I just love Google AI
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- NHTSA data shows that in 2023, there were 31.39 motorcyclist fatalities per 100 million vehicle miles traveled, compared to 1.13 passenger car occupant fatalities, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA).
- Visibility and Stability:
Motorcycles are smaller and less visible to other drivers, and they lack the stability and protective shell of a car.
- Protective Features:
Cars have features like airbags and seatbelts that offer a significant level of protection, which motorcycles lack.
- Rider Vulnerability:
The lack of these features makes motorcyclists more vulnerable to injury or death in the event of a crash.
- Accident Severity:
80% of reported motorcycle crashes result in injury or death, with approximately 20% resulting in death. This is a much higher fatality rate compared to car accidents
Xxxx
Let’s check airline safety
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Commercial air travel is exceptionally safe, with fatalities per mile being extremely low. For every 100 million passenger miles traveled, there are roughly 0.003 deaths,
according to a LinkedIn article. This makes it significantly safer than driving, which has a much higher fatality rate per mile,
according to USAFacts.
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My Master has blessed me beyond all measurement.
I got a car the day I turned 16 in 1974 and I’ve not spent a day without one since.
I totaled three cars before I turned 19, and none since.
In fifty years, I’ve driven maybe a million miles, 20,000 mikes a year average.
What’s scary about motorcycles is they are nearly always ridden for pleasure in nice weather. You can subtract most of the icy weather or slick highway accidents from motorcycle crashes.
But I’ve owned a couple of convertibles where I could say the same about having the top down.
If my 1966 Mustang had been a convertible I’d have been in Plum Grove these last fifty years.
And I’ve been in four cars that have center punched deer, and I hit a wild turkey once at 70 miles an hour.
That, might have hurt, you know?
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Approximately 700,000 animal collisions occur annually in the US, with motorcyclists facing a disproportionately high risk of fatalities. While 2% of deer-vehicle collisions result in human fatalities, nearly 85% of motorcycle-deer collisions are fatal to the rider. Deer are the most common animal involved in these crashes, with November being the peak month.
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Again - what's the point of your post. I open with a concession that riding a motorcycle is dangerous and can and may very well result in death. NO ONE is disputing any facts about this.
You seem like an ex lawyer trying to win an argument that no one on the entire planet is contesting.
Don't be an ex lawyer - or you make me tell the following joke...
"What do you call 500 lawyers at the bottom of the ocean?"
"An excellent start."
Sorry, I couldn't resist.
What's the difference between a motorcycle gang member and a lawyer?
A motorcycle gang member has a code of honor; a lawyer just has a code of billable hours!
A motorcycle gang member rides a hog; a lawyer just hogs the spotlight!
A motorcycle gang member lives for the open road; a lawyer lives for the open wallet!
A motorcycle gang member burns rubber for glory; a lawyer burns clients for cash!
A motorcycle gang member robs with a roar for the thrill; a lawyer loots with a pen for the bill!
A motorcycle gang member strikes with a spark for the street; a lawyer scams with a signature for the suite!
Here's a story for you, story boy...
The crooked businessman, battered and bruised from the car wreck that claimed everyone but him, stumbled through the city streets, his tailored suit now a tattered testament to his narrow escape. His heart pounded with a rare flicker of guilt—decades of shady deals, cooked books, and crushed competitors weighed heavy. “It’s time,” he muttered, clutching a rosary he hadn’t touched since childhood. “Time to confess, to start clean.” He spotted the church’s steeple, its cross glinting under the streetlights, and shuffled toward salvation.
But fate, or perhaps his own distracted mind, led him one door too far. Instead of the church’s oak-paneled confessional, he pushed open the glass door of the law office next door, its sign reading “Harrington & Associates: Your Justice, Our Profit.” The receptionist barely glanced up as he staggered in, mistaking his disheveled state for a desperate client. “Mr. Harrington will see you now,” she said, waving him toward a sleek office.
Inside, the lawyer, a shark in a pinstripe suit, leaned back in his leather chair, sizing up the businessman like a vulture eyeing carrion. “Rough day, huh? Tell me everything,” Harrington purred, pen poised over a legal pad, already calculating billable hours. The businessman, thinking he was in the presence of a priest, poured out his soul—every bribe, every embezzled dollar, every life ruined in his climb to the top. His voice cracked with remorse, his hands trembling as he begged for absolution.
Harrington’s eyes gleamed, not with mercy, but with opportunity. “My friend,” he said, sliding a contract across the desk, “your sins are safe with me—for a retainer, of course. Let’s call it… asset protection.” The businessman blinked, confused, as the lawyer continued, “We’ll bury those confessions in legal privilege, dodge the feds, and maybe sue the city for that faulty intersection. Emotional distress, you know—big payout!”
The businessman’s heart sank. He’d sought a confessional to cleanse his soul; instead, he’d wandered into a den where his sins were just another revenue stream. Harrington leaned closer, his smile sharp as a blade. “Sign here, and we’ll make your past disappear… for a price.” The businessman, still clutching his rosary, realized too late: a serial killer might take your life with a twisted sense of purpose, but a lawyer like Harrington would carve up your soul for a billable hour. Defeated, he signed, trading one sin for another, as the church bells tolled next door, mocking his misstep.