Seth Brundle wrote: » Church claims west London cycle superhighway 'will do more damage than the Luftwaffe'https://www.standard.co.uk/news/london/church-claims-west-london-cycle-superhighway-will-do-more-damage-than-the-luftwaffe-a3652441.html The same project is criticised by leading Tory Brexiteer who wanted French citizenship...Lord Lawson says cycling is most damaging thing for London since the Blitzhttps://road.cc/content/news/173223-lord-lawson-says-cycling-most-damaging-thing-london-blitz
Plans for a cycle superhighway in west London would cause more damage to a parish community than Hitler’s Second World War bombs, a church leader has claimed. Father Michael Dunne, of a church in Chiswick, has urged his congregation to pray that plans for a two-lane cycle path are scrapped after suggesting it would disrupt funeral processions. He accused Transport for London of proposing developments that would do more harm to the community than German planes during WW2 in a scathing Facebook post. And he said the “prospective trauma” would disrupt events taking place at The Church of Our Lady of Grace & St Edward, such as weddings, funerals and communions. ... It asks parishioners to “consider the impact” on “Sunday Mass congregations gathering on the pavement, the elderly, and families with children vs speeding cyclists. “Funerals: no right of way for carrying the coffin. No right of way for First Holy Communion and other processions. Weddings: no right of way for Brides in their wedding dresses.”
Lord Lawson has claimed that cycling is “doing more damage to London than almost anything since the Blitz.” Another Tory peer, Lord Higgins, has said that the Cycle Superhighways currently being built in the capital were responsible for more traffic jams and pollution. ... But Lord Lawson, a climate change denier who lives most of the time in France, also asked: “Is it not also hugely age discriminatory? There is a huge section of the population of a certain age, well represented in this House — I declare an interest — for whom cycling is not a practical option.” “I suggest to my noble friend that it is never too late to start,” was Lord Ahmad’s laconic reply.
A radical expansion of cycle infrastructure across south Dublin is planned by Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown County Council, following the success of the coastal cycle route from Blackrock to Sandycove. A network of 25km of connected cycle routes will be created using quiet residential streets, parks, and existing cycle lanes, along with access-only arrangements on some streets, the closure of parts of other streets to traffic, and the introduction of a one-way system in Deansgrange. Three primary routes are intended to facilitate safe cycling to at least 65 schools across the county, and will see previously disjointed cycle tracks connected for the first time.
mr spuckler wrote: » Is it just me that found these statements completely unnecessary in the FT piece?
Yes, I know that there are bad cyclists. Sometimes they jump red lights. Often they wear Lycra. I wish they didn’t. But there are also bad motorbike riders too, who act like our eardrums are non-essential items.
If we want cyclists to be less annoying, then we should build proper infrastructure for them.
zell12 wrote: » John Drennan in the Mail Under the headline 'Gardai seize 91 electric scooters [in 2020]' and delay in promised legislation for legality of usage, he quotes a government colleague referring to Minister Ryan as: "He is an awful ditherer, he makes Ross look like a hare"
magicbastarder wrote: » simon mcgarr (the data protection solicitor) was talking about a parallel point on twitter recently, in relation to the mother and baby homes/data issue recently, and it reminded me of the maxim 'the reasonable man adapts himself to fit the world and the unreasonable man adapts the world to fit himself, therefore for change, we need unreasonable men'. i suspect the biggest issue with the greens in government is that they're not willing to be unreasonable, the party is set up to punish people who aren't team players. mcgarr was making the point that what was needed from someone in roderic o'gorman's position was someone in charge to basically say 'i know this is something that many people have been working on for years, and even though i'm fresh in the door, i'm throwing that work on the bonfire because it's headed in the wrong direction' and that's what will happen with a lot of the greens, they're not used to actually being in charge and won't have the confidence to swim against the current when required.
zell12 wrote: » he quotes a government colleague referring to Minister Ryan as: "He is an awful ditherer, he makes Ross look like a hare"
magicbastarder wrote: » it's the letters page. which would not exist were everything to be fact checked and vetted for sanity. it's for people whose mates laughed politely at their jokes at the bar in the golf club, to inflict those jokes on the wider world.
eclipsechaser wrote: » I have no idea why the IT allowed something so erroneous to be published.
Seth Brundle wrote: » ...and yet another anti-cycling letter in todays Irish Times...https://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/letters/electric-bicycles-and-the-law-1.4390754 Did Mr. Walsh get his degree in law from eBay given that electric bikes are not propelled by the electric motor (Article 1 (h) of EU Directive 2002/24/EC)?
magicbastarder wrote: » that fine is probably dwarfed by the compensation he received, so i'm wondering from a legal viewpoint is it considered purely punitive, or is there supposed to be some compensatory element to it?
The Court of Appeal has added a €20,000 fine to the sentence of an “uninsured driver”, who crashed his car into two cyclists while four times over the drink driving limit, leaving one of them with a deformed spine and both with life-changing injuries. The court had already found that the four years in prison, originally imposed on Muiris Flynn, was unduly lenient for the charge of dangerous driving causing serious bodily harm.
Stark wrote: » I googled and I guess this is where the Harry Potter reference actually came from https://www.independent.ie/irish-news/election-2016/rightcol/the-front-bench-podcast-3-the-harry-potter-of-irish-politics-and-a-possible-fine-gael-fianna-fail-coalition-34465421.html