- Thread starter
- #31
our home is on (just off) M-66 witch is a main state artery in Mich. Yesterday's weather had the motorcycles streaming by----I would venture to say 3/4 of the bikes that went by were ridden by helmetless riders.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
hehehe.......These aren't my stats, but the NHTSA's......Shame on you for calling the NHTSA a buncha liars, LMAO!!!!!!!
O.K........more "Fun With Numbers":
46% fatality rate without helmet/54% fatality rate with helmet = a difference of 8 points.
29% that helmets might reduce fatalities.......29% + 8 points = 37% that no helmet might reduce fatalities...........
All I know is that AZ is a rider's choice state and I don't/won't wear one.....just like this guy :Trike1:.....he's not wearing one and he's doing just fine, ROTFLMAO!
Riding a motorcycle is not an inherently dangerous under taking. You're getting way off Target.
Actually, not.
My point is that riding with a helmet is 29% safer than riding without a helmet. It's a measurable difference.
BUT, per mile traveled, you are 1600% more likely to die while riding a bike as opposed to riding in a car.
SO, if this conversation is simply about rational evaluations of risk, it's FAR more risky to ride a bike at all than it is to ride a bike without a helmet than with a helmet.
I have no problem with choice. Whoever's head it is ought to have the right to decide for themselves what level of risk they are comfortable with.
I only have a problem with people who insist that riding without a helmet is unsafe when riding a bike at all is about 50 times more unsafe.
It's kinda like the Bible story, IMHO, in focusing on the mote in someone else's eye while ignoring the beam in your own eye.
The fact is that all of us who ride make the decision that the risk is worth the pleasure. Choosing to ride without a helmet is the same thing.
And if you choose to ride with a helmet, you do increase your chances of survival. Just not to the point where is compares to riding in a car.
The controversy has gone on for nearly 40 YEARS.......If some study could conclusively prove that helmets are what they claim to be, then we wouldn't even be talking about this. A mandatory helmet law would have been imposed upon us across the board..........But no one has been able to conclusively prove it, so the controversy continues.
If anything, the 46% fatality rate without helmets vs. 54% fatality rate with helmets that the NHTSA figures speak of actually suggest in favor of NOT wearing a helmet, if even only by a slight margin.
Absolutely pro-choice on this one. Each individual should be able to decide for themselves without being forced to and without being criticized for their personal choice, as the figures are pretty dang close to 50/50 odds.
Something that hasn't been mentioned in this thread yet is that there's a lobby by manufacturer's of helmets to try to force mandatory helmet use. Obviously fueled by self interest and greed, but it kinda irks me that manufacturers of aftermarket accessories (helmets) for motorcycles (and motorcycling being one of the last areas of exercising personal freedom) would try to impose their greedy will on their own peer group.
Hmmmm I was thinking about this post... Every Non-wearing helmet guy and Gal that I know who own or ride on a regular basis.. Own some sort of a helmet... just not like the one that Jack Nicholson wears in EASY Rider..LMAO... But close!
Also no one mentioned anything about that maybe people who have not been riding more than a year or two.. tend to crash more than a guy or gal who has been riding for 10 plus years.. though you can crash at any time.
I like the Idea of a helmet law for those under 18 and for those who are new to riding???? :Shrug:
I had mentioned in an earlier post that the Queensland State government tried to ban open face helmets. We have just had a change of state gov. They have a very large majority so what they want they can get.
Word has got out that they plan several changes that will effect motorcyclists.
Putting a 4 year expiry on helmets. As there is no production date on helmets that will be interesting to enforce.
Higher registration costs for motorcycles but freezing increases for passenger cars.
Hi-Vis clothing for bike riders.
A 0% alcohol blood reading for motorcycles but .05% for car drivers. ( Currently .05% for all drivers )
Re introduction of front identification on motorcycles ( front rego. plates were removed in the 1970s due to pedestrian & rider collision injuries )
Increased use of wire rope barriers ( Cheese cutters ) on roadsides. This has been a safety issue that has been lobbied on for some time.
There is a protest meeting planned in just over a week. That will be interesting. Riders coming from all over South East Queensland.
Sure sounds like riders are being singled out for special treatment.
You guys in the U.S. sure seem to have a better deal than what we are getting here.
Yes, the proposal is riders would be required to buy a new helmet every 4 years.
Front rego plates here used to be across the bike so seen from the front. Blocking air flow to the engine if mounted on the front mudguard. It was common to fit them above the headlight,in front of the instruments. I worked in casualty in a hospital at the time. Had more than a few riders have a head on accident, fly over the 'bars and slice off his family jewels.
The "cheese cutter" barriers are. Vertical posts up to 4ft. high with steel woven cable about as thick as your thumb passed through holes in the posts. The final result is a "barrier" that small cars pass between the horizontal cables. Big trucks just plow through the barrier. Motorcyclists slide along the cables and get slices to bits. No amount of protesting,so far has had any effect. Traveling at 60 mph with these barriers a mere couple of feet from your body. I can't get far enough away from them.
Oh, and it's just after 6.30 on Friday evening here. Have a good night.