And I to my motorcycle parked like the soul of the junkyard. Restored, a bicycle fleshed with power, and tore off. Up Highway 106 continually drunk on the wind in my mouth. Wringing the handlebar for speed, wild to be wreckage forever.
- James Dickey, Cherrylog Road.
Actually i have met him on a few occasions and i stand by what i said.
I have never insulted his spirit or intelligence (didn't mean if i did), i just don't think he is right for the role but as you say we will see what you have done in the next two years. I hope i am proved wrong. the one thing i do now is our levies will never go down. Car deaths are down have those decreased?
The one that struck me was your other post with the ways of getting funding. Those things should all ready be getting funded by all the rest of the money we pay for roads. you should, as the others have suggested be looking more at the defensive/teaching/up skilling side of it.
For a start a better basic handling test, RRRS before you get your restricted, a longer more in depth test for everyone (all vehicles) when sitting their full.
Last edited by BoristheBiter; 25th January 2011 at 06:59. Reason: spelling
Fuck I'm sick of this.... (yeah yeah - dont read it) This shit just sucks the joy out of having a motorcycle.
I went and entered a surfcasting comp in the weekend with 2 of my girls and partners - it was fun. We knew were wouldnt catch much and the weather was appalling but the people were all decent and it was a fugging laugh...
Perhaps you are right. I would prefer that. Or we're both wrong. Probably we'll never know.
However, the chant of "Bullshit!" is still ringing in a lot of ears (mine included) and the smell of bullshit still clings to everything associated with the levy rise, and the MSL.
Do you realise how many holes there could be if people would just take the time to take the dirt out of them?
Gareth Morgan is an Economist first and foremost, that and the fact that he also rides a Motorbike made him the obvious choice to head a committee that will have close to three million dollars to spend on saving bikers lives. It was made known to us before the interview took place that Mr Morgan doesn't necessarily agree with the MSL. But he has been given a job to do. To answers questions as to the viability of such a levy is not part of that job. Possibly that is why he said ''if you have a problem with the MSL, take it up with the government''?
Excellent summary mate.
And he has made quite some sacrifice time wise to take it on....
Kudos to Anne for her stand too, I hope no one mistakes my participation in the council as having 'sold out' or 'feeding from the trough'
I was aksed to participate in forming the governance system, and then appointed to the council, but it was not a smooth ride for ACC and Nick Smith, we seriously held them to account through the whole process and continue to do so
In my heart I totally agree there should never have been a levy raise, ACC should be no fault..... and beer should flow free from my kitchen tap....
But sadly I live in the real world.
Just ride.
My issue with Gareth Morgan fronting the MSL is he appeared on a show on TVNZ7 alongside the Ulysses man and Garth seemed to be agreeing with Nick Smiths statistics on the increase in Motorcycle injuries and deaths and then went on to make the statement that a lot of those deaths were middle aged born again bikers buying machines that were to big and to powerful for them and that they didn't have the ability to handle them.
As an economist and numbers man he failed to firstly justify his comments or point out the fact that their had been a large increase in registrations over that period. As far as I'm concerned he was working his jaw for the sake of being on TV.
I think Nick has someone one the inside now.
Don't judge me based upon your ignorance.
From the figures I found when I first asked myself that question, no.
The crashingest riders are the youngest, linear progression to the oldest (and safest) group.
No way to isolate BABs even if you were unwise enough to attempt a numeric description. Howeve, it's been my observation that most of 'em retain skill levels beyond the younger ones.
Thing is, the dangerous times is that where you're most deficient in both physical skills and that which we might call roadcraft. You can learn these things only by discovering your limits, and the road's a fucking bad place to learn them.
So all the gum beating about safety on the road has for me missed the point. If we're serious about lowering the death / injury toll then we need to develop places and systems where discovering those limits and learning that lore is safer.
Again: make tracks, encourage interested groups to develop training systems and integrate them into the licence structure. And now that you've got a viable alternative point all the bad bastards in the general direction of the very same tracks.
That's it. Off you go.
Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
I agree.
The stats that we see only isolate licence levels, not 'experience' or otherwise. A pie chart I saw on here in the last couple of days says that 52% of fatalities are of 6F status...not surprising since (I'm guessing) that there's more of that class on 100kph roads, and open road speeds are much harder on a biker who comes to grief for any reason.
But whether they are the ones that are crashing in higher numbers or not, I'd hazard a guess that it's BABs that have driven the massive increase in bike numbers in the last 10 years.
Do you realise how many holes there could be if people would just take the time to take the dirt out of them?
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
Bookmarks