The Importance of Motorcycle Advocacy: Fighting for Riders’ Rights

Motorcycle riding is more than a mode of transportation or a weekend hobby; for millions worldwide, it is a lifestyle built on freedom, individuality, and the raw joy of the open road.

Yet this freedom comes with unique vulnerabilities. Motorcyclists face disproportionate risks on highways dominated by larger vehicles, biased legislation, inadequate infrastructure, and pervasive negative stereotypes. Motorcycle advocacy—organized efforts by riders, clubs, and national organizations—has become the critical counterforce protecting the rights and safety of the two- and three-wheeled community.

Without sustained advocacy, riders would lose ground on everything from helmet-law repeals to fair crash-settlement compensation. One of the most visible battlegrounds is legislation. In the United States, the Motorcycle Riders Foundation (MRF) and the American Motorcyclist Association (AMA) have spent decades lobbying Congress and state legislatures.

Their victories include blocking discriminatory motorcycle-only checkpoint programs, preserving the right to lane filtering (also called lane splitting) in states such as California, and defeating attempts to mandate bulky, vision-restricting modular helmets.

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In 2023 alone, the AMA tracked more than 1,200 pieces of state legislation affecting motorcyclists and successfully influenced outcomes in dozens of cases (AMA Legislative Recap, 2023). In Europe, the Federation of European Motorcyclists’ Associations (FEMA) has fought anti-tampering regulations that would have effectively outlawed performance exhausts and aftermarket parts, arguing that such rules punish responsible riders while doing little to reduce emissions from the far larger car fleet.

Safety—the issue most often weaponized against motorcyclists—is paradoxically one of the strongest arguments for advocacy. Data show that properly trained riders are dramatically safer. The Motorcycle Safety Foundation (MSF) reports that riders who complete a basic rider course are 50–70 % less likely to be involved in a fatal crash (MSF 100 Motorcyclists Study, 2022). Advocacy groups push for rider education funding, improved road design (guardrails that don’t turn into cheese graters during a slide), and autonomous-vehicle programming that actually detects motorcycles.

When the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) floated the idea of mandating anti-lock brakes on all new motorcycles, the industry and advocacy community worked together to make ABS standard voluntarily—achieving nearly 100 % adoption years ahead of any potential federal mandate, without the heavy hand of regulation.

Insurance discrimination is another silent war. Many insurers surcharge motorcycle policies 200–500 % over comparable automobile coverage, even when the rider has a spotless record. Advocacy organizations have successfully pressured several states to prohibit “motorcycle-only” rating factors and to require transparent rate filings.

In Australia, the Motorcycle Riders Association of the ACT forced a parliamentary inquiry that exposed collusion among major insurers and led to premium reductions of up to 40 % in some cases (MRA ACT Insurance Report, 2021).Perhaps the most insidious threat is cultural. Politicians and the media often portray motorcyclists as reckless “donors” (a grim term for organ donors) or outlaws.

Advocacy counters this narrative with facts: only about 2–3 % of registered motorcycles in the U.S. belong to the so-called “1 %” outlaw clubs, yet that tiny minority dominates public perception. Groups like ABATE (A Brotherhood Against Totalitarian Enactments) run public-awareness campaigns showing that the average rider is a 47-year-old professional with a college degree and a higher-than-average income (MIC Owner Survey, 2023).

Changing hearts and minds is slow work, but it is essential when juries award lower pain-and-suffering damages to injured riders because of implicit bias. On the international stage, the global advocacy network scored a landmark victory in 2022 when the United Nations finally recognized motorcyclists in its Decade of Action for Road Safety plan after years of lobbying by the Fédération Internationale de Motocyclisme (FIM) and FEMA.

The inclusion means that low- and middle-income countries—where motorcycles often represent 70–90 % of the vehicle fleet—will now receive targeted infrastructure and training funds instead of blanket bans promoted by automobile-centric policymakers.Motorcycle advocacy is not about demanding special privileges; it is about securing equal treatment under the law and on the road.

Every rider who pays registration fees and fuel taxes deserves infrastructure that doesn’t kill them for a single mistake, insurance rates that reflect their actual risk profile, and the basic freedom to modify their machine within reasonable environmental bounds. The alternative is a future where motorcycles are legislated into museums—relics of a freer era, accessible only to those wealthy enough to keep them as garage queens.

The fight is far from over. Autonomous vehicles, electric-micro-mobility lobbying, and ever-tighter emissions rules present new threats. But history shows that when riders organize, vote with their membership dues, show up at statehouses in force, and speak with one voice, politicians listen. The throttle of freedom is in the hands of those willing to twist it—politically as well as mechanically.

References

  • American Motorcyclist Association. (2023). 2023 State Legislative Recap. https://americanmotorcyclist.com/legislative-recap
  • Motorcycle Industry Council. (2023). 2023 Motorcycle Owner Survey.
  • Motorcycle Safety Foundation. (2022). 100 Motorcyclists Research Study.
  • Motorcycle Riders Foundation. Ongoing legislative alerts and position papers. https://mrf.org
  • Federation of European Motorcyclists’ Associations. (2022–2024). Anti-tampering campaign updates. https://www.fema-online.eu
  • Fédération Internationale de Motocyclisme & FEMA. (2022). UN Road Safety Decade inclusion announcement.
  • Motorcycle Riders Association of the ACT (Australia). (2021). Insurance Discrimination Inquiry Report.

#antiTamperingRegulations #bikerNews #bikerNews1 #bikieNews #helmetLaws #insaneThrottle #insuranceDiscrimination #laneSplitting #motorcycleAdvocacy #motorcycleLegislation #motorcycleLobbying #motorcyclistStereotypes #riderSafety #ridersRights

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@carbonated_estrogen when did we allow manufacturers to install more.ports than can be used.

But if a board has 10 SATA ports, I expect to at least use them all at the same time (maybe not at SATA-6G speeds but like SATA-2 or SATA-1 speeds instead)..

On April 4, Governor Jared Polis of Colorado signed into law SB24-079, which makes it legal for #motorcycles to filter between stopped cars in traffic or at stoplights. This makes Colorado the fifth state to legalize #lanesplitting.

Lane splitting by motorcycles in this way makes sense. It speeds up traffic flow for
everyone because it shortens lines of stopped traffic. Also, it encourages commuting by motorcycle instead of by car, which again reduces traffic load.

But an awful lot of car drivers hate it anyway. And ultimately, it comes down to that they see
someone else getting something they're not. The getting actually benefits them as well. But they can't see that.

This is part of an endemic problem that all of America is bedeviled by. Far too many people can't stand to see someone else getting something that they're not,
even if they didn't want that thing in the first place. And even when overall, it actually benefits them for their neighbor to get that thing. And next month, or next year, it may be them getting something that their neighbor doesn't ... assuming their neighbor doesn't try to stop them from getting it in revenge.

America has a really terrible problem with
#selfishness. Ultimately it's part of what's at the root of the MAGA movement. Selfishness. God forbid anybody should get anything you don't. God forbid any money should ever be spent on anything that might benefit somebody different from you, even if it benefits you as well. God forbid anybody who isn't like you should ever have anything. And people get so consumed by this kind of hate that they are unable to see that the rich people they worship, like Elon Musk, Donald Trump, the Waltons, the Sacklers, despise them just as much as they despise their hard-working neighbor who happens to be from, say, Honduras or Lebanon.

They are going to have a very rude awakening one day if they manage to bring the US into a place where its wealthy elites
don't need their votes any more. But they won't care. Because all they'll be able to see is that the people they hate are getting it even worse than they are. And after all, it was all those people's fault anyway, really. Because God forbid anything could ever be their own fault. It's so liberating to have an invisible friend who tells you that nothing you do can ever be wrong.

I know I'm still feeding the modern #capitalist oligarchy, but...

somehow nothing warms my soul like leaving a line of Tesla P100Ds, Mercedes SL65s, and BMW M3s in the dust, #lanesplitting on my $0.10 electric scooter rental in the morning.

#classwarfare