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A2356
a2356

There’s quite a bit of varying levels of misogyny in motorcycling, not just in the Harley world. Sure, it’s not on a level as police brutality, etc. but there’s definitely been a few instances where I’d ask myself, “What goddam year is it again?!” when confronted with it. Finding other women riders to commiserate on

Broadly is doing a video featur on them!!!

Splitting lanes is the only sane way to get through traffic in Los Angeles.

Splitting lanes can be done safely, and for the benefit of all drivers when done correctly.

Actually, motorcycle riders are often NOT wealthy, it’s only been in more recent years that it’s becoming that way. For many years, people bought motorcycles because it was a form of transportation you could fix yourself that cost less than a car - sometimes as little as a couple hundred dollars. For many, choosing a

Yeah people like that give riders a bad name. Then assholes cut me off and try to kill me because some other douchenozzle pissed them off. It's awesome. 😡

You have no idea what you’re talking about. Do you even ride? Do you even know what it’s like to try and find someone to teach you how to ride? We run women’s skills camps to teach women how to ride and I have to tell you..these are not normative women or wealthy. They have been told all their life not to do something

I think Instagram has helped members of this rare breed of women riders connect with each other. I’m a rider myself, and not being in California/the West Coast, Instagram was the only way for me to see other women living the same lifestyle as mine, and as much as I love my male biker friends, riding motorcycles is not

I bought my beloved bike used for $200 five years ago and I ride it as my co-main transportation (I bus when riding isn’t appropriate/when I can’t face the 2km climb in the middle of my ride to work). I’m not saying $200 is nothing, but that cycling doesn’t have to be the fancy new $1200 bike and 60km long rides on