37 Comments

    1. Cycling in the city has many benefits. I live in Groningen (Netherlands) and I see no need to own a car at all. Very economic, healthy and I can get everywhere. While drivers are still looking for a parking space, I can park my bike right outside the shop.

    2. @TheNickjan what law is broken then…. and who needs a helmet when you participate in the safest way of transport there is. A ladder is way more dangerous, but nobody would think of wearing a helmet then right? It makes more sense to wear a helmet in a car.

    3. Wow! Nobody's fat! This will never catch on in most US cities until the oil runs out and then most will just scream about that. It's way too sensible for Americans who feel entitled to a life of oil burning and religious stupidity.

    4. Well, in Denmark and Netherlands for instance, we can have very bad weather any day, all around the year, but i still see ALOT of people using bikes to travel, including myself.

    5. Nope, I'm American but I've lived in 4 continents and been to every Western European country except Portugal, Netherlands, Italy and Switzerland, and USA is NOT rich. A country isn't rich when all the poor own cars, a rich country is where the wealthy bike or take public transport. If the States were rich, there wouldn't be so many cars and the trains would be cleaner and world-class.

      That's my spiel.

    6. Lived in Japan for 2 years without a car and only a bike and subway/train ticket year-pass. Biking is ubiquitous in Japan I admit, I witnessed it, but it is not like the Netherlands, Germany and Scandinavia where they have an infrastructure devoted to bicycles, in Japan you have to bike on narrow sidewalks everywhere.

    7. The only people who claim it to be "Shangri-La" are people who've never lived here or are from third world countries. It's far from that, but not having a car in the US is occupational suicide.

      Places like Philly, San Diego, and New York can get away with bikes transportation but not anywhere else.

      For example: It's 101 degrees outside right now. I would burn or dehydrate on a bike.

    8. I've biked in 105, but it was 50% humidity, and hardly broke a sweat. Why? It was just to the pool a mile away, so if cities were built more compact so you didn't have to bike more than 2 miles on level terrain, biking would be feasible in ANY environment. Cities in America should center population around rail lines. You bike to the rail station and use the train to get around further and rent a bike at the station you get out at. It would take decades of redevelopment, but it's feasible.

    9. Bicycle because they can't afford a Mercedes! The money they have is for alcohol. It is a fucking drunken nation. A rotten regime where 2/3 of Danes are working and paying tax.Tax payed are given to the 1/3 of Danes doing nothing all day! Welfare state! Fucking bullshit!

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