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by blackeyeblitzar 642 days ago
> People will eventually end up in front of a car, either by their own mistake or when an inattentive driver hits them, it will happen.

It seems like you’re implying that everyone eventually dies by getting hit by a car (sorry if I am reading this incorrectly)? But that is simply not true. There are approximately 7000 pedestrian deaths a year right now, compared to a population of about 340 million people. So the probability of dying in a given year is 0.00002. With a 79 year life expectancy on average, the chance of dying as a pedestrian over a lifetime is like 0.15%. By the way, MOST pedestrian deaths are at night, so it seems like an easy way to drive this even lower is just to improve lighting and ask pedestrians to make themselves more visible.

> I'm sorry to ask this on HN but: are you a moron or a troll?

I think this type of comment doesn’t belong here per the guidelines: https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

3 comments

> It seems like you’re implying that everyone eventually dies by getting hit by a car (sorry if I am reading this incorrectly)?

Yes, you interpreted my comment absolutely incorrectly.

I meant that there's always going to be someone getting hit by a car, it's a fact of life when the road is shared between cars and people. Not considering this fact when designing a car is not possible.

Hence my comment asking if GP was a moron or a troll after they stated this:

> large suvs are to protect the occupants. people jumping in front of it should not even factor in. I don't drive on sidewalks.

I simply cannot accept that a user on this forum really thinks this way, it's an absurdly moronic statement.

Do you have a source for this "most pedestrian deaths are at night" claim?
> sorry if I am reading this incorrectly

You are - obviously he's not saying "everyone" will get hit by a car. This is obvious, because that's clearly untrue. In fact, out of 8 billion people on Earth I don't think a single one would argue that "everyone" will get hit by a car.

What's more likely here, you misunderstood? Or you found someone 1 in 8 billion, someone truly one of a kind?

Right, so you misunderstood. Worse, you know you misunderstood but you proceeded anyway. That's dishonest - if you can't make your argument without lying and smearing your opponent, your argument doesn't deserve to be spoken.