• Car Crashes - Everyone Knows Someone That's Crashed

  • Jun 24 2022
  • Length: 29 mins
  • Podcast

Car Crashes - Everyone Knows Someone That's Crashed

  • Summary

  • Car Crashes

    If you took all the car crashes that happened in one country and put those in one place on the same day, you’d have a national emergency. But that’s not the way we deal with traffic crashes. And even though most refer to these as accidents, most collisions can be explained. And crashes that can be explained are NOT accidents.

    Traffic carnage is everywhere in our society. The biggest reasons for crashes are drivers failing to yield and following too close. Simply speaking, drivers are failing to manage speed and space.

    Like disease, no one is immune from traffic crashes. Princess Diana, James Dean, and Paul Walker are just a few of the famous people that have died in car accidents. Every day in the United States there are thousands of crashes, injuries and deaths as a result of the automobile.

    Seat belt use, increased automotive and road engineering, in combination with grass roots drink driving campaigns (MADD) reduced the number of traffic deaths over the past decades. Unfortunately, almost a half-century of policy and legal changes have not impacted the number of drivers that drive drunk.

    GDL (Graduated Driver’s License) programs moved to reduce the number of crashes amongst young drivers. However, fewer crashes amongst young drivers has not been the result. The GDL programs in combination with people living in cities has postponed young people getting their license.

    When they do get their driver’s license, they’re facing the “4 Ds” of life:

    1. Distractions (Screens with an overwhelm of information);
    2. Dating;
    3. Driving;
    4. Drinking.

    And with none of these life events do they have any experience. This inexperience erodes their driving focus and often carries a dire consequence.

    It’s not driver behavior that’s reduced traffic deaths. Rather it’s advances in automotive and road engineering features. In combination with better cars and roads, medical science has further reduced traffic deaths. Yet we’re still crashing and injuring the same number of people as we did in previous decades.

    Finally, in the podcast, we answer smart drivers’ questions.’

    Brake failure on modern vehicles in unlikely. Brake systems are divided into two independent sub-systems. If the front brakes fail, the rear brakes will continue to work, and vise-versa. And if the brakes do in fact fail completely, you can use the parking brake as an emergency brake. If all that fails, simply put the transmission into neutral, and let the car roll to a stop. If something happens, be sure to activate your 4-Way Flashers to alert other traffic that something’s wrong.

    To prevent crashes, manage space well and know that driving is a social activity. Sometimes you just have to let off the accelerator to stay safe.

    Happy motoring smarter drivers.

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