I think I read you fine. Here is what you wrote:youngterrier wrote:You suck at reading.
Getting in a motorvehicle accident without a seatbelt on=higher chance of fatality than driving period.
You may drive and get in an accident, but you don't have a chance of dying if you aren't in an accident.
We're done here. You have a flat earth understanding of reality, and the reason your opinions are so unpopular is because they're static and illogical, not because you possess some form of higher intelligence.
The "comparison" I made in the post to which you were responding was of a scenario in which one stays home and watches a movie on TV vs. a scenario in which one drives their motor vehicle to a theater to watch a movie.There are multiple factors that contribute to wrecking in a car accident and even further factors in determining whether or not said accident could be fatal. Suffice to say, the chances of one getting in a car accident are greater than one being critically or fatally injured in a car accident.
So to show how your comparison is false, I'm showing how deciding to go somewhere does not increase your chances of fatality.
I think any reasonable person would read "I'm showing how deciding to go somewhere does not increase your chances of fatality" to mean you don't think that making the decision to drive to the theater instead of making the decision to stay hone and watch TV increases the chances of fatality.
As you say, you don't have a chance of dying in a motor vehicle accident if you're not in a motor vehicle accident. But I think it's pretty obvious that you have a much greater chance of getting into a motor vehicle accident driving to the theater than you do sitting in your house watching TV. I can't believe I'm having to say this but the probability of you you dying in a motor vehicle accident is defined by the probability that you get into a motor vehicle accident multiplied by the probability that you're going to die if you get in a motor vehicle accident. Obviously, the probability that you're going to be involved in a motor vehicle accident is pretty close to zero if you're sitting on your couch watching TV. It's possible. Someone could come crashing into your house and hit you and that would be classified as a motor vehicle accident. But the probability of that is very low. Orders of magnitude lower than you being involved in one if you're out driving.
And yes there are other factors such as the type of accident. On average having someone crash into your house probably has a different fatality rate than getting into an accident when you're out driving. But surely you can see that the probability of dying in a motor vehicle accident is greater when you're actually out on the road driving a motor vehicle than it is when you're sitting in hour home.






