 
messages does much to explain our collective failure to grapple with the 
quandaries our species has managed to create for itself.

Hans Noeldner
www.entropicjournal.blogspot.com<http://www.entropicjournal.blogspot.com/>

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