it means that his personal risk assessment profile is very different when he is driving a lorry to when he is riding a bike.
I’m sure he can answer for himself rather than needing a personal assistant to respond with their interpretation.
it means that his personal risk assessment profile is very different when he is driving a lorry to when he is riding a bike.
I'm not talking about liability. I've already said that lies 100% with the driver. I'm talking about staying alive as a cyclist.
We've already established the Citroen driver is at fault so that's not my problem.
Actually as it's a built up area everybody should be careful, drivers and cyclists alike. If you look at the streetview image I posted upthread there are cars parked on both sides of the road past the junction making it effectively single lane. Risk of getting doored, people crossing, children playing.
I don't drive a lorry but I do drive a car and ride a bike so that's what I'm looking at and in either case I think there are lessons to be learned from this incident.
I’m sure he can answer for himself rather than needing a personal assistant to respond with their interpretation.
Apologies. It sounded like you thought she played some part by not anticipating or avoiding it.
Still would like to know if you were in her shoes, the driver jumped out and said "everyone should be able to stop, why didn't you"? Would you accept that knowing the driver is 100% at fault?
Is anyone hurt?
She was badly injured, wasn't she?
"The cyclist was left with a bleed on the brain, a broken shoulder and a broken ankle."
I thought she was in a car.
You're doing this on purpose.
"if you were in her shoes" as in the lady who went over the bonnet.
So flip the situation and you are in a car in place of the cyclist. You hit the driver pulling out of the junction and they start shouting at you because you didn't stop.
Do you say, "fair point, I should have stopped" and accept your liability?
You need to be clearer.
assuming my motivation is personal protection,
You didn't answer that and swerved by going on about liability. We all know the driver was liable but people are questioning your assertion that she should have somehow stopped or at least taken avoiding action. I changed that hyperthetical scenario because it adds the element of vehicle protection, as you pointed out that you wouldn't be cautious if it wasn't going to harm you (lorry hitting the car).
I asked again a second time based on the context of this thread. Hence, if you were in HER position and laying in the floor injured.
Is your motivation solely personal protection or is it also to cause no harm to more vulnerable road users?
In the current thought experiment, the former.
Seems in your thought experiment you’d fail the attitude test required of a responsible and capable driver and fail to gain a licence.