There you go, selective reading again. Try this bit "but due to inexperience or a greater distracting factor or some other holey slice the next rider can't." Part of my point is the bits that aren't the rider are the more constant problems and therefore give more bang for buck in fixing and they can't fix themselves. The rider on the other hand has a very personal reason to fix their riding and I believe you are currently trying to confuse 'The Stranger' on this subject, unsuccessfully I should add.
The rider fix has to come from within. Negativity will not assist this.
Lets fix the environment we all ride in.
How dangerous? Who gets to decide? There's no arbitrary limit on what level of risk is acceptable.
If you ride at 100kph on SH1 you'll encounter consequences. How long depends on many things, some of them under your control, some not.
All the bleating on the topic comes from people who want OTHER PEOPLE to change. If you allow that then where does it stop? There's people who want SOMETHING done about most aspects of other peoples' behaviour. Follow that to it's logical conclusion. There's already laws restricting a wider range of bejaviour than at any time in history.
The rape and murder thing isn't worthy of a reply.
Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
There is much more bleating coming from those who don't like being told they should change. They may not believe that they have any need to change, and put up as many arguments against that as there are stars in the sky.
While KM (and others, myself included) keep putting forward just the one argument for change..."The rider is responsible for all that happens to them. Usually."
Do you realise how many holes there could be if people would just take the time to take the dirt out of them?
Strange how it sometimes seems that morons can actually see the simple truth of something.
The statement "The rider is responsible for all that happens to them. Usually" is simplistic in the extreme. It doesn't have to be complicated by a load of "but what ifs".
Would you hit the picks hard, in the wet, on a painted roadmarking?
No, I hear you say.
Well, why not, I'd ask.
Because the grip is not as good as on clear chip, or in the dry, and I'm likely to lock up the front and drop the bike.
Well, says I, isn't that you being responsible?
It is up to you, the rider, to choose what is best to suit the conditions you face. That includes what sort of bike you are on, your skill level and experience, the kind of road, other traffic, weather etc.
Do you realise how many holes there could be if people would just take the time to take the dirt out of them?
Why am is the rider tempted to hit the picks hard on wet paint and is there stopped traffic just around the bend? Is it because they have just had to accelerate to clear the drongo coming out of the entrance way without giving way that the paint was there to delineate? In that case wouldn't it be better to fix the drongo and the paint? fixing the paint will also fix all those minor nose to tails the cages have been having. Fix the right slice of cheese and you fix more than one issue for multiple road users.
Do you realise how many holes there could be if people would just take the time to take the dirt out of them?
yes it does matter to my point and it is often the bit that blame the rider tries to ignore. Just like your 'assume you'd seen it', why wouldn't I have? because they forgot to mark it? If I had seen it I would be doing my best to be under control before I hit it but if I hadn't seen it the why not becomes important.
You did see the "usually", didn't you? I am well aware that sometimes shit happens - stuff that is beyond any rider's control.
There are a myriad of reasons why a rider might not see loose gravel, but most of them are within their control.
Again, not the point. Stop making excuses. The exercise is simple.
Do you realise how many holes there could be if people would just take the time to take the dirt out of them?
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