Safety Isn’t First

On every Ride, our bike has flown the Stars and Stripes.

Nothing is more American than promoting the “unalienable [human] rights” of the Declaration of Independence.

The flag commands attention and shows that we belong.

BikeE AT (Pennsylvania 2011)
Lightning Phantom (Kentucky 2018)
ICE Sprint 26 (North Carolina 2013)
Brompton Superlight (Washington DC 2018)

A man in rural Pennsylvania said, “Flying that flag may have saved your life.” Good point.

Our good New Jersey friend A. J. Bilenker …

Colonel Bilenker on his way to Ft. Drum (2012)

… advised us to fly the POW/MIA flag to be even safer.

Another good point. But that flag might be a poor fit.

There are no U.S. POWs. Most U.S. MIAs were lost at sea.

So we commissioned this flag in the same colors.

It will fly below our Stars and Stripes.

We light up our bike like Times Square, plaster it with reflectors, festoon it with bright colors, and “noodle” it to encourage drivers to give us at least a 3 foot (1 meter) clearance.

Utah 2022
Cyclist safety margin: as much as a whole lane, as little (in yellow states) as nothing. Click on the photo for details.

Jeffrey dresses brightly too.

Joey in fake fur, Jeffrey in blaze orange (Nebraska 2023)

The only drivers who don’t see us are the ones who don’t look.

Yet we …

That crash was over 10,000 Ride miles (16,000 km) ago.

Motorists—all say they’re good drivers!—have been our main threat. (Weather and terrain threaten us too. Dogs sometimes.)

And we’ve always worried a bit about how people will receive us.

So far, almost everyone has been kind.

Yet this year, we are extra concerned.

The leader of a major political party has accused Jeffrey of hating America. He says people like Jeffrey are vermin, enemies of religion, traitors to the United States.

Tens of millions of armed American motorists believe their leader.

A few of them will attack godless traitorous vermin.

How, then, do we stay safe?

We do what we can to be visible. To take only reasonable risks. To obey traffic laws. To show our love and respect for our country and its people.

The rest depends on factors we can’t control.

Anyway . . . were safety the goal, we’d hide in a hole.

The goal is universal human rights.

Some people put their lives on the line to promote human rights.

Others risk less yet stand up … by advocating humane and sensible laws … being a voice for the voiceless … writing columns and books … training lawyers … taking refugees into their homes and communities … sharing.

Colonel Bilenker shared his cap with Joey.

We have done some of these less dangerous things, in a small way, for a few people.

Big impacts always have been beyond our reach and ability—now more than ever, in the sunset of Jeffrey’s legal career.

What we can do on this Ride, in relative safety in America, is respond calmly and gently when we hear people repeating lies that immigrants and refugees are largely criminals, or diseased, or seeking handouts, or not human.

NY Army National Guard Sgt. Devin Colon: “We are in Buffalo to keep the migrants who are housed here safe. … They’re good people. They’ve just been dealt a bad hand.” (NYTimes, October 2023)

We can remind people that we all want a safe, prosperous, humane country—and can set an example of showing respect for different, sincere, informed views on how best to achieve it.

We can vote for honorable candidates who promote human rights.

And we can donate within our means to Human Rights First.

You can too!

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