The Capital Bikeshare killer is here. Bike sharing programs are increasingly popular in big cities, and Washington was an early adopter with its Capital Bikeshare program. (The keys even look like little communist flags!) The program got started with millions in subsidies from the government, and is continually supported by D.C.-area governments. The system’s main inefficiency is the docking system and during big events it can’t easily handle demand surges without human help.
Enter LimeBike, which I tested along with Red Alert‘s Ron Meyer yesterday. Make no mistake: Limbike is here to kill Capital Bikeshare. Each bike has a lock built into the back wheel, so it doesn’t need a dock. You simply park it pretty much anywhere on the sidewalk. While LimeBike’s monthly fees are a bit higher than Bikeshare, its ease of use (via an app) is much better, and at $1 a ride, LimeBike is slightly cheaper on a per-ride basis for casual users. Each bike has a basket with a solar panel on it that powers the GPS and the lock, the front wheel also generates power, and the tires are airless, thus minimizing the need to be handled by employees. The best part? It’s all done without federal grant money or annual contributions from local governments.
Still, competing with the government’s chosen player is . . . no fun. Will the government let LimeBike kill their investment? Probably not.
The Jonah Goldberg podcast! Most readers are familiar with National Review’s Jonah Goldberg. Yesterday, he released a new podcast called The Remnant with Jonah Goldberg. It’s well worth a listen, as Jonah “nervously gropes his way through the podcast universe like a blind pervert in a sex-robot warehouse.” Of course, you should also subscribe to our wonderful suite of podcasts, too.
Kids say the darndest things. The Washington Post Magazine has an interview with the region’s (minus Virginia, oddly) third-graders, to let them have a say on the state of the USA. Some favorites:
Maybe the people bragging on Twitter about their #woke 8-year-olds are actually telling the truth!
Kristol! Kristol! Kristol! Alex Burns has a fun read about the Acela train at the New York Times, and Bill Kristol makes an amusing cameo:
Most TWSers are Northeast Regional types, but Bill sure does love his Acela . . . and hate the Quiet Car.
Old liberals vs. young progressives. In college, my favorite local columnist in Saint Louis was Bill McLellan, who wrote a column at the Post Dispatch. He’s an old-school liberal, and over the years I was there, he taught me a lot about my temporary home town. Saint Louis has been in the news a lot lately post Ferguson on the subjects of policing, race, and crime. Here’s McClellan’s latest on the difference between old liberals and young progressives:
As you can imagine, the column has not been going over well in progressive circles.
Baseball is back! It was only gone for a day, but it felt like forever. And tonight, the playoffs begin! Over at Tablet, I learned something interesting about Dodger Stadium: The parking lot for the stadium was once a Jewish cemetery. Here’s Aaron Katz:
Indeed, when the Dodgers came west, they brought Sandy Koufax, the game’s most famous player of Jewish ancestry with them. There is a plaque on the site, that Katz reports will soon be replaced with a new one. If you’re out west for any of the games, it seems worth checking out.
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