OFF THE WIRE
America’s brief heyday was probably the interlude between the big World War
and the smaller war nobody is still really allowed to talk about. Maybe the
heyday stretched into the golden age of disco. It probably ended with Reagan and
it is definitely over now, for sure. But, the ghosts of that time haunt us
all.
America’s and the world’s fascination with all things Harley-Davidson and
motorcycle outlaw is really nostalgia for the way we were before the current
time of benevolent Stalinism. We now live in a world where Michael Bloomberg
must be smarter than everybody else because he is a billionaire. And because he
is a billionaire and must be smarter than all the non-billionaires it is his
duty to ban big gulps, and the Second and Fourth Amendments. Bill Maher has been
campaigning recently to have the Second Amendment repealed. After all, he
argues, if Swat has guns why would you possibly need one?
Yet there remains a significant subculture of benighted Americans who,
against all reason, continue to yearn for just yesterday when jobs were
disposable instead of workers.
The Devils Ride and Sons of Anarchy both pay homage to that
lost time before it was a felony to punch a cop; when men were the masters of
their own fate and when the going got rough you could just get on your bike and
escape into the west and make a fresh start. Boys don’t watch The Devils
Ride because they are interested in Sandman or White Boi. They watch
because they want to be Sandman or White Boi. They don’t want to be Michael
Bloomberg or Bill Maher.
Harley has been cashing in on this nostalgia for the last free years since
AMF got out of the motorcycle business. The times may have changed but the
memory, maybe it is an embellished memory on the cusp of becoming a myth, is
undaunted. Some weeks it manifests as a circus. This morning the circus pulled
into Rome. This Sunday it will be blessed by the Pope.
Hooray For Harleywood
Harley-Davidson, a company that until recently was so covered in the American
flag that sober men would tattoo the company’s name on their arms, has been
emphasizing its global market for the last few years. To that end the Motor
Company presented the Pope with two of its motorcycles and a leather jacket on
Wednesday in honor of Harley’s 110th birthday, One of the bikes was signed by
Pope Francis predecessor, the former Pope Benedict XVI. One of them will go into
a Vatican museum. The other will be auctioned off for charity. Maybe Michael
Bloomberg will buy it.
Thursday the circus pitched its tents in Ostia, a port city near Rome. The
event there is expected draw 100,000 visitors over four days. Thirty-five
thousand of them are expected to ride in. The event will feature test-rides,
beer, bratz, a tattoo booth and lots of Harley tee-shirts.
Sarah Hauer, writing in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, interviewed
a 15-year-old Britain named Adey Scammell. Scammell rode in from England with
three friends. When he arrived he had a Harley eagle with two pistons tattooed
on his back. Scammell told the Journal Sentinel. “Short of us coming to
Milwaukee, this is the next best place.” When Hauer asked him what he likes
about Harleys he replied, “the noise, the look and everything that goes with
it.”
By “everything that goes with it” Scammell was probably referring to what
Vladimir Putin, in an address to the Night Wolves a few years ago in Sevastopol,
called “the tempting feeling of freedom”.
Blessing Of the Bikes
This Sunday an estimated 1300 Harleys will ride into Saint Peter’s Square for
a blessing of the bikes by the Pope. Toronto’s Globe and Mail described
the blessing as “nothing short of a marketing triumph.” Of course it is. “It is
impossible to imagine rival motorcycle makers getting such attention and
privileges,” the Globe and Mail continued. “The blessing of the Hondas
or the Suzukis? Forget it.”
John Wheeler, a Harley executive whose job has something to do with
international perception management, told the Journal Sentinel, “the
brand and its American ideals translate across cultures.”
“Many people already know the Harley brand, even though we don’t sell in
their country,” Wheeler continued. “People know that we stand for personal
freedom, individualism and boldness.”
Thirty-five percent of Harley’s sales are now outside the United States.
After Rome, the Harley-Davidson noise and freedom circus will travel to China,
Austria, India, New Zealand, Germany, Australia, South Africa, Mexico and
Brazil. Then the circus will return to Milwaukee for Labor Day Weekend.