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-   -   Something you need to understand (https://www.bikeforums.net/showthread.php?t=1180234)

livedarklions 08-05-19 01:23 PM


Originally Posted by literal trope (Post 21061148)
Why do you care how fast or how hard strangers on the internet ride?

Why do you assume that those strangers miss things because they ride at a different pace than you do?

Why do you assume that those strangers finish their rides at home and that they don't have anything else to do but watch TV?

Besides which TV is actually pretty great these days. OP probably thinks there's still only 3 channels to watch.

I ride fast and cover a lot of ground. Consequently, I see a lot, and I can also slow down if I want to take a better look. Why anyone but me would care about that, I don't know, but it appears to be the subject of this thread.

ksryder 08-05-19 01:24 PM

I'm curious what OP thinks you can see at 12 mph that you can't see at 20.

livedarklions 08-05-19 01:28 PM


Originally Posted by ksryder (Post 21061160)
I'm curious what OP thinks you can see at 12 mph that you can't see at 20.

The dog's teeth as he catches you.

jack002 08-05-19 01:40 PM

In the old days people would have a live and let live mentality. Well, all those people are dead now. LOL
Do what I do and like it!

bruce19 08-05-19 01:40 PM


Originally Posted by jon c. (Post 21060391)
never understood the point of these threads. do what you want, no one cares.

Oh no. Here everybody cares. And, some absolutely know how you should ride.

ksryder 08-05-19 01:42 PM


Originally Posted by jack002 (Post 21061187)
In the old days people would have a live and let live mentality. Well, all those people are dead now. LOL
Do what I do and like it!

Yes. Human history is full of examples of tolerance for opposing viewpoints.

https://cimg9.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...faf8ad9dff.png

indyfabz 08-05-19 01:43 PM


Originally Posted by ksryder (Post 21061160)
I'm curious what OP thinks you can see at 12 mph that you can't see at 20.

IKR. That's a total B.S. position. During faster club rides I am usually the one pointing out stuff like wildlife both on the ground and in the sky.

indyfabz 08-05-19 01:44 PM


Originally Posted by bruce19 (Post 21061190)
And, some absolutely know how you should ride.

The OP being the PRIME example.

bruce19 08-05-19 01:44 PM


Originally Posted by shelbyfv (Post 21060967)
I don't think speed has much to do with how long a ride lasts..

Unless you stop, I believe it does.

shelbyfv 08-05-19 01:57 PM

IIRC, in a previous version of this thread, OP explained that he posted this regularly as a service to new forum members. Maybe the mods could make this a sticky if deemed useful? If not, maybe the OP could get over it. Or we can have all this fun again periodically until the kids take the keyboard way.

livedarklions 08-05-19 02:03 PM

Until you have mastered the art of riding slow while riding fast, you are merely on the bike, not of the bike.

Daniel4 08-05-19 02:16 PM

I'd like to start a thread like this in a driving forum about how I like to drive at the speed limit. However, I would expect to get flamed for blocking traffic because nobody else is driving at the speed limit.

WizardOfBoz 08-05-19 02:45 PM


Originally Posted by TimothyH (Post 21060363)
He works for a copier company. He's not military or first responder.

Tim, I agree that there's a moral blind spot in many companies regarding respect for the human. That said, if you sign on for a job knowing the requirements, then my view is you're honor-bound to fulfill em as best you can. So if the copier company hires you with the proviso "You'll be on call 24/7", you kind of know the rules beforehand. And a copier or a fax machine in a hospital admissions department may indeed be mission critical. That said, I think that there's Fair Labor Standards payment and overtime requirements that kick in if they demand your availability under some conditions.

I recall a friend of mine, let's call him Roy, having a discussion with the boss (call him Bob).
Bob: Roy, We're gonna need to send you to Saudi Arabia for the XYZ project for the next six months.
Roy: Bob, I don't believe I care to go to Saudi Arabia.
Bob (becoming excited): Roy, you may not have a choice!
Roy (in his very relaxed, unhurried, calm voice): Bob, I always have a choice.
That ended the conversation.

anon06 08-05-19 02:46 PM


Originally Posted by Daniel4 (Post 21061261)
I'd like to start a thread like this in a driving forum about how I like to drive at the speed limit. However, I would expect to get flamed for blocking traffic because nobody else is driving at the speed limit.

Yeah, I've already seen that exact discussion between drivers, where the ones who said that they drive the speed limit on highways were being flamed and told by drivers who drive faster that they're the ones who cause accidents, due to being "slower" than everyone else who's driving faster (even though studies about car accidents have shown the opposite).

Nermal 08-05-19 03:23 PM


Originally Posted by 55murray (Post 21060725)
Well, I only wave back at folks on real bikes.

People on real bikes don't wave.

VegasTriker 08-05-19 03:43 PM

I guess there are a lot of fake bikes out there. How do I tell the difference? I also ride a trike and can tell you that a lot of riders in full kit and riding a regular DF bike wave. Maybe it is the fact that I ride frequently and probably see the same riders over and over. Sure there are a few with their noses pointed downward who probably don't see anything but the road ahead. Doesn't bother me.

mstateglfr 08-05-19 04:21 PM


Originally Posted by ksryder (Post 21061195)
Yes. Human history is full of examples of tolerance for opposing viewpoints.

https://cimg9.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...faf8ad9dff.png

Win.

Gresp15C 08-05-19 04:23 PM


Originally Posted by WizardOfBoz (Post 21061306)
Tim, I agree that there's a moral blind spot in many companies regarding respect for the human. That said, if you sign on for a job knowing the requirements, then my view is you're honor-bound to fulfill em as best you can. So if the copier company hires you with the proviso "You'll be on call 24/7", you kind of know the rules beforehand. And a copier or a fax machine in a hospital admissions department may indeed be mission critical. That said, I think that there's Fair Labor Standards payment and overtime requirements that kick in if they demand your availability under some conditions.

Indeed, if it's stated up front, then it will attract people who want that kind of work. I have a friend who was a senior nuclear power plant operator, and the times when he was on call were part of his job description.

If a hospital admissions department could be brought down by a single point equipment failure of something that's widely known to be unreliable, I'd be investigating more than just the job requirements of the repair tech.

Happy Feet 08-05-19 05:30 PM


Originally Posted by ksryder (Post 21061160)
I'm curious what OP thinks you can see at 12 mph that you can't see at 20.

On a bent you get a better view of the bumpers

TimothyH 08-05-19 05:35 PM


Originally Posted by WizardOfBoz (Post 21061306)
Tim, I agree that there's a moral blind spot in many companies regarding respect for the human. That said, if you sign on for a job knowing the requirements, then my view is you're honor-bound to fulfill em as best you can. So if the copier company hires you with the proviso "You'll be on call 24/7", you kind of know the rules beforehand. And a copier or a fax machine in a hospital admissions department may indeed be mission critical. That said, I think that there's Fair Labor Standards payment and overtime requirements that kick in if they demand your availability under some conditions.

I recall a friend of mine, let's call him Roy, having a discussion with the boss (call him Bob).
Bob: Roy, We're gonna need to send you to Saudi Arabia for the XYZ project for the next six months.
Roy: Bob, I don't believe I care to go to Saudi Arabia.
Bob (becoming excited): Roy, you may not have a choice!
Roy (in his very relaxed, unhurried, calm voice): Bob, I always have a choice.
That ended the conversation.

I agree with this 100%. Your post is lucid and well written. Agreeing to 24x7 is different from being told you must take 24x7 after the fact. I should have been clearer. Sorry about that to all.

And your point about the environment being healthcare is well taken. Thank you for that.

I took the OP's post as bitterness toward 24x7 but he later clarified.


-Tim-

wolfchild 08-05-19 06:44 PM

Bikeforums has proven over and over again that random strangers get butt hurt and bent out of shape, because of irrelevant things like somebody else's speed, diet, frame material, pedal type, valve stem covers, colour of their socks, chain lube, handlebars type and all manner of other irrelevant stuff.

frogmorton 08-05-19 07:18 PM

There are lots of aspects of cycling that don’t align with mine. To all those riders, I cheer you on. What a sad way to spend one’s retirement years, trolling those that harmlessly see the world differently.

WizardOfBoz 08-05-19 07:18 PM

TimothyH, I should emphasize our points of agreement. I do think that a lot of management reacts to their boss's mandates by decreeing work schedules without regard to what is feasible in 40 hour (or 50 or even 60) hour week. I don't think that's ethical, moral, or fair. Didn't want my agreement to sound like I was taking issue with your main premise: we agree!

Once worked seven 12s for several weeks, on a construction site in Germany. Interesting and tolerable when your 22. Would not be now. We were working to hand over a 300 million dollar portion of a vinyl chloride monomer plant to the client, and every day we didn't do it, we paid interest. And this was during the Jimmy Carter stagflation, 20% interest period. So, after working these insane hours we were successful and the pressure was off for a few days. Everybody let loose. I'm kind of personally conservative from a moral and ethical viewpoint. So I had a few extra glasses of wine. Some of the instrument techs ended up blowing nearly a thousand bucks over the weekend. I'm sitting in the bar, and they each walk in with one or two gals of negotiable virtue under their arm(s) and a bottle of champagne in each hand. Ah, memories.

Interesting that this came up. A person I'm very familiar with just told me that their management set a standard for how many new projects they had to initiate each week. I told them that it wasn't possible - the number of hours of work would subsume the hours in the week. So I'm doing an approximation of Monte Carlo simulation to help them show their management that the requirements they are insisting on are impossible.

downhillmaster 08-05-19 09:10 PM

Hey OP.
Why do you think I need to ‘understand’ some random and obviously selfish thoughts that popped into your head?
:rolleyes:

DrIsotope 08-05-19 09:50 PM

Sometimes a person on a bike might wanna go fast. Sometimes they might wanna tool around the neighborhood at 8mph. I don't understand people who go out and do 400k rides, but I also don't think they're doing it "wrong."

People who obsess over speed aren't doing it wrong, either. Frankly, unless you're using your bike to batter other, unsuspecting riders into the bushes, none of us are doing it wrong. It's riding bikes. It's a thing kids do.


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