OFF THE WIRE
agingrebel.com
Maybe it will happen like this.
I’ll catch a long parade of impossibly slow trucks on a secondary, two lane
road. I dream those roads. They float and dance in my imagination like bingo
balls – the 95 between Needles and Blythe, the 89 between Ash Fork and Chino
Valley, the 85 from Buckeye to Gila Bend, the 54 between Tucumcari and Dalhart,
the 49 from Kansas City to Carthage. I know them. I see myself on them.
I’m alone. One guy. No pack. One bike. An hour later some cop I’ll never meet
will carefully note that the sky is pale blue and the pavement is dry except for
my blood.
I drop down into fifth then fourth. Little packs of cars fly by on my left
going the opposite way. The wind pushes my sleeves up to my shoulders. The
trucks shelter me from the bugs. They hide me from the police. They hide the
road from me. All I see in front of me is a sign that says “Interstate.”
I bide my time, crowding the double yellow line until the line shatters and a
truck in the middle of the parade pulls out to pass. I pull right up behind him
and stare at a sign that says “UPS.” Maybe this driver is chatting with one of
the trucks I just passed. Probably he has no idea I am even there.
A hybrid that looks like a prop from The Jetsons tailgates me. The
truck behind me on my right wears a sign that says “England.” He drops back a
little to give the hybrid and me an out. As soon as the UPS truck signals he is
rejoining the parade the Spark or Prius or Soul or Scion quickly veers to the
right. I let him pass me and I pull in behind him.
He thinks nothing of this favor I have just done him. He thinks he is better
than me. He thinks he is more evolved than me. He thinks we are all born bad but
we all might hope to be redeemed by decades of schooling and psychotherapy, and
by our sincere surrender to social orthodoxy, and when necessary by preventative
policing and enlightened penology. I don’t give a fuck what he thinks. I’d shove
that hybrid up his ass if I could figure out how to lift it with one hand. And
so my attitude proves his point. It is an argument I used to have in the
seventies when I still wanted people like him to like me. Now I just want to be
free and for people like him to let me be.
My tires kiss the yellow lines. Now the hybrid is also blind so he starts to
drop back and he kisses the lines in front of me. The England trucker gives us
both room.
A pair of cars in the opposite lane warn me that another parade is following
them. The hybrid lurches left and then hurries back to the right when he sees
what is coming. He brakes hard. I shift down into third. The two parades pass. I
pull all the way to the right and see nothing.
The England trucker grows impatient. His lights begin to blink. He knows
something I can’t see. He sits so much higher than me. He is talking to
somebody.
I pull back over to the center line and as soon as I do a very old song
starts to pound in my ears – a song from the seventies. The riff is an endless
fortissimo warbling of the same five or six notes over and over and over. It is
all I hear. I don’t hear the engine growling or the road singing. All of the
great outdoors is my listening room.
I swerve left then right. I see two cars coming in the opposite direction. I
wait for them to reach the first of the trucks I can see ahead of me before I
open the throttle and aim straight for the hybrid’s left side.
The hybrid never hears me and he never sees me coming. He’s listening to his
life’s soundtrack. He’s listening to NPR so he’ll know what to think
and I’m halfway through fourth when I fly past him and pull into the middle of
the left lane. I’m past four of the trucks with one to go before I make it into
sixth. When I glance in my mirrors I see the England trucker has turned off his
signal but the hybrid is following me. Up ahead the first semi is trying to pull
away. He’s a truck without a name. He can’t outrun me, even in his dreams.
But then six hundred yards ahead of him a white dot appears. It is aimed at
me. I could pull back in behind the truck with no name but I know he is going to
slow down again when we find the next hill. So I keep searching for my top end
while the same five or six notes play in my un-evolved mind.
Bip-bip-bip-brrripp-bip! Yahoo! Maybe I have eight seconds. Maybe only
six.
Three of them burn. The center line becomes a double stripe again and the dot
becomes a car. We are headed straight for each other. I pull a little right, a
little tighter to the very un-aerodynamic truck with no name. I’m buffeted by
his wash. I only need another two seconds. I wonder if the white car sees me
yet. He is probably going ninety. We’re five hundred feet apart.
I feel a little adrenaline hit but I’m not afraid. I’m calculating. I do this
all the time. All the white car has to do is pull a couple feet to his right.
Usually I hear them honking about a second before we meet. Once when I was
playing chicken like this the oncoming driver pulled completely off the road.
Sometimes I’m past the front bumper of the truck before I meet what’s coming at
me. Sometimes I’m not. Sometimes I catch a glimpse of the driver’s eyes – wide
with terror or fury – and I know that when he eats dinner that night he will
talk about me: About the uneducated, un-therapized, unenlightened, unevolved,
unregulated brute he almost killed that day. I always hear the same five or six
notes. I always assume the driver is sober and that he is afraid to hit me.
So, I am probably not the most appropriate person to tell you that May is
motorcycle safety awareness month. As if you didn’t already know. I don’t know
how you can not know.
I’ve been ducking the story for three weeks because I don’t care about
safety. But, then most of the people in charge of May, the motorcycle safety
awareness month don’t care either. They care about fixing what has been wrong
with me since I was born bad – because, I understand, there is some money in
that.
Newz Noise
The newz noise started two months ago. In March the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration reported that motorcyclists were about 30 times more
likely than passenger car occupants to die in a crash. Apparently, motorcycles
don’t have crumple zones.
The same month, Chanyoung Lee, a scholar at the University of South Florida’s
Center for Urban Transportation Research, produced his own study that proved
motorcycles are dangerous to their riders. That got some press, too.
In April, something called the Governors Highway Safety Association announced
“that motorcyclist deaths increased approximately 9 percent in 2012, to more
than 5,000 lives lost. This is greater than the overall traffic fatality
increase projected by the federal government and would be the 14th out of the
last 15 years in which motorcyclist deaths increased. Notably, this level of
deaths closes in on an all-time high, and motorcyclists remain one of the few
roadway user groups where no progress can be shown over the last decade.”
Every newspaper and every television station in America downloaded a copy of
that last report. It was a microwavable story reporters in any state could
prepare in minutes. All they had to do was rewrite the press release and insert
their location. The report had data for every state and reported that motorcycle
fatalities were up in thirty-four of them.
Writing Newz In A Nutshell
Most of the stories followed the same, simple, three part format. First a
retelling of the most gruesome motorcycle crash in that local area in the
previous month. You know, like, “Little Billy Bob and Miley never guessed their
Daddy was about to be decapitated when he climbed on his motorcycle that fateful
April morning.”
Second, reporters found a local angle in one of the reports. For example, a
Pennsylvania story said, “Last year in Pennsylvania there were 854,493 licensed
motorcyclists, a 13 percent increase from a decade ago, and 409,017 registered
motorcycles, 54 percent higher than a decade ago. PennDOT data shows there were
nearly 4,000 crashes involving motorcycles statewide last year, resulting in 210
fatalities. This marks an increase from 2011 when there were more than 3,600
crashes involving motorcycles and 199 fatalities in those crashes.”
Or, “According to agency statistics, there are more than 194,000 motorcycles
registered in North Carolina. In 2012, there were 4,157 motorcycle crashes that
resulted in 162 fatalities and 3,970 injuries.”
Or, “An Alabama press release lists preliminary data showing 1,830 motorcycle
crashes with 81 fatalities and 1,428 injuries statewide in 2012.”
Or, “In 2012, there were nearly 800 deaths on Wisconsin’s roadways.
Approximately one in seven involved a motorcycle.”
Finally, add some quotes from a local politician. The Pennsylvania story went
on to add, “The deadly crashes came as Governor Tom Corbett announced a
proclamation designating the month of May as ‘Motorcycle Safety Awareness
Month.’ Corbett said in a statement that the decision was made due to the
increased popularity of motorcycling in the state. ‘More people are traveling
Pennsylvania roadways on their motorcycles, but it’s important that riders and
motorists alike are sharing the road safely,’ Corbett said. ‘If car, truck and
motorcycle operators follow simple steps like looking out for each other and
obeying speed limits, we can work together to reduce the number of crashes and
highway deaths we see each year.’ The first recommendation in the Governor’s
Association study, ‘Increase helmet use: Helmets are proven to be 37 percent
effective at preventing fatal injuries to motorcycle operators and 41 percent
effective for passengers. NHTSA estimates that 706 of the un-helmeted
motorcyclists who died in crashes in 2010 would have lived had they worn
helmets.’”
On Guam, “Acting Governor Ray Tenorio signed a proclamation Friday
recognizing for the first time on Guam that May is National Motorcycle Safety
Awareness Month. The signing ceremony took place at RPM Yamaha in Hagatna. The
proclamation seeks to spread motorcycle safety awareness on the island of Guam.
This proclamation ties in with Senator Tommy Morrisson’s helmet bill or bill 87
which is up for public hearing on the 28th. The measure would require that
anyone riding on a motorcycle or scooter wear a helmet.”
A Brotherhood About Trying To Evolve
The news noise really picked up around May Day when ABATE joined the act. The
organization was founded to fight helmet laws and the acronym once meant A
Brotherhood Against Totalitarian Enactments but sometime after I stopped paying
them dues it came to mean American Bikers Aimed Toward Education. Of course. The
more time you spend in a classroom the safer you will be.
Stories bloomed like dandelions. ABATE “presenters” shared podiums with
policemen. Reporters with stories to get learned that “Motorcycles are at an
extreme disadvantage when it comes to a collision with a car or truck.”
“From 2010 – 2012 motorcycle-involved crashes resulted in 509 fatalities and
more than 11,480 injuries in the state of Ohio. In 2012 alone there were 165
motorcycle-related fatalities. Of the 165 fatalities, the motorcyclist was at
fault 71 percent of the time. Taking a training class and riding with proper
endorsements as a motorcycle rider can help protect yourself and others from
injury or even death.”
“May is National Motorcycle Safety Awareness Month. In an effort to encourage
safe riding this summer, the Wisconsin Department of Transportation, along with
State Patrol, invited motorcycle owners to take part in a safety crash course at
the Rock County fair grounds in Janesville.”
“State University of New York at Oswego Police Lieutenant Kevin Velzy
welcomed ABATE Vice President Bruce Le Porte and President Jim Waterman to
present a moving and informative program on motorcycle safety.”
Most of these stories were aimed at motorists who learned that motorcycles
tend to engine brake and move around in lanes and are not self-balancing.
Our Protectors
The dominant safety story this May has been about the police. Sometimes local
policemen carry the educational load when a spokesman from ABATE can’t make it.
Sometimes the cops enlist a stand-in. “New Hampshire State Police, along with
the help of Randy the CPR dummy, are recreating motorcycle crashes as part of a
week-long reconstruction course in Concord.”
But the story usually read something like: “Police will conduct a Motorcycle
Safety Enforcement Operation on Tuesday in (insert your town’s name here) with
extra officers patrolling areas where motorcycle crashes occur. Deputies will
look for drivers and riders who are under the influence of drugs or alcohol and
crack down on motorcyclists and vehicle drivers who commit traffic violations
that can lead to collisions, injuries, and fatalities involving motorcycle
riders.”
The story was the same throughout the Northern Hemisphere of the English
speaking world. In Canada on May 7th, police stopped a pack of 150 Hells Angels.
“Police had information that the bikers would be riding today,” a police
propagandist in British Columbia said. “And with May being Motorcycle Safety
Month, police wanted to take this opportunity to conduct road safety checks on
the bikers.”
The Stornoway Gazette, published in Stornoway on the Isle of Lewis
fifty miles off the North Atlantic coast of Scotland, reported that police there
“are keen to raise awareness to all road users of the increased risk of road
traffic collisions involving motorcyclists over the spring and summer months, in
order to make our roads safer for everyone.”
Road Policing Inspector Neil Lumsden told the Gazette, “Our aim is
to stop and speak to as many motorcyclists as possible with a view to
encouraging and educating riders on positive actions that will help to keep them
safe. This highly visible and proactive approach will deter and divert
inappropriate riding, whilst detecting and appropriately dealing with any
offences. One death is one too many and by adopting this educational and
interactive approach, we hope to reduce the number of collisions and keep all
road users safe.”
In a news brief slugged “Motorcycle safety crackdown Friday,” television
station KERO in Bakersfield reported “Extra California Highway Patrol
officers will be on patrol Friday in an effort to increase the safety of
motorcyclists. Officers will be on duty patrolling areas frequented by
motorcyclists and where motorcycle crashes occur.”
Other news outlets reported other “motorcycle safety crackdowns” throughout
the state. So, “Additional police patrols begin Friday in Marysville, targeting
motorcyclists as part of the National Highway Safety Administration’s Motorcycle
Safety Awareness Month.”
In New York, “The state police will be focusing this summer on motorcycle
safety, utilizing motorcycle safety checkpoints and roving details that not only
focus on motorcycle operators driving habits, but also on vehicular traffic
around those motorcycles.”
Meanwhile In Wausau
Meanwhile the Wausau Daily Herald, noting that May is Motorcycle Safety
Awareness Month ran a long editorial last Thursday calling on Wisconsin law
makers to pass a helmet law.
“Wisconsin does not require helmets for licensed motorcyclists,” the paper
steamed. “This despite the fact that unhelmeted riders are 40 percent more
likely to die from a head injury than someone wearing a helmet, according to a
report from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.”
“In the real world, there are real public costs to irresponsible behavior.
Ambulances, medical care, disability; all these things come from the public
coffers. According to the CDC report, the estimated economic burden of injuries
and deaths from motorcycle-related crashes was $12 billion in 2010 alone – much
more if higher insurance rates and lost tax revenue are considered.”
The first thing I want to know is, does the Wausau editorialist drive a
hybrid? Does he drive it rudely?
Then after I think about this lecture I start to wonder what else all these
busybodies don’t get. They get what is wrong with me but do they get poetry? Do
they get art? Do they get Shakespeare, who died of pneumonia after getting drunk
with two of his hoodlum friends – the towering literary immortals Ben Jonson and
Michael Drayton – and passing out in a field? Would Shakespeare have lived had
he been forced to attend drunk school? Should he have been sentenced to
psychotherapy?
Do these meddlers get drugs. Do they get sex? Do they get rock n’ roll. Do
they understand they are going to die? Do they understand that this is all there
is? Do they understand that each life is little more than a quilt of moments: Of
this moment and that on the 95 between Needles and Blythe, the 89 between Ash
Fork and Chino Valley, the 85 between Buckeye and Gila Bend, the 54 between
Tucumcari and Dalhart, the 49 from Kansas City to Carthage? Do they think they
are better than me? Do they really think they know something that I do not?
Be careful out there for the next two weeks. May is Motorcycle Safety
Awareness Month so the police are everywhere. And they are afraid of you because
they understand that you are not afraid.