Motorcycle Safety Foundation Public Safety Announcement

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I found this video and it really hit home for me because someone speaks out on a subject that some street bike riders seem to not understand. Racing is for the track not on the street!

Motorcycle Safety Foundation Public Safety Announcement from Eugenio Salazar on Vimeo.

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Black Female Motorcyclists in LA riding for over 40 years

Two African-American female bikers are becoming leaders in a traditionally all-male motorcycle world.
  


Marian Peterson has defied gender roles her whole life.
  

As a little girl, she had a train set that outmatched any owned by the boys she knew.
As a young woman, she was the only female to compete on her local horse racing team, the L.A. Jayhawks.
And by the time she reached her mid-20s, Peterson — more commonly known as “Miss Showtime” — was one of the few black women motorcyclists in Los Angeles.
  

Miss Showtime said “When I first started riding I was not on the bike set,” now 64. Instead, she rode motorcycles independently of a club, later becoming affiliated with male riding groups like the Chosen Few MC, who took her under their wing. “Some of the guys felt intimidated because I’m a woman, and by my skills riding.”
  

THAT’S ‘MISS’ TO YOU — Marian “Miss Showtime” Peterson has been riding motorcycles for approximately 40 years. Currently the road captain for “The Magnificent Seven,” an all-male motorcycle club, she has earned the respect of male motorcyclists “by behaving like a lady rather than mimicking the behavior of men.”
  

Mostly self-taught, Showtime is now the road captain of the all-male motorcycle club the Magnificent Seven, a feat indicative of how much respect she has in the riding world. Showtime is also one of the elite black motorcyclists featured in the California African American Museum’s exhibit Black Chrome, which showcases the contributions African Americans have made to motorcycle culture. The exhibit will run through April 12 at the museum, which is in Exposition Park, just a few miles south of downtown Los Angeles.
  

As a black woman in the motorcycle world, Showtime arguably faced twice the challenges that her male counterparts did. When Showtime won a street race against two male competitors, she had to be very humble and coy, so as not to upset them.
  

She told her competitors that she had no idea she was racing them. “I was just trying to keep up,” she recalls telling them. Showtime said that she has managed to earn the respect of male motorcyclists by behaving like a lady rather than mimicking the behavior of men.”Some women will go out and put on their gear and put on their bike, and they’re not the same lady,” Showtime said. “Guys respect ladies.”
  

Showtime also had to exercise caution when she bought a Harley-Davidson in 1999. That famed brand of motorcycle has traditionally been the most sought after by members of riding clubs. In contrast, machines made by Honda, Yamaha and Suzuki are derisively referred to as “rice burners” by bike riders. “They will not admit it, but their dream is to get a hog,” Showtime said of motorcyclists who ride machines other than Harleys. So, when she was able to buy a Harley-Davidson, or hog, some of the male riders thought, “I was stepping on their toes. I’m becoming equal to them.”
  

But times have changed, Showtime said. “Females are riding. They’re riding hogs.”
  


Annett “Brown T. Sugar,” circa 2001, on her 2000 Harley-Davidson Softail Springer.
  

Al “Sugar Bear” Meyers considers Showtime to be a “real rider.” Building bikes for more than 37 years has made Sugar Bear an icon in the motorcycle world. The industry superstar owns Sugar Bear Choppers in Gardena.
  

“She gets the same respect as any man in that organization,” Sugar Bear said of Showtime and members of the Magnificent Seven. “A lot of male clubs will not allow a woman in their club, so the fact that she is in this club and is the road captain is a stamp of respect.”
  

As road captain, Showtime directs the members of the club when they’re on the asphalt. She can set the driving speed for the riders and initiate lane changes. In addition to the Magnificent Seven Motorcycle Club, Showtime was voted into a group for older riders called 50 Plus, which is made up of riders from 30 different clubs. Traditionally, the organization is all-male.
  

Showtime believes she has been welcomed by all-male black motorcycle clubs “because of my status on the bike set,” she said, referring to the motorcycling world. “Now, I’m a living legend.”
  

Showtime follows in the footsteps of black female motorcycling pioneers such as Bessie B. Stringfield, who, starting in the 1930s, travelled by motorcycle alone through each American state (there were 48 states in The Union at the time). Back then, many black riders were introduced to motorcycle riding during their service in the armed forces.
  

Despite the long history African Americans have of riding motorcycles, the contributions blacks have made to motorcycle culture were not always acknowledged.
  

For instance, a black man named Ben Hardy & Cliff Vaughs played key roles in designing the bikes featured in the film “Easy Rider.” Sugar Bear, who has worked with Hardy, also faced blatant discrimination. Motorcycle magazines wanted to feature his bikes without including a picture of him so white readers wouldn’t be put off.
  

White bikers and black bikers are in two separate worlds,” Showtime said. She credits the 2003 film “Biker Boyz” for exposing black motorcycle culture to the mainstream. It’s Showtime’s belief that the media doesn’t show black motorcyclists engaging in bike runs and other activities, as it does for white motorcyclists.
According to her, many of the crew members on the “Biker Boyz” set didn’t realize that black motorcyclists even existed. And black women motorcyclists have yet to garner the attention their male peers have.
  

Annette “Brown T. Sugar” Collins has helped to bring focus to black women riders. A decade ago, she established the Hawg Divas, which she and “Miss Showtime” say is the Los Angeles area’s first black female motorcycle club. The club, like Brown T. Sugar, has experienced its share of challenges. Similar to Showtime, Brown T. Sugar mostly taught herself how to ride. She was inspired to do so 20 years ago, after her then-husband rode her on the back of his motorcycle several times. When Brown T. Sugar decided to ride herself, both her husband and other family members reacted with skepticism.
  

“My dad told me I was crazy,” she remembered. Many tried to dissuade her from riding. They would say, “‘I know someone, and they got hit on a motorcycle, and they died,’ ” Brown T. Sugar said. Despite the fears of her friends and family, she excelled in riding. She even beat her husband at the time in a race to Terminal Island, which sits between Long Beach and Los Angeles harbors. “I whooped his butt … The man was so embarrassed,” she said.
  

She joined an all-male motorcycle club, the L.A. Deuces. To be accepted, Brown T. Sugar said she had to show that she was unafraid and that the men would not be able to leave her behind.
  

She ultimately started a club for women because men didn’t always appreciate the stylistic components of riding: How gloves fit, how hair is styled under a helmet, and so on, is important to women riders but not so significant to men riders, Brown T. Sugar believes. Today, a few all-female riding clubs exist in the Los Angeles area.
  

“I guess women got tired of being on the back (of motorcycles),” Brown T. Sugar said. “You’re not in control when you’re back there. That guy is in control of your life.” Those who encounter her and her club of female riders exhibit a wide range of reactions — from disgust to awe. The women riders have been referred to as “dykes on the bikes.” Other times, onlookers are delighted to see them.
  

“People are always pulling out their camcorders,” Brown T. Sugar said. “They stop and they want to take a picture.” Brown T. Sugar said that she understands why the Hawg Divas create a spectacle of sorts:
“It’s not a lot of ladies out here, especially not sisters.”
  

Article Create goes to Nadra Kareem; a writer for the L.A. Watts Times.

With some changes by Goldie Just Goldie. Reason being is that some areas didn’t include complete recognitions for other iconic black bikers and black motorcycle clubs in Los Angeles.
  


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Motorcycle deaths drop dramatically…Bullshit!


The brands you trust - www.jpcycles.com


  

Current (2008) logo for the United States Nati...
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This is the article:

  

By The Washington Post
Published: April 23. 2010 4:00AM PST

  

After rising steadily for nearly a dozen years to set a record in 2008, the number of people killed nationally in motorcycle accidents dropped dramatically last year, according to a report issued Thursday.

  

The report by the Governors Highway Safety Association found that fatal crashes declined nearly 16 percent in the first nine months of 2009, compared with the same period the year before.

  

There was no ready explanation for the drop, a year after 5,290 fatalities set a record. The speculation included that the economy was keeping bikers off the road, that a 42 percent drop in new motorcycle sales last year resulted in fewer novice riders and that publicity about deaths had heightened drivers’ and riders’ awareness.

  

My response to this madness:

  

In the meantime death rates are climbing while motorcycle permits in the US are handed out like paper flyers to 16 year olds buying new 1000cc sportbikes and older men with slowed reflections, bad habits and no training. Getting a permit to operate an automobile is just about as easy. The answer for this is a bit of a no-brainer.

  

Can the MSF step up and offer newer more relevant advanced training? Yes. Are they working on any such new advanced rider programs? Yes.

  

Will any of these new programs by the MSF be required for citizens seeking to acquire a motorcycle endorsement for their license? No.

  

Will the annual death rate of motorcyclists therefore continue to rise along with rises in population and congestion until the federal government addresses the need of greater education for vehicular operation on state and federal roads? Yes!

  

We need help that’s the bottom line!

  




  

THURSDAY, April 22 (HealthDay News) Deaths among motorcycle riders in the United States dropped by at least 10 percent in 2009, the first decrease in 12 years, according to a new report by the Governors Highway Safety Association.

  

Using data from 50 states and the District of Columbia, the report projected 4,762 motorcyclist deaths in 2009, compared with 5,290 deaths in 2008. Previously, there had been 11 straight years of dramatic increases in motorcycle rider fatalities, according to the report, released April 22.

  

Possible reasons for the lower death toll included less motorcycle travel because of a shaky economy, poor motorcycling weather in some areas of the country, fewer beginner riders and increased state attention to motorcycle safety programs. I don’t know what states are having success in motorcycle safety programs but it sure ain’t Georgia.

  

“Clearly the economy played a large role in motorcycle deaths declining in 2009,” the association’s chairman, Vernon Betkey, said in a news release from the group. “Less disposable income translates into fewer leisure riders, and we suspect that the trend of inexperienced baby boomers buying bikes may have subsided.”

  

Now with that being said, when the economy picks up and it will what will be the solution for the numbers increasing again? What’s in place to counteract the tragedies we faced the last 12 years? Not a damn thing!

  

Betkey also noted that many states have boosted enforcement to ensure that motorcyclists obey helmet laws and are properly licensed and insured. In addition, state and federal authorities have stepped up efforts to combat drunken riding.

  

Though last year’s decline is promising, the association says, it’s only one year, and much more work is required to achieve a steady decrease in motorcyclist deaths.

  

“We will need to see three to five years of decline before we are ready to say that a positive trend has developed,” Betkey said. You got that right Mr. Betkey but in the meantime what are some of the solutions to help the problems that we experienced in the past 12 years? What studies have been done or are going to be done over the next 3 to 5 years to help motorcyclists?

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