I don't have any problems with some idiot taking himself out, or ending up a vegetable for the rest of his life....as long as he has the means to pay for his medical care and expenses, and doesn't injure an innocent person in the process.
There's a move in FL to require motorcyclists to carry an increased amount of medical coverage on the bike insurance.
I can live with that.
We do end up with more injuries after even minor accidents, than a cager does.
We're not only riding a machine that takes MORE skill, and attention, than a car, we're extremely vulnerable to the idiots in the cars!
It's easy, and convenient to target bikes. Hardly anyone will target the cars that kill or injure most of us.
Part of the problem is, insurance claims drive up the costs for the rest of us, for insurance, and hospital bills.
I'd like to see insurance discounts for riders that wear helmets in states that don't require them, as well as discounts for wearing 'proper' or advanced protective gear.
It's kind of silly to wear nothing, or totally inadequate stuff, when almost any level of gear above 'nothing', will offer a real increase in protection in minor accidents.
'Minor' accidents are enough to put you out of work for a while.
In the south, it's too tempting to ride around in shorts, and t shirts when it's hot. Even if you exclude the 'helmet' issue, a minor slide in shorts is gonna lay you up for a while.
The squids who get banged up or killed in stupid accidents, or not wearing any level of protective gear at all....make life more difficult for the rest of us.
"everyone' knows somebody who has been banged up, or worse,on a bike. If they're 'anti-bike', or just ignorant, that is what they'll harp on when talking about bikes with a rider.
(the same people probably know more people who have been seriously injured or killed in car accidents, but they won't insist that anyone should not drive those 'dangerous' cars!)
Yeah, you can be killed walking across the street....in a bathtub...or by your spouse, etc.
The people who are in a postion to force crap on us, usually don't know anything about bikes, don't care to learn, and usually only consider the same crapoid facts and misinformation the non-riding public dwells on.
Wearing your stuff on your bike not only protects you, but may educate the general public, as well as other riders.
Maybe eventually the public will look at a rider buzzing down the street, no helmet, doo-rag flapping, fingerless 'Michael Jackson Limited Edition' gloves, shorts, tank top, and sneakers, and think 'gee, that guy's an idiot', instead of 'Wow, he looks cool!'
The laws will come. With all the yuppies and dumbarse kids killing themselves on bikes they shouldn't be on, surviving families will be screaming for legislation on the rest of us.