Reasonable expectation of injury is the serious difference in most of those
instances. In the case of someone hitting you, with a car or such, THEY made
the action and are liable, rather than you, and there are legal consequences
and avenues to pursue.

Walking down the street you're not likely to do much more than ding your ego
and bruise your body, maybe a little blood.

Motorcycle at 15/20/25 and you can see a serious concussion or skull
fracture. Most folks aren't thinking about accidents at these speeds.

Bicycle at 15/20 you can see a skull fracture/concussion. 10mph can give
your head a good rattle and a moderate/mild concussion. Most folks don't
believe you can seriously hurt yourself in a bike wreck outside of
professional or racing levels. Most folks ride between 5-12mph.

Falling down a set of stairs hard enough/big enough to cause serious injury
is a lower probability than a vehicular collision, and most stair-fall
injuries are statistically limbs and neck, not head trauma. Helmets wouldn't
prevent these injuries.

I support seatbelt and helmet laws primarily because people are phenomenally
good at ignoring the consequences of their actions, and the consequences
that others will face for their action, until it's too late. Giving a more
immediate and less immediately fatal consequence to instill a good habit is
a good idea, in my opinion. "It won't happen to me" is a big mentality, and
the costs to other people are staggering when you sit back and think about
traumatic experiences, lost time, direct medical costs, property damages,
EMT/FD/Police response costs...

Statistically speaking, traffic fatalities and injuries have been in steady
decline since there was first mandated, and then increased enforcement of
seatbelt usage. There have been other factors involved in the decline, but
that's been a constant element. It for certain isn't purely a "money
ticket." The sad thing is that the way to most reliably make people change
their behaviour is to cost them money. Not education, not reason, not
discussion, not warnings, but poking a needle in the wallet changes
someone's behaviour very quickly.

-Kurt

On Mon, Jul 4, 2011 at 12:15 PM, Javier Garcia <[email protected]> wrote:

> I have heard that argument before. If you are walking on the street and
> don't pay attention you can fall, get hit by a car, etc. If you walk down
> the stairs too fast you can fall down the stairs and really injure yourself.
> Why not require everybody to wear helmets all the time? The way I see it
> there is not much difference between a helmet/seatbelt ticket and a parking
> ticket, both are meant to collect more money.
>

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