Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Buy Some Art & Books and Support CM20 Celebrations

July 16th, 2012 by hughillustration

Our little group of Critical Mass enthusiasts took it on ourselves to plan a bunch of activities to mark the 20th anniversary of Critical Mass in September 2012. We’re selling posters and books that we still have in abundance, and will use the funds to support similar ongoing projects.

We have just dropped the prices on posters to $10 each or all 3 for $20, and we’re selling “Shift Happens” for $15, a 25% discount from cover price.

Click on the Add to Cart link below to buy online and have it shipped.

You can also buy the book at the following San Francisco locations:

“Shift Happens: Critical Mass at 20” Book
AK Press
Alexander Book Co (Downtown/SOMA)
City Lights (North Beach)
Green Arcade (Mid-Market)
Modern Times (in the Mission)

 

Buy Online

“Shift Happens: Critical Mass at 20,” edited by Chris Carlsson, LisaRuth Elliott & Adriana Camarena, with essays, photos and art from around the world. Buy it here for $15 plus shipping, 25% off the normal price of $20.
Note: Orders of more than one book may require additional postage. Please order, you will be charged for the cost of shipping the first book, and we will notify you of any additional costs. ALSO: If you are ordering from outside the U.S. the postage has become ridiculously expensive. For example, one copy of Shift Happens! to Brazil = $20 in postage alone!… so check with us about the total price before ordering.

Shift Happens (25% off)


Mona Caron’s CM20 standard poster, 12 x 24 on glossy stock, offset litho: $10

If you are ordering from outside the U.S. the postage has become ridiculously expensive. Please add $10 for any poster orders outside the U.S. to cover postage.




Hugh D’Andrade’s CM20 poster, 12 x 24 on glossy stock, offset litho: $10
If you are ordering from outside the U.S. the postage has become ridiculously expensive. Please add $10 for any poster orders outside the U.S. to cover postage.



Jim Swanson’s CM20 poster, 15.5 x 13 on glossy stock, offset litho: $10
If you are ordering from outside the U.S. the postage has become ridiculously expensive. Please add $10 for any poster orders outside the U.S. to cover postage.



Get All Three Posters for $20!

If you are ordering from outside the U.S. the postage has become ridiculously expensive. Please add $10 for any poster orders outside the U.S. to cover postage.




 

Dear Steve Emerson,

April 6th, 2012 by hughillustration

Hi Steve,

We have a policy of not publishing comments that contain threatening words. Your comment submitted today threatened to run over cyclists at the next Critical Mass, so I can’t publish it as is.

However, I would like to give you a personal response, since this issue has been on my mind a bit, in the wake the tragic accident in which a cyclist hit and killed an elderly pedestrian, possibly as a result of his own negligence and poor riding skills.

So let me make both a logical and a moral objection to your comment. Logic first:

The number of Bay Area pedestrians who die each year as a result of collision with a bicyclist is, on a 10 year average, ZERO. It happens so rarely that it’s not a blip on the statistical radar.

Meanwhile, the number of Bay Area pedestrians who die each year as a result of collision with motorized traffic is, on a 10 year average, 100. (For injuries, including paralysis and other life-altering damage, the number is about 800.)

If your concern is public safety, your emphasis on one rare event involving a bicycle is irrational and illogical.

On the moral front, I’m sorry to point out that you have no credibility, since you express outrage at the death of one innocent person while threatening the lives of dozens of other innocent people. That’s a glaring contradiction, assuming your concern is for the safety of others, and it does not speak well to your sense of civic responsibility.

Therefore, I conclude that your concern is not safety. Rather, it seems likely that your real concern is a cultural resentment against bicycling and what it represents. Bicyclists and pedestrians are beginning to get a larger share of the traffic funding, and policies around parking and street design are shifting to reflect our needs and our presence (though the shift is not nearly dramatic enough, in my opinion). Assuming you yourself are a motorist, I imagine that you interpret this cultural shift as threat to the relative privileges you enjoy as a person who drives.

I propose that you drop this antagonistic stance against a change that after all cannot be derailed. Why not join us? Get out of your car, organize your life so that you’re not behind the wheel for hours each day, and start cycling and walking as your primary means of transportation. You may find, as I have, that this creates a positive change in your life, leading to greater health, a reduction in stress, and social connections to others which are rewarding and pleasurable.

If you like, you can join us on the last Friday of the month at Critical Mass — no one is ever turned away, and the very least you would learn about the ideas and lives of those you profess to oppose. And if you’d like to re-word your comment in a more constructive manner, I’m happy to publish it, even if the views expressed do not accord with my own.

Good luck, Steve!

H.

PS: Now that I’ve written this, I think I’ll publish it on our blog. Thanks for the instigation!

Halloween Critical Mass!

October 29th, 2011 by hughillustration

Many people have asked me, “Hugh, how was the Halloween Critical Mass? Did it suck?” My answer is an emphatic “No! It did not suck!”

Photographic evidence below. If you have more evidence of fun last night (photos, video, audio?) leave some links in the comments!

20th Anniversary Critical Mass Book Project

July 6th, 2011 by ccarlsson

Deadline for Submissions: January 15, 2012

Please send your article proposals, drafts, flyers, photos, etc., to

critmasssf@gmail.com

From Chris Carlsson, Hugh D’Andrade, LisaRuth Elliott, and friends

 

The 20th anniversary of Critical Mass is coming in September 2012. The first-ever ride was in San Francisco in September 1992, so we’re inviting everyone from around the wide world of Critical Mass rides to come to San Francisco next September for a week-long festival to celebrate twenty years. During the week-long festival we hope to have daily group rides, film festival, art shows, discussions, music, and more. (Send us a message if you’re planning to come, and let us know how many people are planning to come from your city/country. And if you’re in the Bay Area and want to help plan the week, organize an event, coordinate food and entertainment, provide housing, etc., please contact us!)

 

In conjunction with this anniversary we also want to produce a new book of essays, cartoons, photographs, and documents, capturing the dynamic and powerful social movements that have emerged from, or embraced the Critical Mass phenomenon. To that end, this is an open solicitation for material for the book. Predictably we have no budget to pay anyone, but we hope to create a historically important volume documenting the emergent bicycle movement over the past two decades, and its relationship to Critical Mass. Any proceeds of sales of the book will go to funding events for the anniversary and after that, for ongoing Critical Mass-related printing and communications.

 

We’d love essays anywhere from 2000 to 8000 words, and we’re open to other kinds of materials too. We are especially interested in essays that go deeper into the larger political questions surrounding Critical Mass specifically, and the bicycle as a signifier and tool of a broader social transformation.

 

Please contact us to let us know if you’re going to write something, or if you have photos, flyers, or other material to contribute to this. Authors or groups published in the book will get a free copy, and if we’re lucky, we’ll find publishers in other languages to produce the book in Spanish, French, Portuguese, Russian, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, etc. If you have contacts with publishers in other languages, please do let us know.

 

Here are some questions to get you started, but feel free to query us with your own ideas of what you’d like to write:

 

1. Please describe the history of the Critical Mass experience in your city with the following questions as a guide:

When did it start? How many people participated in starting it? Did it come out of a pre-existing network or political association? Or did new friends come together to start it?

Give us the details of your ride:

where does it start from, when does it roll, how long has it been going? How often does it happen? Monthly?  How do you think your ride is unique vis a vis other rides you have heard of, or maybe personally experienced?

 

2. How does Critical Mass manage itself in your city? Do you have monitors and communications that are sustained by the same people month after month, or do new people emerge regularly to help produce a good experience? What kind of debates characterize your Critical Mass experience? Do people discuss and argue about the nature of the ride during the ride? Do you have xerocracy (printed documents circulating among the riders)? Do you have pre-planned routes or do you move around the city spontaneously? Do your rides split up into multiple rides sometimes? Tell us about the lived experience and the tensions within your ride, and related to other organized bike rides in your city (if any).

 

3. Can you describe stories of personal transformation that people have experienced as a result of riding in Critical Mass? Who rides in Critical Mass in your city? Has the population of your ride changed over time or is it the same as it has been since the beginning? What kind of future does the ride have in your city, in your estimation?

 

4. How would you characterize your city’s bicycling scene? Was it pretty big before Critical Mass? Did Critical Mass play a key role in expanding it? How does your city feel differently today than it did before Critical Mass started? Or does it feel different at all?

 

5. Are there formal bicycle advocacy groups in your city (or region)? How do they relate to Critical Mass? Do they support it and participate in it? Or are they hostile? What kinds of dynamics have taken place where you are?

 

6. Are there free food, gardening/farming, housing/squatting, free radio, hacker spaces, or other kinds of similar efforts cross-linked to Critical Mass in your city? What is the relationship of Critical Mass to other political and social initiatives in your city, if any? Can you write in depth about those relationships and how they have fed each other? What is the relationship in your city between formal and informal political groups?

 

7. Outsider journalists and writers often pose the question, “What has Critical Mass accomplished?” Our answer in SF as co-founders has generally been to emphasize that Critical Mass is an ongoing event, an ongoing seizure of public space by hundreds and thousands of cyclists, and is not an organization—nor even a coherent movement—with a specific agenda. So to speak of “accomplishments” is to frame it incorrectly. How do you respond to this question? Describe how you experience the meaning and coherence of the Critical Mass phenomenon in your city.

 

8. What kinds of journalism, blogs, writing, and/or art has emerged from the Critical Mass movement in your city?  Please submit some examples and tell us about them (can be weblinks, photos, artwork, books, zines, stickers, posters, etc.  If you are sending a url, please be specific about which page/blog/art you mean, and describe how it relates to Critical Mass, the ride).