"As unlikely as it sounds, the running machine is in fact the most likely cause of injury in the gym according to the US Consumer Product Safety Commission, which counts 24,400 treadmill injuries, as well as three treadmill deaths, in the States every single year." http://www.telegraph.co.uk/beauty/body/avoid-treadmill-injury/ http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2015/05/04/treadmill-emergency-room-injuries-exercise-equipment/26898487/ My argument was that if you are not engaging in risky driving behavior, it is not as dangerous as your generic statistics make it seem. If you can provide any evidence to suggest otherwise, be my guest, but that is doubtful. Unless OP is planning on driving under the influence or like a madman, the chances are overwhelmingly likely that she will reach her destination safely. |
The argument wasn't that OP was more likely to die than not; the argument was that driving was statistically dangerous, which it is, since it's one of the leading killers in the US and definitely one of the top causes of unintentional death. |
And if the only measure of danger is in the number of deaths caused by an activity, then you need to go ahead and admit that the number of deaths that occur from car accidents is 10,000 times greater than that from running on the treadmill, making it, objectively, a much more dangerous activity. Thanks for playing! |
When did I say that? I said injuries, not deaths. Jeeze, you really are desperate to win a meaningless argument on an anonymous board. LOL. Only a fool would say "X is only dangerous if it results in death" |
You said it above when you tried to lump "dying in a car crash" with the general "dying from a fall" Ok. Let's go with injuries then. About 3 million people are injured each year in a car accident. Thanks for playing! |