How not to protect a president: Let him ride a bike
Letter to the editor in today's NY Times:
Re “No Fuss for Biden, Just Sun and Peace” (Kiawah Island Memo, Aug. 17):
As a survivor of a bike crash in which a bicycle helmet most likely saved my life, I was stunned to see a photograph of the president of the United States, of all people, riding on a beach, wearing a baseball cap instead of protective headgear.
Where was the Secret Service to intervene and insist on a bike helmet for President Biden? Based on the photographic evidence, it seems that the president’s own security detail was without a helmet, too.
Protecting presidential documents is a national security issue, for sure; protecting a president’s noggin surely should be one, too.
Tom Goodman
New York
See also Bikes and the illusion of safety, Steven Pinker on the risks of riding a bike and The Harvard Health Letter on cycling.
Rob's comment:
It's particularly irresponsible to encourage children to ride bikes in the city---or anywhere, for that matter: See Getting children on bikes and Indoctrinating children in cycling as a "lifestyle."
Labels: Biden, Children and Bikes, Cycling and Safety, Old Farts on Bikes
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