POAH
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 7,882
- Edit My Images
- No
Are you seriously suggesting that all people who suffer chronic heart disease do so because of a life on inactivity?
have you been to Scotland lol
Are you seriously suggesting that all people who suffer chronic heart disease do so because of a life on inactivity?
Are you seriously suggesting that all people who suffer chronic heart disease do so because of a life on inactivity?
Making motorcyclists wear helmets also didn't help "prevent" accidents.
Although car occupants have to wear seat belts by law, there is still quite a high risk of head injury even to a belted in car occupant, so there is an argument that car occupants should be made to wear helmets.
Although car occupants have to wear seat belts by law, there is still quite a high risk of head injury even to a belted in car occupant, so there is an argument that car occupants should be made to wear helmets.
Try telling that to a workmate of mine who cycled to work and back daily for years, yet died of a heart attack on his way to work one morning.One of the main costs to the taxpayer is caring for inactive people who develop chronic diseases in later life caused by a life of inactivity, such as heart disease. If anything cyclists should pay a "negative" insurance premium as they save taxpayers money by staying healthy and being a lower burden on the health system.
Please explain where you think my high risk of head injury comes from. My 1yr old car, has front airbags, seat airbags, b pillar airbags, side curtain airbags above the doors and so did my previous car, now 7yrs old. Drivers airbags were a compulsory fitment in cars from 1993, but manufacturers have voluntarily increased the number of airbags inside cars to prevent/reduce injury to occupants and increase a cars NCAP safety rating. Cars built since 1993 form the higher proportion of vehicles found on UK roads.Although car occupants have to wear seat belts by law, there is still quite a high risk of head injury even to a belted in car occupant, so there is an argument that car occupants should be made to wear helmets.
One of the main costs to the taxpayer is caring for inactive people who develop chronic diseases in later life caused by a life of inactivity, such as heart disease. If anything cyclists should pay a "negative" insurance premium as they save taxpayers money by staying healthy and being a lower burden on the health system.
Depends on the rest of their lifestyle. Andy if there were any other undetected Heath issues (look at the footballers who have dropped dead during a game because of an undiagnosed issue).Try telling that to a workmate of mine who cycled to work and back daily for years, yet died of a heart attack on his way to work one morning.
Surely that is purely down to the culprits being caught in the act rather than being ignored.I think actually enforcing a compulsory helmets for cyclists rule would be almost impossible, when you consider that that the compulsory lights at night rule for cyclists is rarely enforced and this is a rule that actually helps prevent accidents wheras a helmet does NOT help prevent accidents. I'd imagine it would simply be overlooked in the same way that the 70mph limit on motorways is rarely enforced as people pay no attention and drive at 80 knowing being pulled over would be rare.
Is cycling the only form if exercise you can do? I love the moral superiority there.
There are many others out there so you cannot assume car drivers are NHS drains and cyclists aren't. Plus all the road duty paid and fuel duty paid that cyclists don't pay, where does that money go if it's not directly paid to fund the roads?
I agree, there could well have been other underlying factors, I believe he was a smoker.Depends on the rest of their lifestyle. Andy if there were any other undetected Heath issues (look at the footballers who have dropped dead during a game because of an undiagnosed issue).
jogging to the shop to buy crisps and cake isn't going to result in a heathly lifestyle.
For the most part it will help as part of a heathly life.
Ok read through that as best I could, but I still fail to see how you can factor in the width of car tyres which will spread the loads more evenly over the road surface than over a more finite narrower surface. If it was just down to axle weight rather than contact area, are you telling me that if you applied the same car weight per axle over one tyre per axle instead of two, there would be no change.Posting on my phone, but the link works for me.
As I said, it's the one directly before Chris Malcolm's that you just quoted, which is 384.
Click on view original for that and scroll up a little
Try telling that to a workmate of mine who cycled to work and back daily for years, yet died of a heart attack on his way to work one morning.







the 500th post in response to a troll thread - are you all mental?
When walking on a frozen lake you risk the ice cracking and you could fall through. Slide out on your stomach, exact same weight but spread it over a greater surface area and the ice and water beneath it have a better chance of supporting the weight and greatly reduces the risk of falling through.
There are many others out there so you cannot assume car drivers are NHS drains and cyclists aren't. Plus all the road duty paid and fuel duty paid that cyclists don't pay, where does that money go if it's not directly paid to fund the roads?
So, you think crossing the frozen lake in a Toyota Hilux or M1 Abrams tank would be less likely to break the ice than doing the same on a mountain bike?
"Road duty" and "fuel duty" go into the consolidated fund. Which means it goes on lots of things, including MP expenses, bailing out bankers who are terrible at their jobs and dropping high explosives on brown people.Is cycling the only form if exercise you can do? I love the moral superiority there.
There are many others out there so you cannot assume car drivers are NHS drains and cyclists aren't. Plus all the road duty paid and fuel duty paid that cyclists don't pay, where does that money go if it's not directly paid to fund the roads?
If you drivers would put down your phones and breakfast rolls while driving you might actually see the cyclists in good time, y'know, the ones who have as much right to the road as you lazy sods?
Aye.
....Cyclists who have attitudes like that really make my blood boil!
Regarding running red lights...as a cyclist and driver I think cyclists should be explicitly permitted to ignore red lights if conditions are appropriate. Would aid the flow of traffic for everyone.
You see drivers get terribly worked up about cyclists running red lights - even in perfectly safe circumstances. I don't know why. As a driver I welcome it. The bike doesn't hold you up when the light goes green. It makes things smoother.
Some parts of London have brought in a separate set of lights for cyclists, which go green before the lights for motor vehicles. Quite a good idea on paper; in practise it's quite confusing and there has been at least one death attributed to it.Agree.
When I started getting back into cycling being stuck in traffic at the lights was a nightmare. The pressure is a very real thing. I can totally see the appeal of skipping the lights to get ahead and out of the way of cars and trucks.
And it it aids traffic flow then that's only a benefit to everyone.
I believe France have brought in such a rule...So far ive not heard anything negative about it.
That attitude is pretty common place with motorists to be fair - You can find plenty of examples in this very thread.
"Road duty" and "fuel duty" go into the consolidated fund. Which means it goes on lots of things, including MP expenses, bailing out bankers who are terrible at their jobs and dropping high explosives on brown people.
Most roads that cyclists use are paid out of local taxation (council tax). So almost all adult cyclists pay for the maintenance of most of the roads they use. As do people who don't drive or cycle or use the roads at all.
And guess what! If you take your car from Glasgow up to Inverness or over to Penicuik or to any authority where you don't pay council tax then you're using roads you haven't paid for! You naughty little man! The locals should run you off the roads with pick-up trucks and pitchforks.
Moreover, most adult cyclists also drive. So they pay VED and fuel duty anyway.
What would cyclists pay fuel duty on for their cycling? Porridge?They aren't paying fuel duty when they cycle, so if I do 12000 miles a year in a car, I pay 12000 miles worth of fuel duty for the efficiency of my car, how I drive it. If I have a car and a bike, and I travel 12000 miles a year in total but do 4k miles in the bike, 8k in the car, I have paid less fuel duty for the same type of car/driving style. Some might even call that tax avoidance![]()
What would cyclists pay fuel duty on for their cycling? Porridge?
Some might even call that tax avoidance![]()
Walking....some might even call that tax avoidance.
.
Nobody is taxed on "journeys", per se. And, in any case, the bit about car owners/cyclists was peripheral. It was stuck on the end of the main point, which you have dutifully ignored. The principal point is that, by and large, council tax pays for roads (the roads mostly used by cyclists, anyway). We all pay for local roads through local taxation. Your precious VED and fuel duty go into the consolidated fund.My point is your car owner/cyclist argument is flawed as the cyclist is not paying any tax on their journeys when they cycle. Perhaps when GPS based road pricing comes in, cyclists bikes will be chipped so they pay into the system. Afterall, they are using the roads like everyone else?
Do you walk along the DCW or country roads causing a massive queue of VED paying and fuel duty paying people?