Wall Street Journal columnist launches vitriolic attack on New York City bike share program
In an online video segment entitled 'Death by Bicycle,' editorial board member Dorothy Rabinowitz criticized Major Bloomberg for allowing the 'dreadful program' to come to New York.
Rabinowitz also attacked cyclists who she said were given carte blanche to ignore the rules of the road in the interest of environmentalist programs.
When asked by the host of Wall Street Journal Live why she thought the local government would want to implement a program like this, Rabinowitz came out swinging replying, 'Do not ask me to enter the minds of the totalitarians running this government of the city.'
She went on to attack Bloomberg for his support of the program and bemoan the damage she felt it had done to the city.
'Envision what happens when you get a government that is run by an autocratic major before which you are helpless,' she said. 'We now look at a city who's best neighborhoods are absolutely begrimed by these blazing blue Citibank bikes.'
Noting the number of bike stands the went up around the city, the moderator added that the bays are fire hazards for firetrucks who can no longer park close to some subway stations.
Rabinowitz continued her rant, blasting cyclists for not obeying traffic laws in the city, citing that they often veer from designated bike lanes on to pedestrian sidewalks.
Despite his critics Bloomberg praised the new green initiative during a Memorial Day parade in Queens.
'This is going to be phenomenally popular,' Bloomberg said, according to a report from The Daily News.
The first wave of the Citi Bike plan will put 6,000 bikes at 330 docking bays below 59th Street and in downtown Brooklyn.
Rabinowitz failed to be moved by the city's initiative, which in her view is aimed to make people feel like they are living in a European city.
'If the major had had any guts he would have undertaken a study, but he knew [the citizens] were against it,' she fired.
'I represent the majority of citizens, the majority of citizens of this city are appalled by what happened,' Rabinowitz said.
'The fact that a city is helpless before the driven, personal, and ideological passions of its leader in the interest, allegedly, of the good of the city, can take many forms, but we have seen the most dramatic exposition of this in our city ...'
'With the latest example of this being the bike share program,' the moderator finished.
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