hawkeye-08 wrote:
Some have commented about the attitudes folks have, but I think it is not about the "me" attitude, but rather more about folks just getting plain tired of others thinking that they can tell them what to do... It is really none of your business if I leave my hitch in or not and I don't really care if you think you can tell me what to do.. mind your own business and take some personal responsibility for a change.
To the OP, sorry your wife got hurt.
You are entitled to that mentality when you truck is on private property, but it fails when on public roads, where public safety pretty much trumps your laziness and negligence.
I have never seen someone pull into / run into a trailer ball from behind, but I have seen plenty of truck drivers/owners back into vehicles below the tailgate line of sight, and punch out a bumper or license plate or take out the hood on a low car like a Honda Civic or Accord with the hitch still left in place when not in use. Those are the facts/statistics I've observed. 4 different times I observed this, I took all 4 license plate numbers down, on different occassions, and left the plate numbers on the car hit, after the truck driver hit and ran. 3 of these events occurred at Home Depot parking lots, by contractors. YMMV, but that's my personal experience on the matter.
You are entitled to life, liberty and pursuit of happiness. Driving, and owning/operating a vehicle is not a right... it's a privilege, and that privilege can be revoked, by anyone that observes your practices and is in a position to issue a fix it ticket or a fine. Public roads you drive on make it everyone's business when you have a protrusive unnecessary hunk of metal sitting there in the hitch, when it should have been removed when you were finished using it. With the privilege comes a level of responsibility to all that share public roads and public parking lots. The majority of vehicles out there don't have protrusions sticking out the back beyond the bumper line, which is considered the norm. Your hitch, when not in use towing, sticks out like a sore thumb. A lawyer will tell you one day your laziness in removing the hitch is negligence. It wasn't in use, it wasn't necessary, and it creates a hazard on public roads and public parking lots. It is foreseeable someone will bump into it and hurt themselves.