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- This topic has 296 replies, 66 voices, and was last updated 13 years ago by CharlieMungus.
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Angry commuter – justified??
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JunkyardFree Member
I am not sure why you think the activness of a biking forum would be typical in terms of activity for the UK tbh. Could you explain why you think this is a good comparison to make?
Is it still funny? or like all jokes is it not so funny once it’s explained?
Car drivers tend to drive everywhere and car drivers are often less than calm and rarely in a state of serene bliss.
Is there anything else obvious you need explaining today as my kids are off school 😉stgeorgeFull Memberincidentally, the same article puts the cost of all road accidents in 2009 at £15,820 million – which is a fair chunk of that Fuel Duty revenue!
Which it would be if it was paid for by the exchequer, but its not. In fact less than 7% of this figure is paid from taxes.
33% ie £5,000 million odd is for damage to property, in other words the damage to the car….. (in the main)
Just saying these figures can sound a lot worse than they are
CharlieMungusFree MemberCar drivers tend to drive everywhere and car drivers are often less than calm and in a state of serene bliss. .
Is there anything else obvious you need explaining today as my kids are off schoolYes, explain how you can be sure of the causality in that relationship
Maybe inactive people buy cars. Do you think if they didn’t have cars the would be more active or just stay in more.Secondly, given the origins of this thread, it would seem that cyclist are a equally prone to stress, in fact in this particular case, I don’t think the car driver on the bridge went home and whined about it on the internet.
CharlieMungusFree MemberCould you explain why you think this is a good comparison to make?
It’s not a comparison, It is evidence that cars do not cause inactivity
D0NKFull MemberGuns don’t kill people either
Car culture makes cars the form of transport for choice for most people, so most people own a car, owning a car leads to driving everywhere, leads to inactivity. Everyone else also driving everywhere leads to traffic jams leads to stress.
JunkyardFree Memberhow you can be sure of the causality in that relationship
Which one bliss or laziyness?
Do you think if they didn’t have cars the would be more active or just stay in more.
I think they may still need to work and shop and take their kids to school so I supect they would walk more/be more active. Perhaps we could do a reverse study and see if increased car ownership reduces say cycling activity or general activity in China – what would your guess be I say guess it seems pretty prima facie obvious that all humans will become lazier if they own a car tbh. We could then do it in Indian as maybe the Chinese are just lazy?
it would seem that cyclist are a equally prone to stress
Not sure about equally tbh but yes they can be. Suppose someone ignoring the rules, driving at you then shouting at you may increase your stress levels
As an aside I am getting more convinced their is something statistically re “psychic ” powers and am still reading up. Quite interesting actuallyTandemJeremyFree MemberThere is actually some decent research on the stress. Car commuters are more stressed than cycle or public transport commuter – significantly so. Large scale research done in the states
However – like many petrol heads you don’t want to believe there could be the slightest downside – like all the quibbling about the money.
CharlieMungusFree Memberhow you can be sure of the causality in that relationship
Which one bliss or laziyness?
Actually I meant this one
my kids
😛
As an aside I am getting more convinced their is something statistically re “psychic ” powers and am still reading up. Quite interesting actually
Good for you! But i do notice you have stopped calling me Dr Mungus
CharlieMungusFree MemberThere is actually some decent research on the stress. Car commuters are more stressed than cycle or public transport commuter – significantly so. Large scale research done in the states
One thing at a time TJ, you still need to show some evidence of the other ‘fact’ you made up
However – like many petrol heads you don’t want to believe there could be the slightest downside – likem all the quibbling about the money
Its not money I’ quibbling about, it’s evidence
TandemJeremyFree MemberCharlie – I told you where to find it and indeed others have found some for you.
You just don’t want to believe it.
all I said was it was the acccepted figure. It is. Can I have my apology now?
gwj72Free MemberI bought my first car (sierra lx!) so I could get out to the peaks with my bike and drive to the coast to surf. I didn’t need it for work at the time.
People buy cars for lots of reasons. For freedom if your sick of your surroundings, for employment if there is no jobs locally, to partake in activities that are not available locally, to visit friends and family or to just have some independence if your dependent on others.
People love cars. Brits especially love their cars. We spend enormous amounts of money buying them and caring for them. We buy new ones for the joy we get. Some of us tinker with them and learn about them. Some take them to tracks and race them. I love my cars. One has a name, he’s referred to by everyone by his name not the model. It’s got happy memories embedded in its rusty old shell.
You’re right, we brits are obsessed with our cars. I make no apology for it. As a minority I’m afraid you’re just going to have to learn to live with them.
CharlieMungusFree MemberI think they may still need to work and shop and take their kids to school so I supect they would walk more/be more active.
Maybe, that is one scenario, but it would also increase their access to opportunities for physical activity. Many people drive to the gym and would not go otherwise, many of us transport our bikes to go cycling which we might not do otherwise. The relationship is more complex than saying that car ownership leads to physical inactivity. Surely if this were the case we would see +ve correlations between car ownership and poor health, rather than the converse.
CharlieMungusFree MemberCharlie – I told you where to find it and indeed others have found some for you.
No, you showed me the cost of deaths by RTA
I’m asking you to show me evidence of this.All the deaths and ill health directly and indirectly caused. a million pounds a death.
JunkyardFree MemberTill the oil runs out
Actually I meant this one
my kids
I just laughed out loud in an open office bar steward
I apologise Dr
molgripsFree MemberHowever – like many petrol heads you don’t want to believe there could be the slightest downside
Worst. Arguer. Ever.
GrahamSFull MemberYou’re right, we brits are obsessed with our cars. I make no apology for it. As a minority I’m afraid you’re just going to have to learn to live with them.
That’s fine (apart from the pointless appeal to patriotism) – but getting back to the OP (remember that?) – that doesn’t mean that other road users should be treated like second class citizens for “getting in the way” of cars on “their road”.
At the end of the day the OP describes two people trying to use the road to get somewhere and one of them feeling they have rights over the other because of their chosen vehicles.
That isn’t right.
carbon337Free MemberSince commuting for the last few months Ive started to follow two golden rules,
First – always obey the rules of the road, if for example someone does the nice thing like wave you through when you dont have the right to then dont do it – by the time you both hesitate there is carnage and it brings other motorists into the situation who dont know whats going on.
Second – never assume someone has seen you. Always be more alert than those around you, cover your brakes especially with cars approaching side roads to you – sit up and be seen – even stand up on pedals to make yourself seen in certain situations.
JunkyardFree MemberSurely if this were the case we would see +ve correlations between car ownership and poor health, rather than the converse.
Are you claiming that wealth is related to health?
I am busy so bowing out here. Yes there will be people who use it as you describe. However on average people who own cars will be less active than people who dont and getting a car will make you less active generallybut getting back to the OP (remember that?)
There is always one 🙄 😉
CharlieMungusFree MemberHowever – like many pedal heads you don’t want to believe there could be the slightest upside
CharlieMungusFree MemberAre you claiming that wealth is related to health? I am busy so bowing oit here. Yes there will be people who use it as you describe. However on average people who own cars will be less active than people who dont and getting a car will make you less active generally
No, I’m claiming the relationship is more complex than the bivariate being proposed
JunkyardFree Memberwell that is a given [obviously] however any +ve relationship with car onwernship would be an artifact.
PeyoteFree MemberPeople buy cars for lots of reasons. For freedom if your sick of your surroundings, for employment if there is no jobs locally, to partake in activities that are not available locally, to visit friends and family or to just have some independence if your dependent on others.
All true, unfortunately in many cases these reasons are perceived and misguided. They also tend to be self serving, i.e. there are no jobs locally because everyone relies on the cheap and easy transport offered by cars. The trouble is this is only cheap and easy short term.
People love cars. Brits especially love their cars. We spend enormous amounts of money buying them and caring for them. We buy new ones for the joy we get. Some of us tinker with them and learn about them. Some take them to tracks and race them. I love my cars. One has a name, he’s referred to by everyone by his name not the model. It’s got happy memories embedded in its rusty old shell.
Nope, some people love cars. Many see them as a necessary requirment for cementing there place in society, a status symbol. Others see them as the only means of getting a job. There is a perceived “need” for the damn things! If only they were just there for people like yourself, if only they were just a luxury that could be enjoyed in ones leisure time! As it is many seem them as a necessary evil. The light at the end of the tunnel though is that some are beginning to see them as an unecessary evil.
You’re right, we brits are obsessed with our cars. I make no apology for it. As a minority I’m afraid you’re just going to have to learn to live with them.
As a Brit, I apologise for it. I apologise for the harm it has done to all the local economies, I apologise for the communities it’s destroyed, the health problems it’s contributed, the KSI figures, the marginalisation of big sections of society and the sheer boringness* of most of the cars on the roads.
*The Ford Focus, Vauxhall Vectras, VW Golfs et al all stifle the creativity that could so easily be unleashed by the motor industry. Such a shame that the potential hasn’t been realised.
Anyways, we are going to have to live with them, but there won’t be as many, they won’t be powered in the same way, they won’t be as cheap, they won’t be available to all and hopefully our society won’t revolve around them.
CharlieMungusFree Memberwell that is a given [obviously] however any +ve relationship with car onwernship would be an artifact
as would any -ve, or at the level of ‘noise’.
gwj72Free Member@GrahamS -I’m not defending the actions of the culprit in the OP. I’m just reacting (whereas I probably shouldn’t) to..
A – The actions of individuals being ascribed to every car owner.
B – The acceptance of being abusive to older people just because they drive.
C – The idea that a tiny number of militant cyclists are somehow propping up the economy.molgripsFree MemberYou know, when I commuted in Cardiff (4 miles) I was usually more stressed when biking than driving.
TandemJeremyFree Membergwj72 – Member
@GrahamS -I’m not defending the actions of the culprit in the OP. I’m just reacting (whereas I probably shouldn’t) to..
A – The actions of individuals being ascribed to every car owner.
B – The acceptance of being abusive to older people just because they drive.
C – The idea that a tiny number of militant cyclists are somehow propping up the economy.apart from non one actually said any of those things.
D0NKFull MemberA – The actions of individuals being ascribed to every car owner.
I didn’t notice anyone doing that
B – The acceptance of being abusive to older people just because they drive.
1 or 2 did but don’t ascribe the actions of….
C – The idea that a tiny number of militant cyclists are somehow propping up the economy.
who said that?
CharlieMungusFree Memberapart from non one actually said any of those things.
but someone did say this
All the deaths and ill health directly and indirectly caused. a million pounds a death.
GrahamSFull MemberI’m not defending the actions of the culprit in the OP. I’m just reacting (whereas I probably shouldn’t) to..
No you’re not – you’re just trolling, but that’s okay I was in the mood for a debate.
gwj72Free MemberGrahamS – you need to recap…
A
“You were right. She’s a typical stupid idiot behind the wheel of a car.”
“If in doubt, assume the motorist is in the wrong.”
“she is one of ‘those’ motorists who have a strange atittude to cyclists”B
I’d have likely spat in her face – actions speak louder then words
A few sharp thumps on her (“an older woman”) car door & roof soon sorted that one outC
Too many car lovers on here Dez – they get all angsty when you point out that their dangerous polluting machines are responsible for all the worlds ills and they don’t pay their wayIt would be nice if motorists paid their way tho – as it is they get a huge subsidy from the general taxpayer
Actually a lot of cyclists have above average incomes, and also above average tax bills and so pay more towards the roads…
TandemJeremyFree MemberNone of which says what you claim it does 🙄
charlie – and its true – you have even been given official government figures
Poor sensitive petrol heads – they really do get angsty when the problems of car ownership are pointed out
molgripsFree Memberthey really do get angsty when the problems of car ownership are pointed out
That’s not really what’s going on here.
CharlieMungusFree Memberand its true – you have even been given official government figures
No, you gave me figures on the costs of deaths by RTAs
GrahamSFull MemberYeah as TJ says, none of those quotes actually really match your bullet points – but well done you for recapping anyway 😀
charlie – and its true – you have even been given official government figures
Charlie has a point TJ. The £1.6 million figure was for fatalities at RTAs. You were overreaching when you implied that ALL deaths caused by driving (including those from indirect causes) cost a million per death.
All the deaths and ill health directly and indirectly caused. a million pounds a death.
I suspect what you meant was to say that deaths directly caused by driving were a million per death.
CharlieMungusFree MemberStrictly speaking, the money associated with family distress etc. isn’t a cost is it? It’s more of a monetary value associated with the distress isn’t it. It’s not as though that money exists anywhere in the economy does it?
gwj72Free MemberLook TJ I realise you can’t admit you’re wrong because you’ll have to hand in your lumo cycle clips of power back to your commander if you do. They will be watching..
So I’ll save face for you and repent my selfish driving ways. What have I done?! Think of the children / polar bears / wales etc.
Happy?
TandemJeremyFree MemberSo – I am still awaiting my apology for you doubting me on that. Now thas 1.6 million for a premature death by car, So half that for a premature death by pollution? so average out around a million? Seems reasonable to me. 32 000 people died premature deaths from pollution in the UK each year. 1/3 ish of all pollution comes from cars and its concentrated where the people are in the cities.
You just don’t want to face up to how expensive wasteful and harmful the car addiction is
CharlieMungusFree MemberI suspect what you meant was to say that deaths directly caused by driving were a million per death.
No, I’m sure not, otherwise much earlier he would have said something like “ooops, that’s not what i meant”
CharlieMungusFree MemberSo half that for a premature death by pollution?
why half? Does that cause the same emotional stress? or less or half?
You really need to stop just making this stuff up
PeyoteFree MemberStrictly speaking, the money associated with family distress etc. isn’t a cost is it? It’s more of a monetary value associated with the distress isn’t it. It’s not as though that money exists anywhere in the economy does it?
The problems of quantifying the unquantifyable.
Would it not be calculated based on potential work time lost through distress, loss of earnings from anyone killed, professional time spent on counselling/psychology/psychiatric help. I suppose it depends how far down the line it’s taken, the impact can be lifelong for those it impacts on so could cover any conceivable expense.
Quite a scary undertaking really.
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