jevs
Well-known member
3,500 people killed annually on our roads in the UK....let's ban driving.
3,500 people killed annually on our roads in the UK....let's ban driving.
Is it "Mad Sunday" when they close the roads and let any old amateur biker hurtle round the course. At a guess, I'd say that is when most of the fatalities occur, rather than on the actual TT races with the professional riders.
At the end of the day, it a "consenting adults" thing for me. No-one is being forced to risk their life doing this.
OP, Shit happens end of. "Could get run over by a bus or hit by a bike on the TT course I know what I'd rather have. They are fans. You think they would want it banned? They know it's not safe.
Absolutely correct. 240 people have died on Everest since 1921, and that's only one mountain.
So are we going to ban crossing the road cos that is far more dangerous than the TT.
Why don't you (Stat Bruv) bring this up at a motorbike rally rather than NSC. I will pull up a chair and enjoy watching you get ripped to ****ing pieces.
3,500 people killed annually on our roads in the UK....let's ban driving.
So clearly you are wrong @WellQuickWoody.Wrong.
3,500 people killed annually on our roads in the UK.
Or has any relevance to the discussion I wanted to have.No, that just simply isn't true.
Yeah I realise that, thanks.
I just felt the need to make sure my query was understood by everybody.
Although I'm not attributing it to H&S (the Daily Mail demon), more a Manx thing.
The TT and fatalities therein goes against the grain of all other motorsport and motorbike racing, I just wondered why it was allowed to happen.
Maybe I didn't need to ask the specific question again.The answers to your question(s) have all been answered already. If you aren't on a fishing trip and/or don't have an undisclosed personal agenda, why do you persist in posing questions about the validity of the annual IOM TT & Manx GP/Classic TT Races?
You can't and won't.Wasn't it only last year, or maybe the year before, that a couple died in a bike/sidecar combo on Madeira Drive on a perfectly straight road in the Time Trials thing? Shit happens, and they died what they loved doing. How do you legislate against that?
Maybe I didn't need to ask the specific question again.
But I just wanted to group the answers together that either made no sense, had no relevance, or were simply just wrong, along with the question again, so they could understand.
So who could understand? I reckon the good folk of NSC have just about covered all the bases of the debate meself.
ps You won't be surprised to learn that I adore motorcycle racing on real roads: and the TT is the absolute pinnacle (for me at least) of closed-public-roads motorcycle racing. I didn't make it over to The Island this year, sadly, but I would be there every year for both racing festivals if I could afford it. To myself, the TT really is the greatest show on Earth; & a humbling counterpoint to the ill-gotten riches of modern Football's obscenely overpaid & over-rated diving prima donnas. If you or anybody else here wants to learn more about the TT & why riders continue to lay their arses on the line racing there, you can do no better than read Rick Broadbent's book 'That Near-Death Thing' which was rightly awarded Best Motorsports Book of the Year at the recent 2013 Sports Book Awards. It's absolutely stunning.
otherwise the residents might have to pay more taxThe answer had already been given - the TT is ... important to the island's economy in all sorts of ways.
Just a little pop at those quoted.So who could understand? I reckon the good folk of NSC have just about covered all the bases of the debate meself.
ps You won't be surprised to learn that I adore motorcycle racing on real roads: and the TT is the absolute pinnacle (for me at least) of closed-public-roads motorcycle racing. I didn't make it over to The Island this year, sadly, but I would be there every year for both racing festivals if I could afford it. To myself, the TT really is the greatest show on Earth; & a humbling counterpoint to the ill-gotten riches of modern Football's obscenely overpaid & over-rated diving prima donnas. If you or anybody else here wants to learn more about the TT & why riders continue to lay their arses on the line racing there, you can do no better than read Rick Broadbent's book 'That Near-Death Thing' which was rightly awarded Best Motorsports Book of the Year at the recent 2013 Sports Book Awards. It's absolutely stunning.