And there is the the real answer. Freedom of choice seems like a really great idea, until it bites us in the ass and forces a personal payback. Maybe I should modify my earlier proposal about posting that bond, and add the requirement that you must also forfeit your right to sue anyone and everyone when your "choice" turns out to be not so great.
Don't come back after the crash and sue someone because you bounced your head off that curb and now you can't focus on anything for more than 10 seconds, and you tend to drool a lot, and you can't work anymore so you're losing the nice house, etc., etc.. And don't expect the rest of society to bail you out either.
Jerry
Once again you are heavy-handing a helmet opinion and making requirements that are just simply not valid. All of the things that you point out above could happen even WITH a helmet, and the determining factor of litigation has absolutely nothing to do with whether it was utilized or not (as long as requirement under the law for its use was adhered to). So according to you - someone who is grossly negligent (say - texting on a cell phone) is only responsible if the person they injure is wearing a helmet? Where do you come up with the rational for that? How can you even think that to be a reasonable point of discussion? I'm not trying to call you out, I just don't get it ...
And let me discuss this complete myth about "society bailing people out". Having gone through a family member getting sick, requiring round the clock care due to illness (no, he was not wearing a helmet when he got hit by cancer) ... let me tell you -
When insurance runs out, and personal finances run out guess what?
The fawking treatment runs out as well ... I have yet to see anyone ... anywhere ... at anytime provide evidence of any "bailouts" by society for lack of insurance. If you think Medicare/Medicaid is the answer ... it ain't (even though he paid into it his entire 40 year working life). So unless you (or anyone else) can provide hard data and evidence of this "cost to society" due to lack of a helmet law BS ... please just let it go. It has no foundation, and the more it gets repeated doesn't make it any more true than the first time it was stated.
This is nothing new ... it began back in 1967. If all the cost arguments were valid, it would stand to reason that NO State would have repealed a previously enacted helmet law, yet 27 States repealed (or modified for adults) the law on the books:
"In 1967, the federal government began requiring states to enact motorcycle helmet use laws to qualify for certain federal safety program and highway construction funds. Forty states enacted universal helmet use laws that went into effect by the end of 1969. By 1975, all but three states mandated helmets for all motorcyclists.
As the US Department of Transportation moved in 1976 to assess financial penalties on states without helmet laws, Congress responded to state pressure by revoking federal authority to assess penalties for noncompliance. Between 1976 and 1978, 20 states weakened their helmet use laws to apply only to young riders, usually those younger than 18. Eight states repealed helmet use requirements for all motorcyclists.
In the 1980s and early 1990s, several states reinstated helmet laws applying to all riders. In the 1991 Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act, Congress created incentives for states to enact helmet use and safety belt use laws. States with both laws were eligible for special safety grants, but states that had not enacted them by October 1993 had up to 3 percent of their federal highway allotment redirected to highway safety programs.
Four years after establishing the incentives, Congress again reversed itself. In the fall of 1995, Congress lifted federal sanctions against states without helmet use laws, paving the way for state legislatures to repeal helmet laws. In 1997, helmet laws in Texas and Arkansas were weakened to apply only to younger riders. Kentucky weakened its law in 1998, Louisiana weakened its law in 1999 only to reinstate universal coverage in 2004, Florida weakened its law in 2000, and Pennsylvania weakened its law in 2003. Now 20 states and the District of Columbia have helmet laws covering all riders, and 27 states have laws covering some riders, usually people younger than 18. Illinois, Iowa, and New Hampshire do not have helmet laws."
Whether a person wears a helmet or not ... the issue here is whether it should be REGULATED for use by a Government. IMHO, it is outside the scope of Government (esp the Feds) to legislate acts against oneself. Any law that protects me from me just doesn't make sense. It just simply cannot be supported that non-use of a helmet causes any harm (financially or physically) to anyone but the individual. If someone can provide the evidence, I'm all ears (and eyes)

Ride safe with (or without

) a lid ....