If helmets are the thing that has caused car drivers to behave so badly around riders, then why isn’t the same occurring overseas where people do still sometimes wear helmets?DavidS wrote: ↑Sun Jun 21, 2020 3:22 pmThe thing is that these issues are linked.
A few people above have mentioned that riding on roads overseas is far less of a problem than riding on roads in Australia. One can also mention that bikes and cars shared Australian roads for decades, without the need for separate infrastructure, until, what, the last 20-30 years?
Part of the issue of mandating the wearing of helmets is that it gives off a perception that cycling is a specifically and particularly dangerous activity. After all, most activities don't have legally mandated head protection. Cycling must be dangerous. I've had this very argument with a number of people, the argument usually ends when they say "but then why do you have to wear a helmet when cycling, it must be dangerous".
Of course, we know one thing about cycling safety: more bikes on the roads leads to more room for cyclists on the roads.
So, take away the anti-cycling MHLs, positively promote cycling, do something about the perception cycling is a particularly dangerous activity (it isn't, even though most Australian drivers are clueless) and we can make the roads safer.
Always remember: roads are not infrastructure for motor vehicles, they are infrastructure for road vehicles: bicycles are road vehicles. If the roads do not cater for all road vehicles then something is wrong.
In any case, mandating safety equipment for an activity which is seen as normal and not dangerous in the vast majority of countries is really admitting that something has gone very wrong. It is a policy which is the wrong way around - the first thing policy should do is to remove danger, not try and protect against danger. They are also a failed law: helmets protect one part of the body and one part only: the head. Have head injuries as a proportion of total injuries suffered by cyclists gone down? No - law has failed even on its own terms, get rid of it.
DS
Can you answer that one?
Yes, you didn’t say that, and no, I didn’t say that, so we will get the “didn’t say that” statements out of the way already.