Post by XenoPost by Mighty MousePost by XenoPost by alveyPost by NoddyPost by Mighty MousePost by alveyThe Hulksters: Because they can see over the top of you they
believe that this justifies them sitting on your tailpipe.
The fact that it'll take their hideous vehicle many more
metres to stop than the car they're tailgating never occurs
to them.
also because of the mentality of those who buy those things
And exactly what "mentality" would that be, Felix? Please.
Provide the findings of your studies.
And yet another unstoppable own goal by the Fraudster....
Don't you just love how he's *demanding proof* from Felix. The
level of hypocrisy Darren displays just beggars belief!
it's laughable
I'd have said *pitiable*!
https://www.ghsa.org/resources/news-releases/GHSA/Ped-Spotlight-Full- Report22
which prompted this article;
https://www.smh.com.au/national/why-is-everyone-buying-truckzillas-
that-are-too-big-for-our-streets-20230511-p5d7iy.html
While driving recently, you may have noticed some huge vehicles
on the road. Perhaps you’ve seen an enormous, shiny SUV too wide
to fit in a turning lane, or maybe you’ve held your breath
overtaking a vehicle that feels more like a tank than a normal
car. This isn’t even hyperbole: the largest Toyota Hiluxes are
now around the same size as the Sherman tanks used during World
War II.
Over the past few decades cars have grown a lot bigger, but
with the introduction of the massive Dodge Ram and Ford F-150s,
weighing in at up to three tonnes, we might have reached the
absurd extreme. We know that everything is bigger in Texas, but
now these huge SUVs and – to import another term from the US –
“pickup trucks” are also hitting Australian streets in big
numbers. They’re hard to miss: you’ll find them struggling to
fit into car parks and overhanging into footpaths and bike lanes.
It turns out that they’re not just an oversized annoyance,
they’re also dangerous.
Car crashes are now the leading cause of death of Australian
children, and these monster trucks are their deadliest
incarnation.
and
The square shape and huge mass of these suburban tanks means
that when they are involved in an accident, it’s much more
likely to be a deadly one. In fact, one study found kids are
eight times more likely to die when hit by a SUV compared to a
normal passenger car.
and
So why have these vehicles become more popular in Australia?
For car manufacturers and dealers, the answer is easy: they
make a lot more money selling truckzillas, which can cost into
the six figures, than cheaper alternatives. Consumers have
therefore seen a decline in smaller, lighter options.
Pickup truck owners will often say their motivation is greater
towing and loading capacity, but the truth is some people just
like to feel big on the road. And the marketing reflects this,
describing these colossal vehicles as the “apex predator[s] of
the truck world”, that “eat everything else for breakfast”.
The evidence shows that these vehicles aren’t always safer, and
they’re more likely to be hauling a huge ego than a large load.
Of course we will always need larger vehicles like removalist
should people really be doing the school run in an oversized
commercial truck?
These last two paragraphs have perfectly nailed Darren. For sure
his ego is *bloated*. Don't know why given the failure that his
life has been and the *insecurity* on show. But there he is, doing
the daily school run in his oversized commercial truck. No
question mark needed at the end of the usual *what’s he
compensating for* trope. Everyone knows what his truck is. It's a
statement, a reflection on the size of his penis and his desperate
need to offset elsewhere. His lies and fake claims to trade
qualifications are compensation for his *career failures* and his
truck is a *physical* display of power to compensate for his
visible and non-visible deficiencies. This has now become acute
since Darren is well into middle-age, hence the recent move from a
Navara purchased used into a Ranger purchased new - all in direct
contrast with his previously espoused car buying fiscal
principles. That Darren's method of compensation is his large ute
is patently obvious because he has no real need for a *brand new
large truck* that is, at best, a *compromise*. A decent *trailer*
would suffice for carting anything up to the size of complete
vehicles, and he wouldn't be paying exorbitant commercial tollroad
rates like he will be in the Ranger. The Ranger suspension would
be set up for load carrying and the school run provides only for a
loading of 1 kid, hardly sufficient to *debounce* that suspension.
A harsher ride 99% of the time for sure and all because an ego
needs swaddling. Hell, he has a *truck* at home that would carry
at least as much as his Ranger, if not more, and it's much more
suited to commercial needs.
I can do no better than end this on the summary to the above linked article;
Road safety affects all of us, and we need to make our streets
work for the most fragile bodies in our community, not the most
fragile egos.