Canoe & Kayak Scams Kills 1,000 Americans
			 
			 
			
		
		
		
			
			Cogent, as always, Mary.  And yet... And yet... he has already managed 
to get some office of the USCG to task one of its contractors with 
looking into the question of (A) whether sponsons can indeed be 
lifesavers, and (B) if so, whether they should be required equipment. 
And the contractor assigned the task to a young woman with no paddling 
expertise, hence no sound judgment in the matter, nor even enough 
knowlege to ask the right questions (of Timmy OR of the paddling 
community). 
 
I'd like to trust the good judgment of a USCG faced with Ingram's 
incoherent ravings, but... 
 
-Richard 
 
 
Mary Malmros  wrote in message ... 
 "Rick"  writes: 
 
  ...stuff deleted 
   ...and the number of kayakers is still tiny.  Not the same situation 
   at all. 
  
  Mary, 
  
  Small population means little political clout. This is just the type of 
  potential group for which pooly considered law is enacted. 
 
 Well, no, it really isn't.  You see, in order to enact legislation 
 of any kind, SOMEone has to give a damn about it.  SOMEone has to 
 want to do it.  So can you tell me who, exactly, wants to nail 
 sponsons on the boats of all paddlers?  Sponsonboy doesn't count; he 
 doesn't got a vote in the USofA. 
 
  You must realize that the helmet laws were enacted simply because those who 
  cycled (age range 5-16) had zero political power. 
 
 And those many kids who cycled had these appendages known as parents 
 who cared about what might happen if their child's head hit the 
 pavement.  IOW, there were a great many concerned people -- many 
 millions -- and, rightly or wrongly, they saw helmet laws as a 
 solution. 
 
  No vote, no risk of 
  enacting laws that offend. Because kayaking is growing more popular (mostly 
  fla****er), there are a greater number of low skilled people on the water 
  and an increased risk of death to those individuals. Since the numbers of 
  boaters is still pretty low, lawmakers acting now can enact dumb laws that 
  won't hurt them at the polls. 
 
 Lawmakers don't enact laws on issues that ABSOLUTELY NOBODY cares 
 enough to agitate them about.  A lot of people cared about bike 
 accidents; very few people care about kayak accidents, and with the 
 exception of one lone nutter, NONE of them think sponsons is a 
 solution that would merit anything even faintly scented of a legal 
 requirement.  No lawmaker is going to spent a nanosecond of effort 
 on something like this when they can instead spend time on 
 legislation that someone cares about, and for which their efforts 
 will somehow be rewarded.  QED. 
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
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