• @[email protected]
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      5 months ago

      I’d be curious if that holds in bike friendly places, and would be curious to see statistics from somewhere like the Netherlands.

    • @outsideno1877
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      15 months ago

      Not really no cars cause a MASSIVE amount of deaths less likely to be the driver potentially but its still far more fatal to other people which imo is actually worse

    • @Kuinox
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      -135 months ago

      If we look at it statically, biking is healthier because it reduces health problems.

      • @[email protected]
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        5 months ago

        Bike is healthier until you get pancaked by an SUV or pickup which are increasingly all that people drive on roads nowadays. The roads aren’t safe for bikes. If you live somewhere without dedicated bike infrastructure (no, painted bike lanes on the street don’t count), biking is basically playing Russian roulette.

        • @Kuinox
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          5 months ago

          Even in area not made for bikes, the health benefits outweight the risk of getting killed by a car in the total longevity.
          This become false when the road have too much traffic: air pollution damage start to outweight the health benefits of doing sport.

          • @Cryophilia
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            -35 months ago

            Areas not made for bikes also tend to have a lot of car traffic

            In any case, the health benefits of bikes can be easily achieved by other means, so I don’t think it’s worth bringing up.

        • @[email protected]
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          15 months ago

          I can find sources if you want, but there are studies that show those who get around by bike live longer on average, even in North America. The danger is definitely there, and I agree I’m playing Russian roulette every time I bike around town. However, I am much, much more likely to extend my life by a couple years by being healthier, than get killed in a collision and die significantly earlier.

          • @[email protected]
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            35 months ago

            Okay but ultimately the graphic is showing how dangerous something is, not how unhealthy it is

            • @[email protected]
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              -25 months ago

              Yup, but you responded to a comment about “healthier” and you were talking about “healthier”. You can see my comment replying to that same comment about how “healthier” and “dangerous” are different.

          • @[email protected]
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            -15 months ago

            I don’t think that’s how it works when you’re talking about death rates.

            Yes, for the people that survive, they will see an average and statistically significant increase in lifespan. On the other hand, more of them will die as a direct result of their travel mode than for people that primarily drive. (I.e., you’re more likely to die in a bicycle crash–any bicycle crash–than you are in any given car crash.)

            There’s no good way to make riding a bicycle ‘safe’, because you can’t surround yourself with crumple zones, restraints, and air bags (although you can get airbags for motorcycles, but weight and breathability is less of a concern on a motorcycle). Helmets are about the best you can do, and compliance rates with helmet guidelines on bicycles are pretty low.

            Don’t get me wrong - I fully support bicycles as a way of commuting and most general transportation, and want to see more infrastructure developed towards that end. But we also need to be realistic about the risks.

            • @[email protected]
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              15 months ago

              I don’t think that’s how it works when you’re talking about death rates.

              The comment I was responding to wasn’t talking about death rates.

              There’s no good way to make riding a bicycle ‘safe’, because you can’t surround yourself with crumple zones, restraints, and air bags (although you can get airbags for motorcycles, but weight and breathability is less of a concern on a motorcycle). Helmets are about the best you can do, and compliance rates with helmet guidelines on bicycles are pretty low.

              Infrastructure, my friend, that’s how we make bicycling less dangerous. Riding a bicycle itself isn’t all that dangerous, even without a helmet. What is dangerous, is interacting with cars.

              • @[email protected]
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                -15 months ago

                Riding a bicycle itself isn’t all that dangerous, even without a helmet.

                My dude, have you never ridden a bicycle in your life?

                Of all of my bike crashes, only two involved a car. One spectacular one involved another cyclist on a fixie–it’s always the fucking shitheads on fixies–running a red light and t-boning me because you can’t fucking stop quickly on a fixie. (Seriously, don’t fucking ride a fixie on public streets or trails, you slack-jawed fucking morons.) My two car incidents were separated by 20-odd years; the first one was in San Diego in the 90s, when a cab cut me off on a steep hill and I tried to put my face through his rear windshield, and the most recent was in Chicago when I got slightly doored (hit my leg, left a huge bruise, but my bike was fine). Otherwise, most of my crashes have involved road conditions, like ice during a sudden winter rainstorm, wet steel plates over construction trenches, or an 8" deep pothole that I couldn’t see because it looked like just another puddle. My ex-wife broke her pelvis when she got hit by another cyclist.

                • @[email protected]
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                  15 months ago

                  In your previous comment, you were equating “Danger” to “Death Rates.” How often do you hear of a cyclist dying in an incident that doesn’t involve a car?

                  Yes, accidents and injuries happen. I’ve literally fallen while walking twice in the past week.

                  My ex-wife broke her pelvis when she got hit by another cyclist.

                  And if that was a car, do you think she would have survived?

      • @[email protected]
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        75 months ago

        I upvoted you, because what you are saying is true, but so is the original post. “Dangerous” and “Healthier” are very different. Biking is definitely more dangerous in North America, though I’m not sure about bike friendly places, and would be curious to see statistics from somewhere like the Netherlands. Danger does not consider the benefits of an activity, only the downsides. Health, on the other hand is usually short hand for longevity or lack of health conditions, and on average, even with the danger, people who get around by bike live longer.*

        *I can provide sources if someone wants them, I just need to find them again

  • @De_Narm
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    615 months ago

    It’s true, there is the added danger of being run over by a car. A lot of them actively hate seeing you on the same street.

    • @MonkRome
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      25 months ago

      deleted by creator

  • @RustyNova
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    295 months ago

    What? They are right. But that doesn’t mean it’s a pro car argument. Cars are definitely safer as bicycles can’t utter wrecks you like they do to bicycles

    • @MonkRome
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      45 months ago

      From what I recall it really depends on how you classify danger. Bikes are more dangerous for non-lethal injuries. But any car trip that you drive over 45 mph is slightly more lethal than biking per comparable trip. So it depends on what danger you’re willing to risk.

        • @MonkRome
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          15 months ago

          By comparable, I mean from point a to point b. If you have a 10 mile commute to work, you have a slightly higher lethality driving a car on a highway, than biking to work, but you have a higher chance of non-lethal injury by biking.

            • @MonkRome
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              5 months ago

              Maybe comparable was the wrong word but I think think your using that to intentionally miss my point. When assessing the risk of a commute, if you are looking at per mile risk, biking is less lethal but more injury prone.

      • @[email protected]
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        05 months ago

        So what, does the comment I replied to make sense to people? It has many upvotes but to me seems complete nonsense.

  • Guadin
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    265 months ago

    Really, you’re going to quote a comedy website/image? It also even depends on what they mean with “dangerous”. If they mean dangerous for the passengers (which is a viable assumption since how many deaths are caused by hot air balloons excluding the persons traveling with the hot air balloon?) this could even be a true graph. So hold you “offended” feeling and just laugh at the joke at hand.

    • @[email protected]
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      5 months ago

      Also, I wouldn’t be surprised if electric scooters are legitimately more dangerous in urban environments with sane infrastructure. Those things can go absolutely anywhere, and can reach ridiculous speeds while cars are far more restricted in urban spaces (yet again, the ones with good design).

    • @NeptuneOrbit
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      65 months ago

      I agree that you are correct. It’s a joke. And it’s about safety of the USER.

      However, xkcd is a “brainy” and “technical” web comic. The author assuredly has a rigorous definition for anything like the axes in this comic.

  • @Phegan
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    265 months ago

    I mean, it’s more dangerous for someone on a bike or Scooter on car-centric infrastructure than it is for someone in a car.

    • @[email protected]
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      25 months ago

      Only if you consider only the safety of the vehicle’s pilot. Another perhaps more rational way to look at it is to look at how it affects the safety of all people. And then it’s clear that the car is still more dangerous than the bike, even on infrastructure specifically designed for car safety above all else.

  • @[email protected]
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    5 months ago

    I mean, when a car hits s bike the car is more dangerous overall but the driver sure won’t be injured by it. I know the accident statistic for electric scooters it absolutely lethal because cars keep killing them.

    There is also the question if you count number of incidents or overall harm. Bicyclists scrape their knees and bruise their arms all the time, especially if you also use it in winter and fall.

    • @[email protected]
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      95 months ago

      Bicyclists scrape their knees and bruise their arms all the time, especially if you also use it in winter and fall

      I’ve commuted by bike for decades and I have no idea what you’re talking about. How? What causes arm bruises or scraped knees?

      • @[email protected]
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        25 months ago

        It depends on where you live I guess. I live in Sweden and bike everywhere so I hit ice and go down at least once or twice every winter. It’s usually black ice in early winter where things look fine and nothing is sanded or salted yet and you hit a curve that is just glass.

        Some neighborhoods don’t plow the local roads so that the cars just pack the snow and Polish it into an icerink. If you then add powdered snow so that it looks fine you can suddenly go down and slide several meters. In those situations you are a bit fucked because there isn’t enough traction to get up again and you have to turtle a bit until you find your footing.

        Summer and spring is mostly fine tough with the exception of 2 collisions from other bikes and once when one of the pedals mechanically failed. This is over more than a decade tough so it sounds like it’s more than it is but it’s still more incidents than my brother have had while driving which is zero.

        • @[email protected]
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          5 months ago

          I would never tolerate falling down regularly. Studded tires work extremely well. I ride through blizzard and on ice and slush without any trouble. The only time I went down due to ice was riding on a frozen puddle where my tires gripped the ice but the ice didn’t grip the ground under it. That was a decade ago.

          Breaking a wrist or collarbone (or worse) happens far too easily to just accept routine crashing.

        • @[email protected]
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          15 months ago

          I can say from many, many experiences, you rarely get bruises or scrapes sliding out on ice. It’s nearly impossible to get scrapes because the ice is slick, and even if you hit a gritty patch, you are usually completely covered in clothing. Similarly, you aren’t very likely to get bruised because sliding out is usually a slow fall, you’re not very falling very far, and once again, you’re covered in a lot of clothes that cushion your fall.

  • @werefreeatlast
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    15 months ago

    Riding a Grizzly bear is right up there with hot air ballooning? Wow! How about riding a grizzly while eating a raw meat sandwich and having a large cut on your leg?

  • @[email protected]
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    -35 months ago

    This is why we need to segregate cars off the road away from bikes, and then keep shrinking the car lanes by just a few cm each year, until some cars just can’t fit, and gaslight the car users that cars must just be getting bigger, until eventually even London black cabs and old mini coopers couldn’t fit through, while bicycle lanes keep getting more and more lanes, and the fence between the two starts having barbed wire and more and more CCTV all facing the car users, as the cameras whirr in on faces of the users aggressively, disrupting the silence of sitting in traffic, eventually we install displays inward to the car lanes that show ads, but conspicuously only of bikes, skates and longboards…

    • @[email protected]
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      25 months ago

      So, the opposite of what’s been happening with embiggening cars and unchanging roads in many places. Often designed so that cars could park on either side and still use the road two-way, they’re now effectively one-way due to wider cars, but dickheads think they can fit, and bad things happen. I like it, turnaround is fair play. Good luck making it happen.