Politics, open government, and safe streets. And the constant incursion of cycling.

Category: DC Page 8 of 26

Reminder: VASA Ride in DC on Sunday

Sunday, March 1st, will bring us DC’s third VASA Ride.   They had 200 riders in 2007, and around 300 in 2008.  Would love to see that increase substantially this year.  And with snow and cold predicted for Sunday, who could possibly want to stay home?

Oh, right – what’s the VASA Ride?  It’s a mass ride (of varying lengths) sponsored by the Embassy of Sweden to celebrate the Vasaloppet, a Swedish ski race.   Last year we rode from the Embassy up MacArthur Boulevard to Cabin John and back.  It’s not a race – just a fun group ride.  The best part?  The free hot blueberry soup served by the Embassy at the end.  If you’re in the DC area, I hope you’ll check it out.   More info, including start times and (optional) registration here.

DIY Bike Repair Shops in DC?

Freewheeling Spirit wishes:

that D.C. had a DIY bike repair shop.

I’d like to see something like the Bike Kitchen in San Francisco (watch the Bike Kitchen video on youtube). Then, instead of working alone in a cramped space, I could be working and joking alongside fellow cyclists with lots of space and access to every tool I need.

I second that.   Bikes aren’t terribly complicated to work on, but very few people have the tools they need to do so easily and safely.   And who wants to buy and store tools that you’ll only need occasionally?  A DIY bike shop – say, attached to a community center – would solve that problem.   The military bases I grew up around always had something similar for cars and woodworking, and they were heavily used.  I suspect the right location would yield the same result in DC.

Mark Your Calendar for the VASA Ride: March 1st

Washcycle wrote the post answering the question I was thinking about at the same time – when will this year’s VASA Ride take place?  March 1st is the answer, it seems.   They had 200 riders in 2007, and around 300 in 2008.  Would love to see that increase substantially this year.

Oh, right – what’s the VASA Ride?  It’s a mass ride (of varying lengths) sponsored by the Embassy of Sweden to celebrate the Vasaloppet, a Swedish ski race.  DC, thank god, isn’t cold enough to have a companion ski race, so we do it on bikes.  Last year we rode from the Embassy up MacArthur Boulevard to Cabin John and back.  It’s not a race – just a fun group ride.  The best part?  The free hot blueberry soup served by the Embassy at the end.  If you’re in the DC area, I hope you’ll check it out.   (In fact, if you’re on the fence about it, drop me an email and let me dragoon convince you to ride with me and the group I’m forcing assembling.)

Can’t Ride In Snow? Smartbike DC Says No

Just got this:

Due to increasingly bad weather and a concern for rider safety, we will be temporarily suspending SmartBike DC use until further notice. We will update you by email and on our website when we have resumed operation.

Thank you for your cooperation and understanding.

Your SmartBike Team
Clear Channel Outdoor

Huh.  Maybe they’ll shut down in the summer, too, when the UV Index gets too high?

Friday Notes: Breaking the Ice Edition

Frozen Potomac

I understand that we’re getting alll the way into the 40s today, before plunging back into the frozen winter.  Sounds like a good time for my annual solicitation for employment near the Equator.  I mix an excellent martini.

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Matt Cooper thinks that if we really want to change government, we should get serious about improving defense procurement.  I think that the public appetite for this is fairly thin, but if it were done right, it could bring massive returns.

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Getty Images goes looking for content at Flickr.  Interesting.   There are loads and loads of phenomenally skilled photographers on Flickr, but I can’t help but feel like this is just one more step in the direction of making it harder to make a living as a professional photographer.

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Apple, making sure your kids sell candy instead of dope.  Or something like that.  (DopeWars has been on every handheld I’ve had since 1998).

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Thomas Fuchs and Felix Sockwell ofter some branding help to the GOP.  Some of them are actually quite thoughtful.

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I’d really like to see some follow-up on, and independent confirmation of, NSA whistleblower Russell Tice’s claims aired on Wednesday night:

TICE: Well, I don’t know what our former president knew or didn’t know. I’m sort of down in the weeds. But the National Security Agency had access to all Americans’ communications, faxes, phone calls, and their computer communications. And that doesn’t — it didn’t matter whether you were in Kansas, you know, in the middle of the country, and you never made a communication — foreign communications at all. They monitored all communications. (emphasis supplied)

He goes on to explain how the NSA, under the guise of trying to ensure that they weren’t reaching into communications they shouldn’t, were doing exactly that.   Now, I do tend to believe that the NSA has done that (see, e.g., statements that some NSA employees were listening in on intimate conversations between deployed soldiers and their wives).  A systematic wholesale monitoring on the scale of what Tice is talking about, however, goes well beyond my original suspicions.  But not beyond possibility.  I’d like to see his claims taken seriously and investigated.

On Geithner and His Taxes

The moment I heard the nature of Timothy Geithner’s tax issue explained, I felt like I knew something about the man.  James Fallows explains:

I do not believe, and will never believe, that his failure to pay his own self-employment tax while at the IMF was an “oversight” or a “mistake.” I have many many friends who have worked for this and similar organizations.

[ . . . ]

I could go on with details but I’ll just say: if this were a situation more average Americans had experienced personally, he would not dare make his “mistake” excuse because everyone would say, “Are you kidding me???”

This tracks perfectly with my own reaction, based on my experience in a town full of people who have similar employment.   It seems clear that this issue isn’t going to derail him, and maybe that’s okay:

I accept the argument that he is a necessary part of what has to be the best possible team America can assemble at this moment. But I don’t like the fact that he is obviously dissembling on this point, and that he obviously was not playing it straight over a long period of years.

Keep that in mind, in the coming years.

An Inaugural View from the Mall

Roughly two million people showed up to see the inauguration of Barack Obama on Tuesday, and there are almost as many stories out there about that.  My own is of an easy and wonderful day – we biked down around 8:30, huddled like penguins trying to stay warm for a few hours, experienced the joy of turning the page on a dark chapter of American history with a couple million people, and rode home after.   Pictures here, if you like.

I also want to share the story of a friend who traveled in from out in Loudoun County, Virginia.  While she had to go through a lot more trouble than me to join everyone on the Mall, it sounds like she had a fantastic time, too:

The MARC train experience was excellent-  we left my house at 7:30 and drove to the bridge over the Potomac at Point of Rocks station- parked the car in a near empty parking lot and got aboard the train.  While on the train waiting on the car with the bathroom,  I met people from Ohio, Washington state, Massachusetts, and Atlanta. Everyone was so excited. There was a man with his 10 month old daughter heading down.  I hope she was warm enough.  We met a man, Doug from Frederick, traveling alone and George and I adopted him to walk with us to the Mall.

We got into Union Station right before 10 AM and it took us 1.5 hours to walk (slog) over and finally find a place to enter the Mall at the Washington Monument. We had to navigate the street closings near the Capital and try to get from D and other streets back to Independence Ave.  I have never seen so many people in my life on the streets to “Mecca” but everyone was very polite and cooperative.  We lost our new friend Doug in the massive crowd.  I held George’s hand the whole time so we would not be separated, it was that crowded around us.

On the way over, we saw the lines of people with orange tickets snaking for blocks and wondered how many of them actually got through in time to get on the Mall.  I heard stories about many blue and purple ticket holders not getting in.  Honestly, I never thought we would make it in time but we finally got on the Mall at 11:30.  There were still so many people on the street trying to get to the Mall on time.  Just amazing.

The jumbotron was not that close, but we could still see it and just decided to stay put as the ceremony was about to start.  When Bush was shown on the screen there was massive booing all over the Mall – that many people booing was truly amazing. (I was one of them).  There were some kids by us who got separated from their dad and a woman was going to help take them to the “lost and found”.  There was no clapping nor booing for Rick Warren where I was  – just indifference.

I loved being on the Mall when Obama was sworn in. I will never forget it and the crowd going nuts. Even with all those people, It was very quiet during his speech – all listened intently.  After his speech many people left. The wind started to pick up after that and it got really cold by the Washington Monument. Massive amounts of newspaper pieces were blowing everywhere.  (Obama should have ordered everyone on the Mall to pick up the trash next to them as part of their first assignment to support the country)  We had no problem finding an empty porta-potty.  Due to the fact it took us so long to get to the Mall, we decided to start heading back to Union Station even though our train was not until 5:30.

Again the crowds heading back were just astonishing.  The line to get to the L’Enfant Metro station was blocks long.  There were an amazing amount of lost gloves and scarves on the street along with a child’s boot that must have slipped off.  Parked tour buses lined the streets everywhere.  Pedestrians ruled - Metro buses trying to get around were trapped at intersections with no cops to help them.  What was most inspiring to me were all the elderly black women who were bound to make it to the Mall to witness history and now were slowly heading back.  We saw some of them sitting on small chairs in the 395 tunnels taking a rest before moving on again.

All was well until we got to Union Station.  What is it with Union Station and security? We thought we would get something warm to drink and sit in there before we got our train. Come to find out all shops had been shut down there.  Earlier on the morning train we had been told there would be restricted access to the station in the afternoon (I guess due to a ball being held there in the evening and security.)  It was very confusing where to go to get in. We were sent around to an entry along the left side of the station which was fenced off.  Either they were sweeping the station or there was a security issue, because suddenly all people were being sent back out of the station and I think they closed the Metro for a time.  We were not allowed to enter and many people were backed up all over the streets, some with rolling luggage, who wanted to get in and not miss their train. So masses were sent out into a crowd who all wanted to go in.

No one was saying what was going on and people were getting angry. There was a policeman on top of a porta-potty gesturing to people , but you could not hear him. It was comical.  All it would have taken was a person in charge with a bull horn to say we have temporarily closed the station and just hold on a few more minutes, but no – nothing.  Finally, they were allowing people in and it got scary when all throngs of  people behind us were pushing forward. I was pushed into an orange barrel that I was lucky to get around.  Here is a quote from the Post and I think this happened when we were there. “”Firefighters were called for people who had fallen down among a crush of people at a security checkpoint near Union Station. “   There was no excuse for that. Again, a person with a bullhorn would have calmed the crowd and explained the situation.

Once we got inside the fence, there were about 15 Homeland security guys on each side of us and we had to run the gauntlet to get into the station. I wished I had taken pictures of that. No one checked our bags. Once inside there were great signs leading us to the MARC train and we were able to actually get on an earlier train and get home and see some of the parade. Other than almost getting trampled, it was a great day!!!!   MARC train did an excellent job!!!!!

You know things are special when you can get trampled and still call it a great day.

Related: Pictures from the We Are One concert, note about Pete Seeger’s This Land performance, and new link to the Seeger video in comments here.

Our City

We Are One? Really?

This is a photograph of the the crowds at the We Are One concert this past Sunday:

All that space around either side and the end of the Reflecting Pool?  Space that “security” excluded the public from.  You know, the public – that giant blob of people at the bottom of the picture (who managed to get along just fine without the heel of the Secret Service and MPD bearing on them).  Worth contemplating, the mindset that makes it okay to exclude the public from what is perhaps the most public space in the country.

Photo Copyright Win Mcnamee / Getty Images

We Are One: Inaugural Concert Music and Photos

(Update: high res slideshow of my photos here.)

I made it down to the Mall today, along with thousands and thousands and thousands of others who have high hopes for Barack Obama.

I’ve already posted about the highlight – Pete Seeger’s leading us all in This Land Is Your Land – but I thought I’d share a few of my favorite songs and some of my photographs.  Wasn’t even half way through the line to get into the secured areas when they shut it down, so my perspective is from waaaay back.  But you know what?  I think I lucked out – we had a blast in the back.

I’m listening to and enjoying the replay of it on HBO as I write this, and discovering some of the great – but quiet – tracks that I missed out there in the cheap seats.   This is what got us moving when we were there, though:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=malnd19Ttyk[/youtube]

So we danced some more,

to Stevie:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4wZ3ZG_Wams[/youtube]

And for once, this seemed appropriate:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=56mjwycKuXA[/youtube]

Keep reaching.

Bigger versions – and a few more – of these pictures here, if you’re interested.

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