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Thread: Where do you want to see motorcycling heading?

  1. #91
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    Quote Originally Posted by Woodman View Post
    You know, I think that a lot of "motorcyclists" are caught up in their own world and sometimes forget that there is another whole world out there.
    A lot of us ride bikes, but don't consider themselves to be "motorcyclists", just like rugby players are not neccesarily "rugby heads", they just like playing rugger on saturdays.

    My opinion
    Well said young man!

  2. #92
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    Quote Originally Posted by onearmedbandit View Post
    I understand there is an over representation of motorcyclists in road accidents, but other than this (which is concerning, don't get me wrong, but also bear in mind that a 20kmh accident on a bike can seriously harm or kill, whereas in a car it will fuck your bodywork - motorcycles are simply more dangerous than cars, doesn't mean that they are 'bad') what makes you believe the govt will legislate us off the road? Seriously. What indicators do you have? Is this happening overseas already? Will the manufacturers and the support industry not have anything to say? And why us? Are we that bad? What about alcohol issues? Smoking? Don't these have more bearing on the average kiwi?
    Government is largely about balancing the books and so, in many ways, ACC and the public health system are both our friend and our enemy. We cost the goverment an amount disproportionate to our numbers and voting power and that's fact, not opinion. It is true that so do other groups in our community e.g. cyclists, equestrians and rugby players. However, the way ACC was set up means that the government cannot do much about those other groups and still be the goverment for very long. They can do something about us though, and they are.
    These circumstances don't apply e.g. in the States and so there is not the same pressure to act.
    Alcohol and smoking affect much larger groups and so the goverment treads more softly, but even so, they have done quite a bit about smoking and are currently drawing a bead on alcohol.
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  3. #93
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    Quote Originally Posted by T.W.R View Post
    Brilliant from someone who has and likes people to know as he thinks it's a status symbol a bike that was portrayed as the 1st real factory produced badboys toy
    I'm intrigued to know how my choice of motorcycle has any bearing on what I've said here.

    Perhaps you can enlighten me.

  4. #94
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    Quote Originally Posted by Katman View Post
    Me, I'd like to see Motorcycling entice the numbers to it's fold that it truly deserves.

    I'd like to see the Old Guard accept the fact that an increase in motorcycling numbers is not going to affect their 'hard man' image.

    I'd like to see new motorcyclists, who desire to one day be the Old Guard, accept that you'll only get there by surviving.

    I'd like to see Motorcycling attract the numbers required to become a political force.

    I'd like motorcyclists to realise that the only way that we have a chance of becoming a political force is by becoming an accepted part of society.

    I'd like to see Motorcycling grow up.
    I read the whole thread and I still don't understand what you're trying to achieve Katman.

    Are you trying to convince me to think something? If so, what?

    Are you trying to convince me to do something? If so, what?

  5. #95
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ender EnZed View Post

    Are you trying to convince me to think
    Yes.

  6. #96
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    I'm also kind of confused by this thread.

    A motorcyclist is a person that has or rides a motorcycle. Nearly everyone owns a car or (say) a house and yet you could not realisitically expect every, or even the majority of drivers to agree on a direction or an issue. Sure - a subtribe may be convinced of something but not the whole group, they are simply too diverse.

    Motorcycling is not a nation. Its a generic term and even if you could set up a representitive group the vast majority of sub tribes would complain that it does not represent their best interests and rebel against it. In fact a significant portion of motorcyclist would rebel against things that were in their best interests. Face it - most riders distrust, dislike and actively avoid others outside of their own groups and its getting more 'normal' to do so. (waving for example)

    There is a significant group of people who ride just because it does annoy others - (the BAD HD boys n gurls, mean sprotbikers and the fuggin wankers don't think I can ride just because I'm a girl posse spring to mind. Nothing wrong with that - just accept it for what it is and don't elevate it to some kind of higher level of being, its not.

    We all got here via different paths, we will all be staying here for various lengths of time and we certainly won't leave together - I can't see it changing!

  7. #97
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    Quote Originally Posted by Paul in NZ View Post
    We all got here via different paths, we will all be staying here for various lengths of time and we certainly won't leave together - I can't see it changing!
    And the way I see it, from here motorcycling has a choice of two paths to take.

    One will take motorcycling from strength to strength and encourage more motorcyclists, thereby providing us with a voice that will be listened to.

    The other will continue taking us along the same downhill slope that we've been on for some time now.

  8. #98
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    Quote Originally Posted by Katman View Post
    And the way I see it, from here motorcycling has a choice of two paths to take.

    One will take motorcycling from strength to strength and encourage more motorcyclists, thereby providing us with a voice that will be listened to.

    The other will continue taking us along the same downhill slope that we've been on for some time now.
    As a marketer, much of what I do is watch trends and look at the future, and motorcycling as we enjoy it does not have a particularly flash future.

    Riding a motorcycle as a form of transport is illogical if you can afford the higher cost of driving a car, and as the developed world becomes richer less and less people need to ride bikes - remember in our youth we bought bikes because it was the cheapest way you could get a decent set of wheels - Triumph Bonneville vs Mk2 Zephyr in my case; one was quick and handled, the other was a Zephyr. Today's kids choice is a Hyosung 250 or a Nissan Skyline. My 19 year old rides a Street Triple, but if I hadn't introduced him to bikes he would not have been bitten by the bug and he would probably drive a Mitsubishi Evo or similar.

    Sadly for our sport he is in the minority - he has no mates his age into bikes and when he goes for a ride it's with me and with my mates. We have lost the young generations to motorcycling, and even though lots are interested, very few are willing to spend the money to get a poxy 250 and grind their way up the ranks the way we did when they can go out and buy a supercar tomorrow. That means as we get older and hang up our helmets (and yes, it will happen) the number of bikes on the road will decrease.
    Don't blame me, I voted Green.

  9. #99
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    Quote Originally Posted by Katman View Post
    And the way I see it, from here motorcycling has a choice of two paths to take.

    One will take motorcycling from strength to strength and encourage more motorcyclists, thereby providing us with a voice that will be listened to.

    The other will continue taking us along the same downhill slope that we've been on for some time now.
    You want political clout? Start a religion! Brian Katman take us to the White-house!

    Quote Originally Posted by shrub View Post
    Sadly for our sport he is in the minority - he has no mates his age into bikes and when he goes for a ride it's with me and with my mates.
    It's growing quite rapidly in Auckland from what I've seen, what with the very limited options when it comes to A to B in the CBD.
    But then I wasn't there in the 'golden age' being a mere whippersnapper, so would have no idea how it compares.

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  10. #100
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    Quote Originally Posted by Katman View Post
    And the way I see it, from here motorcycling has a choice of two paths to take.

    One will take motorcycling from strength to strength and encourage more motorcyclists, thereby providing us with a voice that will be listened to.

    The other will continue taking us along the same downhill slope that we've been on for some time now.
    Motorcyclings future is museums, gangs and scooters with a few stroppy women doing their own thing.

  11. #101
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    Quote Originally Posted by Pixie View Post
    Don't want to see it - but it will effectively be banned in NZ in 20 years
    "..........from my cold, dead hands."

  12. #102
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    Quote Originally Posted by shrub View Post
    As a marketer, much of what I do is watch trends and look at the future, and motorcycling as we enjoy it does not have a particularly flash future.

    That means as we get older and hang up our helmets (and yes, it will happen) the number of bikes on the road will decrease.
    Uh, aren't bike registrations at their highest level since 1980?

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  14. #104
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    Quote Originally Posted by Headbanger View Post
    Uh, aren't bike registrations at their highest level since 1980?
    I don't have the stats to hand, but I know that 2007 was the highest number of registrations since the 1980s, but were a fraction of the number of registrations of the 70s, and followed on from many years of very low numbers of registrations. The majority of bikes purchased over the last few years have been big and expensive bikes and have been a result of the economic boom times we all enjoyed over the last 6 or 7 years, and a major influence on motorcycle registrations have been the born agains. Only problem is that unlike complete newbies, born agains are a finite market.
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  15. #105
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    http://www.nzta.govt.nz/resources/mo.../docs/2008.pdf

    It looks like the motorcycle industry is in pain.

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