No.
Share bikes are one of the worst things to have happened to me personally and I shan’t be putting up with it any longer.
Yesterday, I walked past a bike with not one but two horrifically bent wheels (… how tho?), hanging half out of a tree and yelled at it, “WHAT NOW, BIKE? DO YOU EVEN STILL QUALIFY AS ‘BIKE’? HOW DID YOU GET UP THERE? WHOSE RESPONSIBILITY ARE YOU, PLS? DO YOU PLAN ON JUST SITTING THERE, LOOKING PATHETIC FOR THE REST OF ETERNITY?”
The thing that upsets me most about share bikes is that someone once thought they were a good idea.
“You know what we should do?” a person once said. “Have bikes that belong to no one but also everyone. For a small price that in no way covers the actual cost of a bike, they can cycle wherever they like, and then dump the bike on the street, or in the middle of the road, the details don’t matter. I think this business model will really bring out the best in people.”
Narrator: It did not bring out the best in people.
Here’s everything that’s wrong with share bikes. Post continues below.
Whoever pitched this abomination of an idea overlooked a universal human truth: People ruin things and they don’t even know why.
You see, share bikes are a lot like communism, only much worse.
They belong to a utopian future defined by a classless world order where people inherently respect public property. But that premise is expecting far too much of people.