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What do people do about minibuses? Or do you just avoid them altogether?
Indeed. I can find hundreds and thousands of cases where parents, due to their mistaken beliefs over react in all sorts of ways. Perfect example are parents who are terrified of paedos.Of course, people do take risks, my point is I don't agree that the people are good at calculating/assessing the risks correctly.
You are saying any accident, no matter how probable == almost certain death. Wow, do you have any statistics to back that up? It sounds like a paranoid sound byte to tug at the heartstrings of parents, devised by a well meaning adman.In this case, the stakes are too high: Even though the probability of an accident is very low, you face an almost certain death of your kid
Now you are suggesting we completely ignore the probability of an accident and just assume it will happen. Furthermore, when it does happen, you will have a death. If thats not a perfect example of incorrect assessment I dont know what is.No matter which probability you attribute to an accident, the expected loss should outweigh the cost of getting a car seat.
Vast majority of countries that have mandatory laws are countries with car cultures where babies end up spending huge number of hours in cars travelling in high speeds. To equate the risk associated with that and compare it equally with a new couple taking their baby home for the first time, who are going to be in a slow taxi for a very short amount of time is misguided. Alas, this just goes back to proving your point, where you stated:The main reason why many countries do have mandatory seat belt laws is because people are not good at (or simply don't bother) calculating risks correctly.
Of course, people do take risks, my point is I don't agree that the people are good at calculating/assessing the risks correctly.