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This is a question Ouch!

A friend was once given a biopsy by a sleep-deprived junior doctor.
They needed a sample of his colon, so inserted the long bendy jaws-on-the-end thingy, located the suspect area and... he shot through the ceiling. Doctor had forgotten to administer any anaesthetic.

What was your ouchiest moment?

(, Thu 29 Jul 2010, 17:29)
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It would make people think twice about just getting on a bike and buggering about in town, just as one does a car.
It wouldn't disuade people to any significant degree - people who want to ride will ride, just as they do with cars.
(, Wed 4 Aug 2010, 14:21, 1 reply)
Erm..... How?
Surely the risk of a high fine would disuade more cyclists from jumping red lights than they would if they paid for an annual license?

Anyway, the idea is to get more people to jump on bikes and travel short distances, no?
(, Wed 4 Aug 2010, 14:25, closed)
I think if you had to go through the rigmarole of paperwork and pay insurance
you'd have a hell of a lot more respect for bike-riding.

But as for encouraging people to ride bikes - not from me - I don't care how you get to work - I'm certainly not one of those "environment" poseurs, I just think that however you do get to work, you should obey the rules of the road.

I don't charge the barriers on the tube because I'm going a shorter distance than others. I don't expect cyclists to expect to be able to break the laws because they don't like some of them.
(, Wed 4 Aug 2010, 14:28, closed)
Hmm
Does paying Vehicle Excise Duty stop boy racers from driving their souped up Corsas in an antisocial fashion?

I'm not an environment poseur either - I pay over the odds for a bike frame manufactured in Taiwan and shipped halfway round the world, that I've maintained and built up in my own time and at considerable expense. Plus I love cycling too.

You won't see me jumping red lights or cycling on the pavement.
(, Wed 4 Aug 2010, 14:32, closed)
No obviously it won't completely stop twats being twats.
But I'm sure a bit of regulation, legal enforcement, and personal and financial accountability would stop couriers being so, and likewise the vast majority of cyclists.
(, Wed 4 Aug 2010, 14:35, closed)
Then perhaps better enforcement of on the spot fines at traffic lights would achieve the same ends, no?

(, Wed 4 Aug 2010, 14:35, closed)
And taxes. I think the taxes would make bike ownership, distribution and acceptance
far more respected - like that of a car. Owning a stolen car anywhere beyond Chavland is not cool or acceptable, and those who own and use cars are expected and respected for using and respecting the rules of the road.
(, Wed 4 Aug 2010, 14:42, closed)
I assume you're a driver?
Has Vehicle Excise Duty disuaded you from speeding?

As a cyclist I can give plenty of examples of bad driving where drivers have failed to uphold the rules of the road, despite obviously paying a levy to use it.

[edit]

Taxes are already levied on the distribution and sale of bicycles, in the forms of import duty and VAT.
(, Wed 4 Aug 2010, 14:50, closed)
I'm not a driver, no.
But I won't object to paying my dues and respecting the rules of the road if/when I become one if/when I move out of Mordor.

Taxes are already levied on imported cars.
(, Wed 4 Aug 2010, 14:54, closed)

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