Your strident assertions prove nothing.Originally Posted by Funkyfly
Neither does any prevalence of opinion.Originally Posted by Funkyfly
Your strident assertions prove nothing.Originally Posted by Funkyfly
Neither does any prevalence of opinion.Originally Posted by Funkyfly
kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
- mikey
This is a far more acceptable form of putting things, not as was stated earlier in the thread that you are at fault in EVERY case. Of course having a prang makes you think what you could and would do in future to *try* and avoid a simular situation. According to what was said earlier, if two parties are involved both are a guilty as each other - bollocks i say to that sentiment.Originally Posted by jrandom
But, back to the original, signage for road works/gritting of roads etc. While a downed biker may have contributed to some extent so did the lack of signage.
Dude, you can plan all you want, you still can plan for everything!Originally Posted by jrandom
Sure accidents are aviodable if BOTH sides were planning ahead, What im talking about here is failure of one party to drive safely and another party not being able to do anything about it.
It happens, go ask a cop.
I think that everyone who's posted to this thread would agree with that statement. It seems self-evident that it's possible NOT to crash on a blind corner with unexpected gravel; hence, if one crashes, at least partial responsibility devolves on the rider.Originally Posted by Mongoose
I thought that this, which was effectively the judge's position in the case referred to previously, made complete sense. The guys who've posted here arguing for personal responsibility are railing against the 'victim mentality' that would argue NO responsibility for the rider in the gravelly-corner case.
kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
- mikey
You are so full of it, big brazen statements, yet again pulled out of the air.Originally Posted by jrandom
The majority of our laws are based on prevalance of opinion!
The majority of opinion proves majority belief.
I know. Give me an example of one of those situations where no amount of planning or actions by one party could avoid the 'accident', and remember that it should include an absence of malevolent intent on either side.Originally Posted by Funkyfly
I know it happens. But I'm arguing that doesn't always have to.Originally Posted by Funkyfly
kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
- mikey
I dont recall seeing much "victim mentality" in this thread. I dont remember anyone stating the rider wasnt partly at fault.Originally Posted by jrandom
What we have had is a barrage of stupid statements by Motu, Jim and yourself stating it is alway the riders fault.
This is simply wrong.
You're accusing me of brazenly pulling the statement that you brazenly pull statements out of the air, out of the air? I wasn't attempting to prove anything with assertions; I was pointing out that *you* were doing so.Originally Posted by Funkyfly
Which is why Winston Churchill described democracy as "the worst form of government, except for all those others that have been tried". It's one of those 'logic' ideas - you know, the fact that a majority opinion is not proof of correctness?Originally Posted by Funkyfly
Of course. But... it doesn't prove right or wrong.Originally Posted by Funkyfly
kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
- mikey
JR society needs a measuring stick, remember we are trying to keep this REAL WORLD, in new zealand that measuring stick for right and wrong is often what the majority believes.Originally Posted by jrandom
Kindly quote the bits where Jim and I said that it was "always the rider's fault".Originally Posted by Funkyfly
I'm going to say this once more and then give up. You can't just state that something is, or isn't, right or wrong - you have to demonstrate it by a line of reasoning if you want to convince anyone who thinks otherwise.Originally Posted by Funkyfly
Saying "This is simply wrong" and hoping that the statement stands on its own merit is known as making an unsupported assertion, which is one of those things called 'logical fallacies' that don't belong in a good argument.
kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
- mikey
Posted by Jim - "Every accident you have is your own fault. There is ALWAYS something you could have done to avoid one."Originally Posted by jrandom
Go back and read my scenarios about waiting in traffic, blocked in with no where to go and someone rear ending you, in such a case you would be an innocent party.Originally Posted by jrandom
reason on that and compare it to jims comment above.
well?
I have carried this torch long enough, i look fwd to someone else carrying it on.
Indeed. And I wouldn't try to argue otherwise. But the majority opinion can be influenced towards a better position by a single good argument, which is why it's important to attempt the consideration of these questions without prejudice to what people may already think.Originally Posted by Funkyfly
kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
- mikey
The cops did every thing they could to charge me, but as far as the law was concerned I'd done nothing wrong, I was wearing protective clothing, my bike met legal requirements to be on the road, and the skid marks indicated that I'd seen the threat and braked, though to this day I have no memory of the proceeding 12 hours and only a spotty recollection of the next 3 days.Originally Posted by Funkyfly
I believe that I could have avoided it. It is 100% my fault for being in the wrong place at the wrong time, because of a lack of personal discipline. Everyone is human and we all make mistakes, but motorcyclists need personal discipline, skills, and survival habits that run contrary to the current philosophy of having an accident and then going, "O well, insurance will fix it and I'm such a good driver/rider it couldn't possibly be my fault." You can get away with that attitude more often in a car than on a bike, and if you don't take the approach that every accident is your own fault, you aren;t riding in survival mode. It's harsh, but a necessary attitude if you want to keep on riding bikes for years, rather than just to the next accident.
You've selectively quoted me and put words in my mouth. That's not a conversational technique. Neither is demanding answers. I'm happy to sustain an argument, but not when it is apparent that it is wasteful of both party's time.
I'd like to thank JR for popping in because he has said what I wanted to say in response to your comments and saved me from making a bigger arse of myself than usual.
If a man is alone in the woods and there isn't a woke Hollywood around to call him racist, is he still white?
That scenario is precisely why I always filter away from the back of a traffic queue. A colleague of mine had precisely that accident, and he doesn't filter like I do. I've never been rear-ended. Do our respective styles influence the likelihood of that particular accident happening? I think so. Once again, I'm not talking about 'fault', in any moral sense. I'm talking about control and ability to influence outcomes.Originally Posted by Funkyfly
Giving up already? You should take lessons from Zed.Originally Posted by Funkyfly
kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
- mikey
You seem oblivious to the real point - all this stuff about contractors doing their job - what kind of defence? etc you are spouting on about.Originally Posted by Funkyfly
I will try again. The point I am making is that if contractual arrangements make that the absolute responsibility of the contractor or the Council, either way to ensure 100% compliance will cost money and it is unlikely to be achievable. Others have mentioned signs blown over, stolen etc. Defending lawsuits from crashed bikers will cost money. Organisations and their insurers on the advice of their lawyers are averse to spending money. If we push them and they lose they will legislate to ensure they don't lose.
Say all you like about the contractor, but the Council employs the contractor, and the contractor will have some weight with Council opinion and it won't be in favour of bikers that cost either party real hard money.
My point about the Council executive and staff versus the Mayor and Councillors was aimed at your comment about you having 7 years experience with a Council (I was presuming as an employee and not an elected representative) though you aren't an experienced biker, and that was to point out to you no matter how intelligent or logical the staff might be, the elected people hold sway based on usually minority pressure from squeaky wheels. It wouldn't take much for there to be an outcry against motorcycles racing dangerously down the nice ratepayers lovely country roads. Solution, ban the bastards.
Are you too stuck in a warp here to see that.
No-one wins when the lawyers get involved and costs skyrocket.
Cheers
Merv
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