โJun-28-2018 08:06 AM
โJun-29-2018 09:40 AM
โJun-29-2018 07:47 AM
โJun-29-2018 04:56 AM
fj12ryder wrote:
Here ya go: List of countries by traffic-related death rate
Obviously the US is not the worst by a long shot, but most European countries with strict licensing and training are way down from ours.
It appears that the more lax the licensing and training, the higher the fatality rate.
Now I've stated my views and I shall sit back and simply read the postings with no more arguing.
โJun-29-2018 04:49 AM
โJun-28-2018 06:56 PM
โJun-28-2018 05:24 PM
โJun-28-2018 05:23 PM
fj12ryder wrote:Bionic Man wrote:Sure, all you have to do is logically explain why countries with strict licensing and training regimens have lower accident and fatality rates than those that have lax licensing and training regimens.fj12ryder wrote:Bionic Man wrote:Disagreement with people doesn't make me wrong. People certainly are allowed their opinions even when they are wrong. Happens all the time, and many times in the past. Popular belief is not a criteria for the correct action.fj12ryder wrote:
If more regulation, training, and more rigorous licensing didn't do any good, it's very unlike that the German high-speed autobahn would be as safe as it is.
Of course we need better licensing, that's a given. As for who should pay for it, obviously the people who are using it, and ability to perform with your vehicle of choice is stupidly obvious. How in the world can it be safe for a person to drive a Yugo to pick up his 40' diesel pusher, or his 1-ton dually pulling a 40' fifth wheel? That's just ignorant.
Training and licensing should be mandatory, and more testing for the inexperienced, i.e., the younger drivers, and those over 65. These are easy questions, and easy answers. We have high accident rates because drivers are just waved through the testing with no need to have any real ability to drive that multi-ton vehicle they just drove off in.
I'd suggest you read the comments posted prior to yours before you emphatically come across with "of course" and "that's a given". Because most folks here don't agree with you.
Lots of people drive poorly simply because they have not been trained properly. Good/safe driving is a complicated task, and for some reason this country seems to think it is innate in any person that can walk through a door and correctly answer a dozen questions on a test, and drive a car around the block without running into anything.
I lived and drove in Germany for 2 1/2 years and discovered first hand how poorly Americans are trained. It's not that we can't be trained, it's simply we aren't given the opportunity.
And the fact that you lived in Germany (or any other assertion you make) doesn't make you right. Back off on your holier than thou attitude. There are plenty of examples where government regulation did not improve a situation. Probably many more than where it actually did have a positive outcome.
Also, the fact that I believe that I'm correct in this assumption does not lead to a "holier than thou" attitude. That implies that I feel a moral superiority, when in fact I am just posting a pretty much proven fact. Believe it or not, it will still be true. Just open your eyes to it.
โJun-28-2018 04:29 PM
โJun-28-2018 04:17 PM
Bionic Man wrote:Sure, all you have to do is logically explain why countries with strict licensing and training regimens have lower accident and fatality rates than those that have lax licensing and training regimens.fj12ryder wrote:Bionic Man wrote:Disagreement with people doesn't make me wrong. People certainly are allowed their opinions even when they are wrong. Happens all the time, and many times in the past. Popular belief is not a criteria for the correct action.fj12ryder wrote:
If more regulation, training, and more rigorous licensing didn't do any good, it's very unlike that the German high-speed autobahn would be as safe as it is.
Of course we need better licensing, that's a given. As for who should pay for it, obviously the people who are using it, and ability to perform with your vehicle of choice is stupidly obvious. How in the world can it be safe for a person to drive a Yugo to pick up his 40' diesel pusher, or his 1-ton dually pulling a 40' fifth wheel? That's just ignorant.
Training and licensing should be mandatory, and more testing for the inexperienced, i.e., the younger drivers, and those over 65. These are easy questions, and easy answers. We have high accident rates because drivers are just waved through the testing with no need to have any real ability to drive that multi-ton vehicle they just drove off in.
I'd suggest you read the comments posted prior to yours before you emphatically come across with "of course" and "that's a given". Because most folks here don't agree with you.
Lots of people drive poorly simply because they have not been trained properly. Good/safe driving is a complicated task, and for some reason this country seems to think it is innate in any person that can walk through a door and correctly answer a dozen questions on a test, and drive a car around the block without running into anything.
I lived and drove in Germany for 2 1/2 years and discovered first hand how poorly Americans are trained. It's not that we can't be trained, it's simply we aren't given the opportunity.
And the fact that you lived in Germany (or any other assertion you make) doesn't make you right. Back off on your holier than thou attitude. There are plenty of examples where government regulation did not improve a situation. Probably many more than where it actually did have a positive outcome.
โJun-28-2018 04:14 PM
โJun-28-2018 04:09 PM
fj12ryder wrote:down home wrote:Ah, this explains why people don't use cell phones, read books/newspapers, and just in general not pay attention: because they know it's not a smart thing to do.
Regulate, regulate the call of the Socialists and those who think everyone else cannot tie their won shoes because they ccan't.
People know if they need practice and suchand attend to it themselves.
No regulations needed.
One of those kind is now in charge of TWRA and you must have safe boating certificate if born after 89 to operate a boat over 85 hp and register even a canoe. Limits on the number or Bream when you can catch hundred at a time every day e of the year.
The reason I said that because he a Liberal thinks that regulation and expensive licenses and permits gives control and money for more Regulators.
No Regulations and no Regulators. People are smart enough in most part of the Country to figure out things and to tie their won shoes themselves.
We want a free society not a well not a well regulated and permitted and poorer society.
That sentence positively dripped with sarcasm.
Also the regulations for fishing, and hunting partially, mainly came about because people could not be trusted to self-regulate themselves, leading to over fishing, over hunting and scarcity of fish and game. A person may be smart, people are stupid. Why are passenger pigeons extinct when they used to darken the skies, bald eagles were endangered at one time, the list is pretty long.
โJun-28-2018 04:01 PM
โJun-28-2018 03:57 PM
โJun-28-2018 03:49 PM
fj12ryder wrote:Bionic Man wrote:Disagreement with people doesn't make me wrong. People certainly are allowed their opinions even when they are wrong. Happens all the time, and many times in the past. Popular belief is not a criteria for the correct action.fj12ryder wrote:
If more regulation, training, and more rigorous licensing didn't do any good, it's very unlike that the German high-speed autobahn would be as safe as it is.
Of course we need better licensing, that's a given. As for who should pay for it, obviously the people who are using it, and ability to perform with your vehicle of choice is stupidly obvious. How in the world can it be safe for a person to drive a Yugo to pick up his 40' diesel pusher, or his 1-ton dually pulling a 40' fifth wheel? That's just ignorant.
Training and licensing should be mandatory, and more testing for the inexperienced, i.e., the younger drivers, and those over 65. These are easy questions, and easy answers. We have high accident rates because drivers are just waved through the testing with no need to have any real ability to drive that multi-ton vehicle they just drove off in.
I'd suggest you read the comments posted prior to yours before you emphatically come across with "of course" and "that's a given". Because most folks here don't agree with you.
Lots of people drive poorly simply because they have not been trained properly. Good/safe driving is a complicated task, and for some reason this country seems to think it is innate in any person that can walk through a door and correctly answer a dozen questions on a test, and drive a car around the block without running into anything.
I lived and drove in Germany for 2 1/2 years and discovered first hand how poorly Americans are trained. It's not that we can't be trained, it's simply we aren't given the opportunity.