Maybe it's just a case that the human race as a whole is turning into a bunch of selfish tw*ts who don't give a fig about others.
Not helped by idiots like Clarkson who engender the opinion that driving your chav machine 'on the limit' is cool.
Maybe it's just a case that the human race as a whole is turning into a bunch of selfish tw*ts who don't give a fig about others.
Sadly a lot of people cycle with a driver mindset. The bike enables them to act out their desire for freedom speed and choice in ways no car can any more. So they jump red lights, ride too fast on pavements and go the wrong way down one way streets and drivers see them do it and go nuts....
This dichotomy is common when comparing an individual exposure to risk and the exposure that an entire population faces over a period of time. Cycling can be termed relatively safe for each individual cyclist while at the same time recognising that improvements can be made to lower every cyclist's exposure to risk. Lowering the exposure to risk to every cyclist would result in fewer KSI.One thing that stuck me today whilst out and about and doing my usual deep (for me) thinking.
There's a real dichotomy between the relative safety of bikes and what we would like to see improved on our roads.
I see a lot of talk on here (rightly so) about cycling being a relatively risk free activity. Yet, on the other hand, we complain that the roads need to be safer for cyclists.
The 2 possibly don't add up do they, in particular whan we are trying to persuade/encourage others to either cycle more/take up cycling or to driver safer/improve road safety?
This dichotomy is common when comparing an individual exposure to risk and the exposure that an entire population faces over a period of time. Cycling can be termed relatively safe for each individual cyclist while at the same time recognising that improvements can be made to lower every cyclist's exposure to risk. Lowering the exposure to risk to every cyclist would result in fewer KSI.
I work in an industry where it is conceivable that I could kill through negligence. There are situations where it would be possible for me to kill a couple of dozen members of the public or more and a couple of high profile names. Even if I was negligent in the execution of my work the risk of this negligence actually killing someone would be tiny and would require a series of errors and omissions by several people. I could probably spend my entire career operating in an 'unsafe manner' without any misfortune. However, expand the risk that I would pose as an individual across an entire industry that has hundreds of millions of interactions with the public and people would die. That is why industries (often jogged by the force of government legislation) work on minimising the risk they pose to the public and their employees. Cutting the risk each individual poses from tiny to infinitesimal pays dividends.
If I didn't work to the appropriate standards I'd find myself in a rather uncomfortable situation. I don't want to be there so I don't cut corners - a bit like driving really.
The big dichotomy is in the general perception of road safety. In the wake of rail and air disasters,over time, countless millions will be spent upgrading equipment, procedures and training in an attempt to reduce the risk of such events being repeated. The reduction in the public's general exposure to risk will result in a handful fewer deaths. Any other response to a disaster would be condemned by public and politicians alike.
However, on the road thousands are killed and seriously injured each year and there are few demands to maintain operating standards, improve the function of the licencing system or for the government to intervene with improvements to infrastructure (some are happening but the government has made clear that this is only at a local level). Recently the biggest conversation in the public sphere about reducing risk revolved around the profitability of insurance companies (who are struggling to pay out for all the carnage). Government can for a modest outlay save thousands of lives and livelihoods - in France tougher enforcement (on the back of an impromptu Presidential announcement) has made a huge improvement to their accident figures. We are heading the other way.
Got to love this onePerhaps, in the way in which you see them going past your house?
I'd hardly call supercars 'chav machines'. Clarkson et al. are entertainers, they are not really that extreme. Those that fail to realise this are, IMO, beyond help.Not helped by idiots like Clarkson who engender the opinion that driving your chav machine 'on the limit' is cool.
One thing that stuck me today whilst out and about and doing my usual deep (for me) thinking.
There's a real dichotomy between the relative safety of bikes and what we would like to see improved on our roads.
I see a lot of talk on here (rightly so) about cycling being a relatively risk free activity. Yet, on the other hand, we complain that the roads need to be safer for cyclists.
The 2 possibly don't add up do they, in particular whan we are trying to persuade/encourage others to either cycle more/take up cycling or to driver safer/improve road safety?
Got to love this one
"Tonight I saw a cyclist with no lights on"
"Well you saw him though didn't you, so ner "
What exactly are you suggesting or advocating, that since the cyclist was seen by the poster it therefore means they don't need lights?
The cost is a boundary enough!While I understand your point, I think calls for this sort of thing have to be balanced with the view that this would put off a lot of potential cyclists. These may not be the committed cyclists who spend time on cycling forums like this one and have a deep interest in issues relating to cycling in general. They may not be confident cyclists and they may not even ride the way we feel they should ride but they ARE cyclists none the less. As has been pointed out, the more cyclists there are on the roads, the more other road users are used to seeing them, the safer it is for all of us.
Let's not make it even harder for people to take up cycling.
... I pay enough and do enough to cycle freely on the road.