jstark47 wrote:20 year old goes to Sears, buys a table saw. Sears salesperson doesn't ask if he knows how to use it, just sells it to him. Goes home, uses it, has an accident, cuts off a hand, bleeds to death before he can control the bleeding.
Should we blacklist that Sears store? I don't think so. As a matter of fact, that sounds kinda dumb, doesn't it?
I agree with Flynrider.
I'm not going to boycott any dealer who, in their struggle to cover overhead and stay in business, may not have gotten the exact shades of gray correct and made the correct judgement call. It's not a black and white issue. How low a skill level in a rider? How powerful a motorcycle? You can kill yourself easily on a 150cc scooter for that matter....
I'm sorry this mother lost her son...... but it's too damned bad she wants everyone except him and herself to be responsible for his lack of judgement. As the article said, "he turned around to smile at his friends." The numbnut couldn't even look where he was going, and this is somehow the dealer's or the manufacturer's fault?
The likelyhood of someone killing themselves within 30 seconds of starting a table saw is significantly smaller than riding a supersport bike.
Certainly, anyone can kill themselves on a 150cc scooter or for that matter a pot with 1" depth of water.
What we are talking about is that the dealer/salesperson knows that the product is dangerous in anything less than experienced hands. The dealer knows that this isn't a tractor-trailer truck being bought by an unlicensed individual for a business that will be driven by someone else. They know that the individual in front of them will be riding the motorcycle that they are selling (unless it was a gift for someone else, but I don't think anyone would recommend buying a bike as a gift given the particular nature of people when they finally sit on a bike).
You have to have a license in order to purchase a gun. A gun can be dangerous in inexperienced hands. It is no different with a supersport bike.
Europe, already has laws regarding cars. You need to have a specific license to ride a car with incredible horsepower. This is no different.
With all that, I'm not really arguing for laws in this matter.
But I am interested in establishing bikers that will live for the hobby and vehicle rather than die from it.
Understanding that bikes have a lot of horsepower for their weight and actually internalizing that and knowing what will happen when you tromp on the throttle are two different things. A knowledge that people don't come with inherently and a knowledge that most certainly, if the dealer and salesperson know their product - they know there is difference in these kinds of knowledge.
RhadamYgg