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Messages - Sturmkrieger

#161
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/cycling-london-uk-sadiq-khan-bikes-race-class-gender-a8367916.html

Too few women and people from ethnic minority groups cycle in London and more must be done to promote diversity among a largely white, male and middle class biking community, the city's walking and cycling commissioner has said.

Grand schemes, such as the Cycle Superhighway network of partially-segregated routes linking the suburbs with the centre, are too often perceived as simply a way of getting "middle-aged men cycling faster around the city", Will Norman acknowledged.

He said he was considering setting diversity targets for London's cycling population to ensure progress was achieved.

Black, Asian and minority ethnic groups account for about 15 per cent of the city's cycle trips – around two-thirds less than Transport for London estimates it could be.

Speaking to The Independent, Mr Norman, whose job it is to deliver on Sadiq Khan's pledge to make walking and cycling safer and easier in the capital, said: "There is a problem with cycling and the way it is perceived of getting middle-aged men cycling faster around the city, which is not the objective at all.

"It touches on something which is a real challenge for London cycling, which is diversity."

Mr Norman, the capital's first cycling commissioner, said he wanted to tackle the "gender divide" among cyclists that had spawned the term middle-aged men in lycra – or Mamils.

He added: "Even when we have seen the growth in the number of cyclists, we haven't seen that diversity.

"There are a number of reasons for that. One is that safety is paramount for getting different people from different walks of life cycling: older people, younger people, those from different backgrounds."

The mayor's office has unveiled a number of projects it says will begin to address a lack of diversity, including cycle training courses, grants for community groups who do not typically cycle and promoting electric bikes, as well as expanded cycle routes. On Quietway 1, a new route linking Waterloo with Greenwich, the proportion of women has risen from 29 per cent to 35 per cent.

Duncan Dollimore, road safety and legal campaigns officer at Cycling UK, backed the moves, saying authorities should be "focusing on the barriers that deter people from cycling rather than existing cyclists".

Mr Norman also responded to mounting criticism of Mr Khan's record on delivering cycling projects after nearly two years in City Hall, saying his boss had achieved more for London's cyclists than Boris Johnson had in his first six years in the job.

He said it was "nonsense" to suggest the Labour mayor was failing in his promise to make London a "byword for cycling" and said the city was on track to double the number of cyclists on the streets by 2026.

However, he admitted more needed to be done.

"Is it ambitious enough in the longer term? I think we need a higher level of change," he said.

"The target that we have set out in the mayor's transport strategy is over that 25 years we want to shift to 80 per cent of journeys to be walking, cycling or by public transport.

"That is a much more ambitious target and really is fundamentally rethinking the way that we move around our city."

Mr Khan has promised an average of £169m annually for cycling schemes over the next five years, tripling the length of the Cycle Superhighway network, and recently announced six new cycle routes.

That compares with an average yearly spend of £91m promised during the previous Tory mayoralty.

Critics, including the London Assembly's Transport Committee, have warned that Mr Khan is "not acting quickly enough to build new cycling infrastructure, particularly new segregated cycling routes, even where there is public support for them".

Concern about a lack of progress comes after the latest death of a cyclist who was hit by a lorry on a busy roundabout in Greenwich, southeast London.

That prompted the London Cycling Campaign to call on Mr Norman and Mr Khan to "hurry up" fixing the most dangerous locations in London for cycling.

Simon Munk, the group's infrastructure campaigner, said only a network of safe, comfortable cycle routes would see cycling's appeal broaden.

"The mayor just needs to crack on with making sure that network is there and is high-quality," he said. "Each new main road cycle track and safe-feeling quiet route brings loads more people to cycling as one of the most convenient, healthy and safe ways to get around."

Asked to address criticism the mayor had struggled to tackle stubbornly-high car use in the capital by shifting people onto two wheels, Mr Norman said: "I think that is utter nonsense, there is an awful lot being delivered.

"We have done more in the first year-and-a-half of this administration than Boris did in his first six years. It seems odd that that is the way people are looking at it because it is not actually true when you look at the figures."

The number of cyclists in London continues to rise – reaching three times 2000 levels – but at 2 per cent of all journeys, the city falls well short of others on the continent, including Berlin (13 per cent) and Paris (3 per cent).

Concern has also been raised about controversial plans for a new road tunnel given the green light by the mayor earlier this month.

The £1bn Silvertown Tunnel, which will be closed to cyclists and pedestrians, will worsen congestion and have a dire effect on the local environment, campaigners warn.

But Mr Norman defended the plan, saying that east London was badly served by cross-river connections. He also stressed a second, bike and foot bridge was planned to link Rotherhithe and Canary Wharf.

Following a successful ban on cars, taxis and lorries at the Bank interchange, which has led to a reduction in accidents and improved air quality, he said other junctions may soon see a similar overhaul.

"Where we can take out traffic, we will do, and there are a number of schemes which we are looking at from a design perspective," he said.

"The evidence I have seen shows there have been drastic reductions in the number of accidents in that area. It has improved speed for the buses. That approach of bus and bike only is certainly something I would be keen to look at [in other locations]."

Commenting on stalled plans to pedestrianise Oxford Street, he said he was "confident" a solution would be found by the end of the year.

And he said he supported the proliferation of dockless hire bikes, insisting they were helping to drive higher-than-ever rentals of the TfL-run Santander bike hire scheme.

Ruling out a TfL version of the dockless bikes, he said: "There is an ecosystem of bike hire that is working well.

"I personally think they are great. If we can get more people cycling, particularly in some of the outer London boroughs where we don't have some of the resources to grow the Santander scheme, that is fantastic.

"But it has to be done in a way that works for all Londoners, so having those cluttering up the pavements is really not what we want. If that is done in a responsible way with good numbers then I think that is a very positive thing."

He also defended the incoming deputy mayor for transport, Heidi Alexander, who stood down as an MP earlier this month.

Ms Alexander became an advocate for tougher penalties against dangerous cycling after her constituent, Matthew Briggs, lost his wife in an accident involving a cyclist using a bike with no front brakes.

Mr Norman said the former Labour MP for Lewisham East was an "avid cyclist" who was already "talking about the things she would like to see in terms of cycling".
#162
General Jabber / R.I.P. David Lane
Mon 28 May 2018
On this day eleven years ago, David Eden Lane (1938-2007), a true White warrior and hero of our race, died while imprisoned in a JOG gulag here in America. From serving in The Order to coining perhaps the best known pro-White slogan today, the Fourteen Words, he showed that he refused to sit idle against the Jewish power-hold and fought for our people even while imprisoned. May we all possess the same amount of courage in our hearts as he had within his own heart.

But while his immortal phrase "We must secure the existence of our race, and a future for White children" is practically universal, never forget that prior to the Fourteen Words, there was the First Commandment of Creativity.

"It is the AVOWED DUTY and HOLY RESPONSIBILITY of each generation to assure and secure for all time the existence of the White Race upon the face of this planet."

RAHOWA!
#163
Before I post the article, I'd like to first paraphrase what Klassen stated in the White Man's Bible about any race traitors or libtards who still wanna cry over those poor little Indians whose asses got handed to them in the Winning of the West (same with those who still cry over the Abos in Australia).

I say if you are a White person and you think we should apologize for our ancestors' conquest of the New World (thus allowing you to live in a developed nation today), I say first go find yourself the nearest Indian or Abo, sell him or her all your possessions, then let that colored savage bury a fucking hachet in your head, just like they would've done to your ancestor had he or she not fought back. Then, I won't consider you a hypocrite.

Now, onto the article...

https://www.yahoo.com/news/donald-trump-says-ancestors-tamed-164418877.html

President Donald Trump said at a Naval Academy commencement address Friday that "our ancestors tamed a continent," adding that "we are not going to apologize for America."

"Together there is nothing Americans can't do, absolutely nothing," Trump told 2018 graduates of the U.S. Naval Academy. "In recent years, and even decades, too many people have forgotten that truth. They've forgotten that our ancestors trounced an empire, tamed a continent, and triumphed over the worst evils in history."

He added: "America is the greatest fighting force for peace, justice and freedom in the history of the world. We have become a lot stronger lately. We are not going to apologize for America. We are going to stand up for America."

Before Europeans arrived in what became the United States, Native Americans occupied the land but were forced to relinquish territory as the new Americans pushed westward as part of what was termed "manifest destiny." In 1830, President Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act, which led to the deaths of thousands of Native Americans.

President Donald Trump speaks at the commissioning and graduation ceremony for U.S. Naval Academy Class of 2018 at the Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis, Maryland, U.S., May 25, 2018. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

Trump previously caused controversy when he held an event honoring Native Americans in the Oval Office last November with a portrait of Jackson in the background. Trump has regularly praised Jackson, although at times with a questionable grasp of history. He has also repeatedly referred to Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren, who has claimed Native American heritage," as "Pocahontas."

"A nation must have pride in its history to have confidence in its future," Trump said Friday. The president's comments mirrored a tweet he sent out in March celebrating National Agriculture Day.

"Our Nation was founded by farmers," he wrote. "Our independence was won by farmers. And our continent was tamed by farmers. Our farmers always lead the way -- we are PROUD of them, and we are DELIVERING for them! #NationalAgricultureDay

Trump added Friday it was a great time for the graduates to be joining the Navy. "We are witnessing the great reawakening of the American spirit and of American might," he said. "We have rediscovered our identity, regained our stride and we're proud again."
#165
Quite a shame Peterson chooses to stand with the perfidious Jew. Then again, if he didn't, he definitely wouldn't be employed in one of their indoctrination centers.

But hey, he's pretty good for funny clips.


 
 
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