Post #344,572
7/4/11 8:51:58 PM
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Lovely anecdotes.
And I do not in any way wish to diminish personal experiences where they have made a difference. However. In all the years as a child I rode a bike, including to-and-from high school, I never had an accident involving head trauma. Neither did either of my siblings. Right there is an interesting statistical comparison.
There was a public argument in the mass media in Australia a few months ago about their effectiveness. The issues were not cut and dried. Yes, individual lives have been saved and injuries reduced. However, the numbers tell a different story. The reduction in percentage deaths from mandating bicycle helmets was actually inconclusive. And then there were issues of actual safety standards and grubby money-making exercises around helmet sales. One of the few definitive statistics were how many people now do not cycle because of the mandatory helmet law. Myself included.
Believe it or not, my point wasn't actually whether it is or isn't stupid to wear a helmet. My point was that how a good safety practice has been turned into a rules enforcement exercise. Sometimes I'd like the permission to decide my own safety levels.
Wade.
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Post #344,573
7/4/11 10:15:13 PM
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Sympathize with that, of course
Recall though: this IS a nanny-state, along with several worldwide similar. Except that in Murica, since you're 'insured' [our Largest bizness?] -- absolutely Nothing is ever again 'supposed to go-wrong' ... Go-Wrong cha cha.
Arrayed against Free Will(ful-ness) are the Forces of those same Insur. Cos., natch wanting everyone to buy lots of their wares: and need fewer and fewer payouts, because everyone Must use seat belts
[and, they Must! actually--or those n+1 airbags may well not save your sorry ass, as you tumble about.]
That so many do Not voluntarily choose to use both: helmets/seat-belts, even-- I attribute to the Innumeracy, the Dumbth and ignorance of all science/physics, especially.
A visceral appreciation of merely F=MA, would cause one to never forget to use such minimalist protection.
Alas, here--the heaped dead bodies illustrated countless cases where either prophylactic most likely Would have cheated death/maiming/Reagan-brain syndrome.
It's a philosophical argument. We don't Do philosophy here; maybe better in Oz?
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Post #344,574
7/4/11 10:23:55 PM
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Yes, and?
When I was a wee lad, I never wore a helmet either. That doesn't make it any less stupid, in hindsight. We know more now. It only takes one accident, and you could be a vegetable, or worse. I don't care how stupid it might make me look wearing it, it's goin' on my head.
Do you wear a seat belt when you drive?
-Mike
"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."
- Benjamin Franklin, 1759 Historical Review of Pennsylvania
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Post #344,600
7/6/11 4:24:13 PM
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Well... how about this then...
I was 8. Yes ballsy. I rode my bike down the slide at the Elementary School near my home. (I went to it the first time the next year in third grade).
So... I crashed and burned. Didn't crack my head open but I gouged out my left hand and nicked my cartilage of the first knuckle of my left pointer finger. Does that mean every one should have to wear protective hand gear and riding armor?
There are people that care more about what they look like in the motorcycle world. Some try to get away with "Novelty" helmets because they are slim and small... but they all die sooner or later.
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Post #344,601
7/6/11 4:31:33 PM
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Gouged hand < closed head injury
HTH!
;-)
Regards, -scott Welcome to Rivendell, Mr. Anderson.
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Post #344,604
7/6/11 5:55:04 PM
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And who pays
Mostly, somebody with a hand injury ends up paying for the related experience themselves or (if 8) via immediate family.
Closed head injuries tend to be real, real expensive, and often render the injured party incapable of paying expenses.
Your hand protection is mostly your own financial risk, your decision. Your head, though, is my (as a member of your risk group via insurance or unpaid hospital bills) financial risk, so I may feel I have a stake in the decision. I haven't decided where I come down on the whole issue, but while I usually tend to very strongly favor the individual right, in this kind of thing I also see another side as being not automatically wrong.
---------------------------------------
I think it's perfectly clear we're in the wrong band.
(Tori Amos)
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Post #344,606
7/6/11 7:02:07 PM
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On the gripping hand...
I'm much less concerned about informed adults. If someone wants to ride their motorcycle in a Kraut helmet because it looks cool, I don't care. It's their decision. Not that I'm very impressed with people who won't wear a helmet because it ruins their hair-do. And I agree with you on the financial burden.
Parents who don't put helmets on their kids, however, are another matter. I consider it along the same lines as smoking in a car with kids.
Regards, -scott Welcome to Rivendell, Mr. Anderson.
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Post #344,607
7/6/11 7:18:34 PM
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Then you should favor helmetless riding
Someone crunched the numbers back in the 80s. People without helmets are more likely to die. People with helmets are more likely to have debilitating -- but non-fatal -- brain injuries.
So if you're looking just at the finances of it, it's cheaper for you if other people ride without helmets.
--
Drew
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Post #344,640
7/8/11 8:29:23 AM
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Is that why...
Ohio doesn't have a helmet law?
Nor Indiana.
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Post #344,646
7/8/11 9:59:15 AM
7/8/11 9:59:26 AM
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Dunno about that
All I'm saying is you can't use the economic impact argument to support your desire to tell someone else that they should wear a helmet.
(Not "you" you of course, just in general.)
--
Drew
Edited by drook
July 8, 2011, 09:59:26 AM EDT
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Post #344,669
7/8/11 10:56:11 PM
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+5, Illuminating.
So many things in this modern western secular society is done for the "economic impact", even if the original impulse was actually quite noble. :-(
(Don't get me started on speed cameras...)
Wade.
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Post #344,651
7/8/11 11:16:28 AM
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We (ohio) used to have a helmet law.
It was repealed on the basis that it was not up to the government to prevent people splitting their heads. The insurance companies pissed and moaned and some quack from the Cleveland Clinic wrote numerous screeds to the paper that it was so heartbreaking fixing the people who were splattered without helmets. I wrote, in response, that he probably picked the wrong profession and he should bitch about his guidance councilor instead. The paper declined to publish it...
I am the first to admit that Ohio is an incredibly stupid state, but the helmet laws have nothing to do with it.
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Post #344,641
7/8/11 8:31:20 AM
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Sure it is...
But hands are exceptionally important to a persons ability to become a hardworking lackey in the order of Society.
SURELY you don't want to deprive johnny his ability to make money for the rich folk?!
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