• @TheQuantumPhysicist
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    -511 months ago

    Buses kill kids too. Trains too. Airplanes too. Let’s get rid of transportation.

    Or is it about the numbers all of the sudden?

    You’ve got to be a special level of dumb to think that anything in life has zero risk. Even food kills kids under certain circumstances.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 months ago

      https://injuryfacts.nsc.org/home-and-community/safety-topics/deaths-by-transportation-mode/

      Passenger vehicles are by far the most dangerous motorized transportation option compared. Over the last 10 years, passenger vehicle death rate per 100,000,000 passenger miles was over 20 times higher than for buses, 17 times higher than for passenger trains, and 595 times higher than for scheduled airlines. Other comparisons are possible based on passenger trips, vehicle miles, or vehicle trips, but passenger miles is the most commonly used basis for comparing the safety of various modes of travel.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 months ago

              Uh. It’s literally per type of vehicle per 100,000,000 miles against passenger vehicles.

              You can have your car, go nuts, but people who don’t want one shouldn’t be forced to have one to survive. I should have the freedom to not need a car.

                • @[email protected]
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                  11 months ago

                  I’m actually quite good at abstraction. It’s my entire job, so I better be.

                  The statistics are directly comparing different forms of public transport against passenger vehicles. Are you saying that you want it to compare different types of passenger vehicles as well? Fine, but the statistics are still in favor of public transport.

                  While busses technically are involved in around the same amount of accidents per 100 million miles, and they’re more likely to kill a pedestrian when involved in an accident, they’re transporting significantly more people with every mile driven. Passenger miles takes this into account: 1 mile driven with 20 occupants is 20 passenger miles. Busses are twenty times less likely to kill someone per 100 million passenger miles.

                  Per vehicle mile, cars and light trucks made up around 40-45% of pedestrian deaths. Note this is in vehicle miles not passenger miles, so a direct comparison doesn’t work as well. However, even if we assume there were 5 people in every single car on the road (which is absolutely not the case), busses are still less than than half as likely to kill per passenger mile.

                  If that’s not what you were asking to compare, then you suck at asking questions and need to be more specific.

        • @[email protected]
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          411 months ago
          1. “Per 100,000,000 passenger miles”. It’s literally right there.

          2. Name anything else we do that kills more kids. I will wait.

            • @[email protected]
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              311 months ago

              You’ve said, “You suck at abstraction” to two people now who’ve explained very clearly what’s wrong with your understanding of the study. If you can’t be bothered to explain yourself nobody will know what you mean.

              It’s hard to see how “quality of life” can be balanced against enormous numbers of people killed, but it sounds like you can’t name anything that kills more kids? Maybe because there is nothing? Maybe this is a huge problem and saying, “cars kill kids” is actually pretty valid?

              Cars are terrible for quality of life unless you live rurally. Not only are they massively wasteful, their highways cut swathes through communities, they create noise pollution, they dominate our landscape and rob us of communal spaces, and they cause urban sprawl and force us into enormous and stessful commutes.

              There is no part of our lives that is made better by cars. You can’t just say “quality of life” and expect that to mean anything unless, again, you explain yourself. You don’t seem interested in doing that though.