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Crtitical Memorial

Today's account of a critical memorial from a first time participant and I WILL RIDE AGAIN.
Today was my first ride with Critical Mass, and what an important ride to be on with the tragedy from this past week and as a fellow cyclist. We have such a strong community of bicycle riders here in Portland, it is an awesome feeling to be riding with a few hundred of them next to you on metropolitan streets. The cops and corporate media were for sure out in force. What I do not understand is the need for 10- 15 motorcycle cops, vans and 5 - 10 cop cars as well as 20 or so bike cops. They are the ones blocking the road, riding in bicycle lanes, and disobeying bike and traffic laws.! Along the way we witnessed at least 10+ bicyclists being ticketed, each surrounded by 3 - 6 cops! As i see it we should be receiving a THANKS from the Portland Police Department and Mayor Katz for once a month providing them with a bonus paycheck from all the unnecessary ticketing!

The ride itself minus the ignorant, uptight, over bearing cops, was awesome, to be riding up Hawthorne and seeing the mass of bicycles riding up hill, then on Belmont from 30th Avenue to 39th we took the entire 9 blocks! YEA bikes.

Once at 39th and Belmont up to 40th we had the entire road blocked with bicycles waving in the air, you could feel a strong, positive, somber mood in the air as cyclists came together to memorialize the deceased and seriously injured riders from the past week.

I was holding sign, that was created by a fellow shifter, stating, "CYCLIST, KILLED HERE, by CAR!" and I felt a sense of community, a sense of grief and a sense of a bunch of GREAT love for the people surrounding me. We held a minute of silence, as I got tears in my eyes, I looked around at the majority of the people, holding their heads in thought, and wondered, "have you ever seen a group of people in cars stop and get out and hold a minute of silence for those killed in an oil war, to support their driving habits? or to mourn the loss of a fellow automobilist?" Ok that might be extreme, but a drunk driver killed 2, and hopefully not a third, that is EXTREME.

Afterwards, the policeman sitting in his car with the engine running was chanting to us with his speaker: "THIS IS THE PORTLAND POLICE..." as if we could not distinguish him from the crowd of bikes? There was a young man holding a sign stating, "Cars Kill more people in a year than the vietnam war" he was standing next to the curb, and immediately he was harrased, an officer pulled his sign down, I geuss it is not allright to think or make public statements against the mass automobile society, then he was ARRESTED! what a crime, ey. holding a sign, educating the passerbys and well OK annoying the police, but there is no where I have ever read or seen that says this is against the law?!

The crowd slowly dispursed and went in several different directions. Some people continued on to the site where Paul T. Hriskos was killed one week and a day ago. Some people travelled down 39th and that is where I lost everyone. Except for a small crowd of us just up a few blocks from Stark, at Laurelhurst Park, where a young man who was ticketed after about 20 minutes of discussion and quite a scene, we all would not leave until they let him go. It took 6 motorcycle cops to talk to him and his mom, one to talk to us, and one to direct traffic. What I gathered was he looked at the cop wrong, and was wrongly accused of signaling because most of the small crowd witnessed his signal, I think the cops were just looking to give out another $300 ticket, yes $300!

my conclusion:

From the gathering at the Park to the end of the ride was about 2.5 hours long! I will definitely participate again. and let me leave with this last comment, that when a police officer dies, a bunch of cops get together for a memorial, block highways, biways, streets and intersections, and NO ONE GETS ARRESTED!

but when the biking community wants to do this......CRACK HEADS man, cuz we are such a threat! Which is ironic, because we power our own transportation, cut down on automobile traffic, wear and tear on pavement, pollution, road rage, and wars for oil, somehow this is EVIL?
my first cm ride too 27.Jun.2003 22:14

freebee

this was my first ride too, and i will ride again, and again, and again, and i will strongly encourage all bicyclist to go as well,

thank you to every one who was there

shame on the police

see you on the streets

another misguided activist... 27.Jun.2003 22:39

an altruistic skeptic

so one more bicycle activist flowers in portland...

is there any direction to the critical mass activism? it seems to be on the same course as anti-war marching. Lots of hooting, hollering, sign waving, and verbal abuse towards the police and opposing persons. No effect on the course of the empire, huh? So-called oil wars and road rage continue to rumble, but why? Is it because too many people drive cars?

My real question is hard to word, but is something like - what kind of world can even tolerate, much less survive, this slow, poking, liberal leftist activism?

It sure feels good to be a liberal activist. Taking over the streets for an hour, making the hugest! sign ever, one more really good bumper sticker, allowing yourself to be symbolically arrested, veganism ... you know.

PS: the author is in fact a car-less vegan just trying to get the ball rolling. I'm on your side, but looking for something quite different, not the... for-a-better-tomorrow, PEACE-NOW! ... crap. No more programs for change.

*READ SOME FUCKING DERRICK JENSEN INSTEAD OF RIDING IN THE NEXT CRITICAL MASS!

that was critical mass, and then it wasn't 28.Jun.2003 02:26

anon

i sympathize with the last writer. (and applaud the first time riders)
that was the most disheartening mass i have ever participated in, and in 'debriefing' with my friends afterwards i found that i wasn't alone.
from now on we need to ride as if it is the last day on earth.
being corralled and utterly controlled by the cops does not a critical mass make.
in the past, when we've at least taken over all lanes and STILL stopped at stoplights, at least we've retained some shred of dignity. today we were separated and stretched out, had little opportunity to show solidarity with one another, (our 5 minutes at the murder site being the exception, before we all obediently left without any fight whatsoever when the robocops showed up), and allowed ourselves from the get-go to be herded like sheep.
either tactics need to be re-invented and re-imagined or critical mass is dead.

p.s. 28.Jun.2003 02:29

anon

next time read some derrick jensen and THEN hit the streets.
for fuck's sake don't JUST read!

i'll tell you the point of critical mass, apathetic skeptic 29.Jun.2003 18:31

solid gold

its about solidarity. protests never really change any viewers mind, but they do reinforce the feeling of community amongst like minded people. its a chance for us all to get together and ride safely and happily in the streets. sure, we can't block every fucking city street and interesection, but so the fuck what? its not about just pointlessly blocking shit, as we have all seen, that only gets you beaten down. its about riding your bike, and having the power of numbers on the streets. by myself, riding to work, cars have the power to run me off the road, etc., BUT they don't try that shit when theres 500+ of us. so what if the cops only let us take one lane. do you seriously think that is worth getting arrested for? i'd rather take the whole road, sure, but you have to pick and choose your battles. they can tell you to stay in one lane, BUT they can't tell you where to go, and they can't tell you to not ride your bike. if you don't like the direction of a ride, then get up front and make your voice heard instead of sitting in the back and bitching. oh, and hey skeptic, how about you stop sitting home and reading your informational books on how to be a revolutionary, and actually get out in the streets and BE a revolutionary.