no said:
snipped
Talking about streaching to make a point. Again I ask you what else do you
want to government to prevent me from doing to keep something from POSSIBLY
impacting you. I can think of many things, climbing ladders. You might see
me fall and have to get out of you chair, wrap yourself in bubble wrap and
call for help. Riding motorcycles, you might have to dodge the wreckage
when someone crashes and this could cause you to spill your coffee in your
lap. Drinking coffee in a moving car, you migh get burned by spilled coffee
and lose control of your car and drive into a playground full of children.
PLAYGROUNDS!!! My Lord, look at the dangers there; swings, see-saws, running
children tripping and falling, out of control cars!!!!
All of which makes about as much sense as your 'they might have to leave
their machines' stuff.
Having been on construction job sites more than once with coworkers who
injured themselves and had to be either
rushed to hospital or extricated from dangerous places by other workers
because of they were:
A. Using equipment not meant for the job
B. Injured and had to be extricated from dangerous position because they
were not using safety belts, hard hats, foot gear etc.
Yeah it happens a lot, which is why Insurance is so high for
construction workers.
I have news for you, they don't work because stupid people tend not to
follow such laws. I give you two examples; seatbelts and lawn mower deadman
switches.
Stats show most of them do, seat belt use has gone from almost nil to
80% since the laws were enacted
http://usgovinfo.about.com/od/consumerawareness/a/seatbeltuse.htm
“It’s no coincidence that because 8 out of 10 Americans are wearing
their safety belts, we have also achieved
the lowest traffic fatality rate on our Nation’s highways since
record-keeping began 29 years ago,” Mineta said.
Today’s traffic fatality rate is 1.48 fatalities per 100 million vehicle
miles traveled, a dramatic reduction since
1975 when the rate was 3.35 fatalities per 100 million vehicle miles
traveled."
Yep, fingers moving faster than brain there but the question still needs to
be answered. Who are you to tell people what kind of car they must drive?
Again, I'm not telling them anything, if they are smart they will drive
the safest car they can afford. If they are stupid,
then they will win the Darwin award, along with people who drive on thin
lake ice and gold during thunderstorms.
Of course the free market had nothing to do with it because the government
is controling things. As you pointed out you could buy cars with airbags
LONG before the government forced them upon the people. It just seemed
that people wanted to spend their money on other things. Which, as I keep
saying, should be their right.
Not Airbags. Seat belts, racing harness, roll bars, fire suppression.
None of which was readily available
to the average person. Nor was there much information available
regarding deaths prevented by seat belt
use for the average person to make a educated decision back then.
Good for her and a few years ago the government changed the law allowing
people to legally disconnect the airbags in their cars. But you seem to be
stuck on the small details and not seeing the big picture. What if the
government forces cars to be built to NASCAR Cup standards and the cheapest
car you can buy cost $100,000US? As I have pointed out this would save many
lives and cut the impact to your life.
LOL, more extremism. For one thing Nascar cup standards would not pass
current regulations for road cars.
Hum. . .I guess there are dozens of race car drivers dieing every year.
I guess big racing is just hiding that fact. The point still stand,
many
times a year a race car hits a concrete wall doing well over 100 mph
and
the driver climbs out of the car and walks away under his own power.
Do
a youtube search and I'm sure you can see some video of racing
accidents
that would have killed someone driving any car out there on the
commercial market. I guess its just fancy editing when they show the
driver walking away.
They die in crashes all the time, or are seriously injured, here you go:
Deaths in Grand-Am
* Jeff Clinton, Homestead-Miami, March 2002
[edit] Deaths in NASCAR Winston Cup/Nextel Cup (since 1971)
* Friday Hassler, Daytona, February 1972
* Larry Smith, Talladega, May 1973
* Tiny Lund, Talladega, August 1975
* Ricky Knotts, Daytona, February 1980 (qualifying race)
* Bruce Jacobi, injuries suffered in a 1983 wreck at the 125-mile
qualifying races at Daytona (he would remain in a coma until he died in
1987)
* Terry Schoonover, Atlanta, November 1984
* Baldwin, Rick, injured during qualifying attempt at Michigan in
1986,
succumbing in 1997.
* Grant Adcox, Atlanta, November 1989
* J. D. McDuffie, Watkins Glen, August 1991
* Neil Bonnett, Daytona, February, 1994 (in practice)
* Rodney Orr, Daytona, February, 1994 (in practice)
* Kenny Irwin, Loudon, July 2000 (in practice)
* Dale Earnhardt, Daytona, February 2001, Daytona 500
[edit] Deaths in NASCAR Busch Series (since 1982)
* Clifford Allison, Michigan, 1992 (in practice)
* Adam Petty, Loudon, 2000 (in practice)
I don't know about how the other NASCAR cars are equipped so I only
counted the Cup and Bush series. Using your own numbers in the past 30
(THIRTY) years there has been a total of 13 deaths. (FYI, in 2003 there
were 417 people killed falling from ladders. That's about 3208% more.)
In the last 30 years how many drivers, I won't even include passengers,
have been killed in cars that are traveling much slower who could have
lived if the government had required all cars to be built to protect the
drivers like NASCAR requires their cars to be built?
Two points. One, if you want the government to protect you and those
around you should not they protect you to the utmost? Two, who gets to
decided what is the right thing?
Can't come up with a counter argument for this?
13 deaths and many life threatening injuries that are not listed. Nascar
is nothing like day to day traffic,
in Nascar you have some of the best drivers in the world, all going in
one direction with road marshalls
watching for infractions of the rules, oil & debris in about 40 races a
year.
You give cites of how not buckling up is a danger for the person not buckled
up you have yet to give a cite showing how many accidents are CAUSED by
people not buckling up AND injure others. Can you come up with 5 accidents
in the past 30 years where an unbuckled person was the cause of a fatal
accident?
If you can not then will you admit that there no REASONABLE risk to anyone
other than the individual who made a free choice to not buckle his seatbelt?
http://www.wa.gov/wtsc/programs/seatbelt2.htm
"Belted People Don't Kill Other People:
A study conducted at the University of Tokyo examined 100,000 collisions
involving front and rear passengers.
The study found that drivers who are buckled up have five times the risk
of dying in a collision if their rear seat
passengers are not buckled up. The injuries to the driver and front seat
passenger are caused when the people
in the back who are not buckled up catapult to the front. The force of
this human body flying into the front seat
is calculated to be 3.5 tons for a 30-mile per hour crash. The study
found that 80% of the deaths from the crashes
could have been eliminated if the rear seat occupants had been buckled
up. The study results were recently published
in The Lancet".
1.
2. Fatal MTA Bus Accident -- July 27, 2007
<
>
The* driver* of a MTA Metro Bus was* ejected* from his bus and then run
over by the bus after being braodsided by a Lincolin Navigator SUV. The
SUV The driver of a MTA Metro Bus was ejected from his bus and then run
over by the bus after being braodsided by
a Lincolin Navigator SUV. The SUV ran a red light on the corner of
Williamington & 120th Street in unincorporated
Los Angeles. The driver of the bus died at the scene. The driver of the
SUV was transported in critical condition
3. Crash on icy I-80 fatal to OP woman
http://blogs.kansascity.com/crime_scene/2006/12/26/index.html
A 32-year-old Overland Park woman wearing her lap belt but not shoulder
belt was thrown from her 2002 Ford
Explorer and killed when it overturned on icy I-80 in Wyoming Saturday,
police said. A 7-year-old girl passenger
was treated and released.
Update: The Wyoming Highway Patrol tells me the victim, Tonice S.
Joseph, slid out of her lap belt when the
vehicle overturned. She was thrown into the oncoming traffic lane and
struck the passenger-side windshield of a
state snowplow. The child was partly pinned under the Ford Explorer,
troopers said. That's the extent of the
report; the investigating trooper is off today.
4.
http://www.usatoday.com/money/consumer/autos/mauto974.htm
"Query's husband of three years died instantly after the tread peeled
off his Firestone tire, his Explorer rolled
three times, and he was thrown out of the vehicle and into oncoming
traffic".
5.
http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1528800/20060417/proof_of_d_12.jhtml
Ashanti pulled out of a planned concert in Johannesburg, South Africa,
on Saturday after her cousin was killed by a drunk
driver while running an errand for the singer before the show. According
to the Cape Times Web site, 20-year-old Quinshae
Snead was thrown into oncoming traffic from a car in which she was a
passenger after it was struck by an unlicensed
17-year-old drunk driver who had stolen his mother's car.
6.
http://www.silive.com/printer/printer.ssf?/base/news/115020455968410.xml&coll=1
Danielle Ricco, a classmate of Miss Sallustio at Pace University and one
of her close friends, was killed in the crash after
being ejected from the cab's front passenger seat and thrown into the
path of another taxi going in the opposite direction.
7.
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4188/is_20070403/ai_n18786106
Police have released the identity of a Clearfield man killed Monday
night after he was thrown from a rolling vehicle and hit
by oncoming traffic.
8.
http://www.poormojo.org/pmjadaily/archives/008429.php
SEMINOLE COUNTY, Fla. -- A driver of a sport utility vehicle that
flipped nearly 12 times on Interstate 4 was cut
in half after he was launched into the air and landed in the windshield
of a moving SUV, according to Local 6 News.
9.
http://www.safeprogram.com/jessica.htm
"Within the past month I lost someone close to the family. Her name was
Katie Marchetti. Her and my cousin AJ
were driving home from an engagment party. They did not drink. In fact,
they left the party early because they
were tired and wanted to go home. AJ was driving and Katie was in the
passenger seat. On the way home AJ fell
asleep at the wheel, and collided with the gaurdrail. AJ was wearing his
seatbelt and had minor cuts and bruises...
Katie was not. She was ejected from the car into oncoming traffic. She
was then hit by another car. She did not
survive. "
10.
http://64.233.167.104/search?q=cache:gG9Mvx087bMJ:timesnewsweekly.com/Archives
2004/Jul.-Sept.2004/090904/NewFiles/TEEN%2520DIES.html+ejected+into+oncoming+traffic
&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=97&gl=ca
"A Howard Beach teenager died after the auto she was riding in flipped
and ejected her into oncoming traffic on the Belt Parkway on Sunday."
How, how, HOW! I have NEVER read an accident report which cites the cause
of the accident being the lack of seatbelt usage. I haven't even seen it
listed as a contributing factor. Can you give me one (1) accident where
this has happened?
Also you like to use reasonable risk as your reason. Just what is a
reasonable risk? The risk of 1 person in 100,000 dieing? 1 in 500,000? 1
in 1,000,000?