This is a serious question and NOT intended to stir up controversy.
Where are the AMA's priorities?
I will admit to having never joined the AMA. It seems to me that the AMA's top priority has been preventing / repealing helmet laws. This may be completely wrong, but that's been my perception (we all know perception and reality can be far apart).
I'd really like to see the AMA do some serious research around the concept of lane sharing / filtering. If the results warrant it, I'd like to see the AMA advocate for lane sharing / filtering as a national standard.
I'd like to see the AMA really push for DRIVER education.
I'd like to see the AMA REALLY push for rider education.
Honestly, I'd like to see the AMA push for tighter enforcement of licensing laws (despite pressure from the manufacturers).
Thoughts?
http://www.americanmotorcyclist.com/membership/benefits
Here is a list of the benefits from being a member.
I am signed up to get Political action emails.. so I can exercise my right to contact my representatives with good knowledge.
Here are the last two received:
Save the Recreational Trails Program
Email or Call your U.S. Senators Today!
<snipped for clarity to this thread.
This one is hitting California right now.. bs that the AMA and others are kicking ass on!! :thumbup
Pismo, Calif.:
A California appeals court has rejected a request by the Sierra Club to ban Off Highway Vehicle use on a county-owned parcel in Oceano Dunes State Vehicular Recreation Area. A state Court of Appeals upheld a San Luis Obispo Superior Court decision that it is too late to review a coastal development permit issued in 1982 that allows off-highway vehicles on a 584-acre, county-owned parcel, called the La Grande Tract, within the park.
The Sierra Club had sued State Parks, arguing that the La Grande Tract is classified as a buffer area by San Luis Obispo County’s local coastal plan and is, therefore, a nonvehicle area. Both courts ruled that State Parks is under no obligation to amend its general development plan to reflect the designation.
The Sierra Club was ordered to pay the costs of the appeal and is barred from further litigation over the 1982 permit. The lawsuit was the latest move in the club’s efforts to curtail off-road riding in the park. The court noted that the Coastal Commission and county have closely monitored activities in the park for more than 20 years.
Source and full story:
www.sanluisobispo.com/2012/01/10/1902441/oceano-dunes-sierra-club-lawsuit.html
Sierra club.. thank you for paying for your assault on our dunes..