Text of a letter I sent to the local birdgage liner:
Last Sunday, Dr Lisa Vecchione, the director of orthodontic services at Children's Hospital's Cleft-Craniofacial Center, was killed in a car crash in Ohio. Reading through the details of the crash I cannot help but wonder if she died needlessly.
The car she was driving was a Mini Cooper. She was hit by a tractor/trailer rig, pushed into other vehicles, and died more or less instantly. A Mini Cooper is a three-door hatchback, 146 inches long, 55 inches high, and weighing about 2,500 pounds. Although it has a cornucopia of airbags which would make it relatively safe in a collision with another Mini Cooper, when colliding with anything over two tons, it is little more than a rolling casket.
Had she been driving a large SUV or a full-sized truck (a vehicle with a full frame), it is likely she would have walked away from the accident, or at most experienced a few broken bones. She would have lost the fight with the tractor, but pushed through the cars in front of her – and survived.
One can only hope that people reading this news story – especially other Doctors - will recognize that a large vehicle is literally, a form of “life insurance.” Honestly, no medical doctor should ever be driving a roller skate like she was. What a needless waste.
Why does no one - particularly public figures - acknowledge the inherent safety of large vehicles? If you can afford the vehicle and the gas, it is simply stupid to ride around in a 2500 lb vehicle.
We have a President who pats himself on the back for a (stupid and unachievable) goal that cars average 50-some mpg by some date in the future. Such cars will be death traps, and the regulations that spawn them will cost, literally, thousands of lives.
If a pharmaceutical company tried to sell an anti-obesity drug that would result in the premature death of a thousand people a year, they would never be able to bring it to market. But the EPA writes a regulation that will cost many times that, and they are hailed as being forward-thinking and progressive.
BTW, my new Kawasaki 2000 gets about 42 mpg. It's a lovely vehicle. Really.
Vehicular Life Insurance
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Re: Vehicular Life Insurance
wow, about 3mpg less than I get in my TDI. (and at 3200lb will fare about the same when vs a semi...)dgs49 wrote:BTW, my new Kawasaki 2000 gets about 42 mpg. It's a lovely vehicle. Really.
Re: Vehicular Life Insurance
How does it do against a tractor-trailer rig in a collision?BTW, my new Kawasaki 2000 gets about 42 mpg. It's a lovely vehicle. Really.
Your collective inability to acknowledge this obvious truth makes you all look like fools.
yrs,
rubato
Re: Vehicular Life Insurance
dales wrote: How does it do against a tractor-trailer rig in a collision?

Re: Vehicular Life Insurance
Tractor trailer? Hell, I could be killed in a collision with a dog!
Re: Vehicular Life Insurance
What was the purpose of your topic?
Your collective inability to acknowledge this obvious truth makes you all look like fools.
yrs,
rubato
Re: Vehicular Life Insurance
Only 42MPG from yoiur bike? Hell, Liz's Easter Egg is averaging 52! (WORST tank was a hair under 49.) Her old Festiva averaged about 46.
Treat Gaza like Carthage.