viney266 wrote:And even better yet? If she crashes with the bucket on...it will be counted statistically as a helmet ...So if she gets a splattered head it counts a a helmet failure!!!...more ammo for none helmet folks!
Now don't get me wrong, full face all the time guy here, but I support your right NOT to wear one if you so choose. BUT, you except what happens if you do
questions we are having (my daughter and I )
1.) with her bucket can she now carry a tune?
2) it IS called a brain bucket. maybe she is just confused
3) Is it just some new trend we don't know about.
I don't think I agree with the idea of being able to choose not to wear a helmet. I look at it like a scoot/moto version of a seatbelt. If you want to go kill yourself, don't do it on the road- the law requires a bare minimum of safety (helmet) and I'm totally okay with that. In fact, to that effect, I feel like the law should disqualify 'brain buckets' as effective helmets. That's just my opinion, though, nobody else has to agree.
Some of my outrage does stem from the "OMG these people could get hurt like I did they are total dumbasses!" and I have no way of knowing whether their choice to dress/gear like that is made out of pure ignorance or a choice to simply not give a buffalo's arse about their own safety. Either way, like I said, my initial and biggest problem is that they make us who take scooters seriously/are enthusiasts/consider ourselves part of the culture look bad... because to John and Jane Doe driving their cage around, we're all the same people, riding around on our 'mopeds' or 'Vespas'.
Like JH said, edjamuhcate. Le sigh.
theflash784 wrote:It's not just scooter people who don't take their safety seriously. I have seen plenty of motorcyclist doing the same thing. Last summer I saw this woman riding a MC with short shorts and a halter top. She did have a helmet- they are required here in Mich. Some of the ladies I worked with went on cross country MC rides and would wear halter tops. I cringed every time they talked about it and my only two wheel experienced had been a small 80cc MC but I knew enough to wear a jacket or a long sleeved shirt.
On a some what related note- would we all be so drawn to our scooters if everyone got it, if they were main stream? Isn't part of the attraction to riding is that you are doing something different? Would scooters still be cool if they were more common place?
Yeah- when I rode with Lokky up to Baltimore last year I was in shorts and sandals. NOT proud of that. I could kick myself now.
Okay, I may have to wait until, like, I'm not really sure... next year or something to kick myself. But that's my point I guess. Sunburn on my knees was NOT enough punishment for that dumb move.
As for scooters being mainstream... I know that's why some/many scooterists are attracted to them, but that wasn't me. It was fun, and I got sucked into the culture (Lokky's fault). Not to criticize ANYBODY... but I've never understood the idea of doing something specifically because it wasn't "mainstream" *finger quotes*. It's seemed totally silly to me, ever since I was young, and my younger sisters and cousins shunned me because I wouldn't wear baggy boy pants, black t shirts, and listen to crappy metal bands with them (their way of being the opposite of mainstream). Don't get me wrong... I do/like PLENTY of stuff that isn't 'mainstream'... but because I want to, not because of its non-mainstream status. If that makes sense.
Anyways, me getting into scooter culture and consequently getting my 170i... Lokky's fault. I was going to Club meetings already and having fun riding around already, and then my car bit the dust and... well, the planets just kind of aligned and a bought a scoot.
