deuxdiesel wrote:The day that people stop using the "r" word to describe other people who do things they don't agree with is the day they will stop looking foolish. Still use the "n" word to describe people of African decent as well?
jajones wrote:dennismurphy wrote:well, having actually HIT a tree (yes, my own careless fault) wearing a helmet allowed me to live and heal and learn from my initial carelessness and stupidity to continue to ride on.....
had I not had a helmet, well, I'd probably be drooling now and NOT typing this post
I think there's a difference between prudent or due diligence and "culture of fear"
Sounds like a darn good idea that you wear a helmet, Dennis.
I'd argue that based on open and closed head injury statistics, it'd be "prudent" for folks to wear helmets while cleaning leaves out of their gutters. It'd also be prudent to wear a helmet while driving regardless of whether you wear a seat belt or have air bags. That said, how many foam-at-the-mouth-helmet-advocate cyclists wouldn't dream of wearing a lid for such activities? It is the logical inconsistency of argument, combined with the "over the top" fervor that the cycling subculture helmet nazis exhibit that I have a problem with. It is like a mental disorder that afflicts the cycling subculture. Maybe they've bumped their collective heads?
Tom L. wrote: Hence we don't get the benefits of actual scientific studies and experimental results (like if bike helmets actually do increase safety) we perennially get results in many areas that pander to people's erroneous fearful notions and of the advocates of predetermined positions.
Tom L. wrote:
There was a link off a link from your original story that has a video is related in a unusual way. In the case of supermarket checkouts the fastest way to check out and get you quickly out of the store is to have one line feeding all cashiers. Stores don't often do this because customers don't like it. And of course the stores generally pander to the customer's erroneous notions just as nearly all politicians and most commercial entities selling things to people do. Hence we don't get the benefits of actual scientific studies and experimental results (like if bike helmets actually do increase safety) we perennially get results in many areas that pander to people's erroneous fearful notions and of the advocates of predetermined positions.
cramer wrote:Tom L. wrote:
There was a link off a link from your original story that has a video is related in a unusual way. In the case of supermarket checkouts the fastest way to check out and get you quickly out of the store is to have one line feeding all cashiers. Stores don't often do this because customers don't like it. And of course the stores generally pander to the customer's erroneous notions just as nearly all politicians and most commercial entities selling things to people do. Hence we don't get the benefits of actual scientific studies and experimental results (like if bike helmets actually do increase safety) we perennially get results in many areas that pander to people's erroneous fearful notions and of the advocates of predetermined positions.
I don't consider picking the fastest checkout lane to be a completely random / chance proposition. A little attention to details improves your odds greatly.
Tom L. wrote:Herein lies a lot of our problems. A lot, maybe most, people think they're smarter than everyone else, facts be damned.
Tom L. wrote: Hopefully you're not a network or telecommunications planner.
cramer wrote:Tom L. wrote:Herein lies a lot of our problems. A lot, maybe most, people think they're smarter than everyone else, facts be damned.
I don't think I'm smarter than everyone, but I know that I'm smarter than the vast majority of people. You don't have to be smarter than everyone else to pick the fastest checkout lane though. Being more observant is actually more valuable than intelligence for this task IMO.
cramer wrote:Tom L. wrote:
There was a link off a link from your original story that has a video is related in a unusual way. In the case of supermarket checkouts the fastest way to check out and get you quickly out of the store is to have one line feeding all cashiers. Stores don't often do this because customers don't like it. And of course the stores generally pander to the customer's erroneous notions just as nearly all politicians and most commercial entities selling things to people do. Hence we don't get the benefits of actual scientific studies and experimental results (like if bike helmets actually do increase safety) we perennially get results in many areas that pander to people's erroneous fearful notions and of the advocates of predetermined positions.
I don't consider picking the fastest checkout lane to be a completely random / chance proposition. A little attention to details improves your odds greatly.
Tom L. wrote:the mathematical odds determined through rational analysis are that a single line feeding all checkouts will get you and everyone else through the checkout line the quickest no matter how good you are at picking the single best checkout line.
dennismurphy wrote:cramer wrote:Tom L. wrote:
There was a link off a link from your original story that has a video is related in a unusual way. In the case of supermarket checkouts the fastest way to check out and get you quickly out of the store is to have one line feeding all cashiers. Stores don't often do this because customers don't like it. And of course the stores generally pander to the customer's erroneous notions just as nearly all politicians and most commercial entities selling things to people do. Hence we don't get the benefits of actual scientific studies and experimental results (like if bike helmets actually do increase safety) we perennially get results in many areas that pander to people's erroneous fearful notions and of the advocates of predetermined positions.
I don't consider picking the fastest checkout lane to be a completely random / chance proposition. A little attention to details improves your odds greatly.
Apu on the Simpsons showed Marge how to pick the fastest moving lane( I avoid checkout lanes behind older folks who will be writing a check - that' so 70s
)
dennismurphy wrote:Apu on the Simpsons showed Marge how to pick the fastest moving lane( I avoid checkout lanes behind older folks who will be writing a check - that' so 70s
)
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests