Saturday, July 06, 2019

Josh Wilson: Bike guy

When I read the pro-congestion pricing op-ed in the Chronicle last month, the byline, Josh Wilson, was vaguely familiar. Seemed like he was one of the original Critical Mass participants and advocates.

Sure enough a search quickly confirmed that notion. Wilson is a Critical Mass pioneer who contributed a chapter to Chris Carlsson's book, Critical Mass: Bicycling's Defiant Celebration, wherein he rhapsodizes about his "bicycle salvation" and the bullying Critical Mass demonstration on the last Friday of the month that makes it harder for working people to get home (see also this).

The Chronicle surely knows who Wilson is, since he's contributed pro-bike, anti-car op-eds before, like the one on the Idaho stop---which is no stop at all---in 2015: Why the 'Idaho Stop' is safe cycling).

That makes the Chronicle's description of Wilson disingenuous: "Josh Wilson is a San Francisco freelance writer." A writer, however, who writes mostly about salvation---his and ours---via bicycles.

Wilson's congestion pricing op-ed is a complete muddle, with this sort of thing:

One solution is to build around transit rather than automobiles, but that process is bogged down in the eternal battle between preservationists and pro-density developers. We need to raise the stakes while they get their issues sorted out.

That's nonsense, since "preservation" has nothing to do with SF's transportation issues, which are about Muni and traffic congestion. Of course development and transportation are intimately related, but Wilson provides nothing to clarify the issue.

Wilson proposes congestion pricing for 19th Avenue and Van Ness Avenue:

Two other corridors in San Francisco that would benefit from a use fee are 19th and Van Ness avenues. These well-traveled, rough-and-tumble urban throughways are also integral links in two major highway systems — California Route 1, and U.S. Highway 101. They are full of traffic that is often “just passing through,” and that brings no real benefit to the city and its residents, but takes its toll in pedestrian safety, pollution and degraded quality of life.

But then he backtracks with another muddle about something called "zone pricing":

A poorly conceived plan could be a nightmare. Making 19th and Van Ness avenues simple toll roads would merely push the traffic out into the surrounding neighborhoods. 

A better solution would be “zone pricing,” a concept that has already been kicking around SFMTA planning offices for a number of years. Under a well-implemented plan, residents along both 19th and Van Ness avenues — or any major crosstown corridor — could enjoy discounts or even waivers, and would certainly benefit from improved public transit and reduced pollution and traffic hazards.

How does zone pricing differ from congestion pricing? Wilson can't really say. Giving local residents discounts/waivers when they use those busy streets hardly addresses the huge political problem that would be created by billing the thousands of motorists traveling North/South through San Francisco. What would prevent Marin County and San Mateo counties---and even San Francisco---from doing that? The answer: Common sense.

The problem anti-car zealots like Wilson have: Congestion pricing is overwhelmingly unpopular even in San Francisco according to annual public opinion polls.

As I've pointed out before, the SF Chronicle has a soft spot for the bicycle fantasy, as it tries to be with-it by appealing to young people in the city. It even endorsed Critical Mass after the demo was marred by violence.


Alas, the SF Examiner is no better.

Later: Can't find anything about "zone pricing" on the SFMTA's site, but the San Francisco County Transportation Authority (SFCTA) is the city department that takes the lead on congestion pricing. See also Tilly Chang's quest for Congestion Pricing.

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Historical fascist photo-ops with tanks

From the New York Review of Books: Tanks for the Memories: A Historical Tribute to Trump’s ‘Salute to America.’  

Lame pun for a literary journal, but the fascism-and-tanks historical pictures are good.

(Bloomberg) -- President Donald Trump delivered a 4th of July speech on the National Mall that extolled the U.S. military and American people and put himself at the center of the Independence Day celebration.“We celebrate our history, our people, and the heroes who proudly defend our flag -- the brave men and women of the United States military,” Trump said on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial on Thursday, flanked by American flags. “We are part of one of the greatest stories ever told -- the story of America.”Trump recalled key developments in American history, including the country’s founding, exploration of the west, women’s suffrage and the civil rights movement.Trump avoided overly political themes, calling the speech a “Salute to America,” though it came as a crowded field of Democrats is challenging him in the 2020 campaign. The event included military tanks, flyovers by military jets and Air Force One, and culminated with an extended fireworks display.Thousands of spectators packed the Mall to watch, and the typically apolitical Independence Day festivities took on trappings of a political rally. A number of those in the audience wore Trump shirts and hats and vendors sold Trump election merchandise. Protesters displayed a statue of Trump sitting on a toilet sending a tweet from his phone.Revamped CelebrationTrump revamped the traditional celebration, which doesn’t usually feature a president delivering a speech on the Mall or the display of military might. The fireworks, which took place after the speech, generally last about 15 minutes but this year will span 35 minutes after a donation by two pyrotechnic companies valued at $750,000.In his roughly 45-minute speech, Trump described some of the most noteworthy inventors in American history and highlighted cultural innovations and advances in medicine. Trump pivoted from his discussion of history to say the nation is stronger than ever before as the crowd chanted “USA! USA!”“Someday soon we will plant the American flag on Mars,” Trump said.Trump praised “Americans of faith,” along with military service members and law enforcement officials. He thanked families whose relatives were killed during military duty.While Trump’s speeches often include attacks on his political opponents, Thursday’s did not. The president instead highlighted themes that unite Americans.“We are all made by the same almighty God,” he said.‘Show of a Lifetime’Trump promised a “show of a lifetime,” but it didn’t go entirely the president’s way. Afternoon rains and forecasts of scattered thunderstorms may have kept spectators away and prompted flash flood alerts.The anti-war group Code Pink brought the 20-foot balloon depicting Trump as a baby wearing a diaper. Windy conditions caused handlers to deflate it.Trump reserved space for special guests -- the Trump campaign, Republican National Committee and Defense Department were among those that received tickets. Among those present were Labor Secretary Alex Acosta and Interior Secretary David Bernhardt.Federal law bars political fundraising in government buildings or rooms where officials perform their duties, but doesn’t restrict presidents from inviting deep-pocketed donors to the White House or official events.Government officials provided no crowd estimates. Trump tweeted a photo showing of spectators on the Mall, saying: “A great crowd of tremendous Patriots this evening, all the way back to the Washington Monument!” At the start of his presidency, Trump took issue with media reports citing photos showing fewer people attended his inauguration than those of his predecessors.Trump conceived the event after his plans for a military parade on Veterans Day were stymied by complaints from local officials about the cost. The president has been enamored of the idea of a Washington celebration with a military component since attending the 2017 Bastille Day parade in Paris, which included an aerial display, thousands of marching soldiers and hundreds of military vehicles.‘Stroke His Ego’Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden said in a speech in Iowa Thursday that for Trump, the event was “designed more to stroke his ego than celebrate American ideals.”The Trump administration deflected questions about the cost of the event as District of Columbia officials said they’re concerned they’d be left with large bills. The city has said it’s still owed about $7 million from costs associated with Trump’s inauguration but the administration official said the District hasn’t asked for funds from upcoming federal budgets.Some in the crowd said they’d come specifically to see Trump.Trump supporter Kim Tarver, a secretary who had traveled from Clanton, Alabama, to celebrate Independence Day in the capital, arrived early and said she wouldn’t be deterred by rain.“I’m only here once,” she said.Others said they were ignoring the president.“I’m trying to spread my patriotism by saying I am not going to let you stop me from celebrating my country,” said John Fink, 23, of New York.(Updates with Trump tweet of crowd photo in 16th paragraph.)\--With assistance from Ryan Haar.To contact the reporters on this story: Josh Wingrove in Ottawa at jwingrove4@bloomberg.net;Laura Davison in Washington at ldavison4@bloomberg.net;Giovanna Bellotti Azevedo in Washington at gbellottiaze@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Kevin Whitelaw at kwhitelaw@bloomberg.net, Justin Blum, Linus ChuaFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P.
United States, July 4, 2019

Mussolini reviews tank corps, October 1935

Timothy Egan in today's NY Times:

...Trump has compared himself to Abraham Lincoln, which is like comparing a noxious weed to a redwood tree. 

When the anti-immigrant Know Nothing party was at its height in the 1850s, Lincoln had this to say: “I am not a Know-Nothing. That is certain. How could I be?” He continued, “As a nation, we began by declaring that ‘all men are created equal.’ We now practically read it, ‘all men are created equal, except negroes.’ When the Know-Nothings get control, it will read ‘all men are created equal except negroes, and foreigners, and catholics.’”

The modern-day Know-Nothings are the pink-faced mobs calling for a wall at Trump rallies. They are the architects of a government policy that puts children in filthy cages and forces them to drink fetid water, that sees helpless and newly orphaned babies as subhuman — all while laughing at the cruelty...

And when Trump rolls out weapons of war to celebrate the birth of a nation that never even had much of a standing army until the 20th century, you can see why passionate pride in this country is at its lowest point since Gallup started measuring this sentiment in the modern era...

See also Why Trump likes tanks.

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