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Complaints over bare-headed Chris Boardman’s helmetless BBC Breakfast bike ride

British Cycling policy advisor responds to criticism, saying it "obscures real issues"...

Chris Boardman’s appearance on BBC Breakfast this morning has provoked a flurry of complaints about his not wearing a cycle helmet – even though the segment began with him explaining why he chose not to do so. In a detailed explanation this afternoon, Boardman says that while the reaction was "understandable," it is also "unfortunate because it obscures what I believe are the real issues."

The early morning TV show is featuring a report on cycling each day this week. It is broadcast from Salford, close to the Manchester headquarters of British Cycling, where former Olympic champion Boardman is policy advisor.

Prior to going on a bike ride with him, presenter Louise Minchin asked Boardman, “Viewers will notice I will be wearing a helmet but you won’t. Why not?”

He replied: “It’s a very long answer and more time than we’ve got here," before summarising his position briefly.

“It discourages people from riding a bike, you’re as safe riding a bike as you are walking, statistically, you’re much safer than you are going in your own bathroom and you don’t wear a helmet there," he explained.

“There’s absolutely nothing wrong with helmets, but it’s not in the top ten things that you can do to keep safe.

“We’re going to look at all of those things, but for me, I want bikes to be for normal people in normal clothes.

“About 0.5 per cent of people wear one in the Netherlands, yet it’s the safest country in the world,” he added.

“There’s a reason for that.”

Despite his explanation, the backlash on social media was predictable, many pointing out that the Netherlands already has the type of infrastructure that Boardman and others are campaigning for in the UK.

One Facebook user, John Stimpson, said: “Chris Boardman wearing no helmet and riding in black jacket and jeans. For an item on cycling safety you can't get more stupid.”

Another, Toni Smith, said: “How can you show a piece about cycling safety when the ex-champion is not wearing any safety gear? This is not acceptable! Please in the future choose an ambassador who practices what they preach!”

Many others leapt to his defence, however, with Morgan Lewis saying: “For all those people expressing outrage, I wonder if you have spent the same amount of time looking at the evidence about helmets over the years as Chris Boardman has. His view is not idly held. There is a lot of knee-jerking in these comments.”

Jonathan Richards pointed out: “About two thirds of fatalities WITHIN cars are caused by head injuries - why not a call for compulsory helmets for those travelling in cars? And as for pedestrians ....”

Meanwhile, Chris Myrie couldn’t resist asking: “Does this mean his £80 endorsed helmets from Halfords are useless?”

There was a similar division in reaction to his comments on Twitter, where Boardman himself tweeted this morning after the show: “Hi All, rather than try to address the helmet debate (again) I'm going to pen something for people to read and point you to it this PM.”

That response has now been published on the British Cycling website. Boardman acknowledged the BBC Breakfast piece had “got a lot of people fired up,” and that “my riding a bicycle in normal clothing, looking like a normal person was greeted by some with cries of horror. It’s both understandable and unfortunate because it obscures what I believe are the real issues.”

Foremost among those issues is why some cyclists in the UK believe they should have to wear a helmet while cycling in the first place, he said.

“People wear helmets and high vis as they feel it’s all they can do to keep themselves safe. It shows just how far away Britain is from embracing cycling as a normal and convenient form of transport,” he added.

Pointing to the example of Utrecht in the Netherlands and providing a link to a video of people cycling there he went on: “I’m willing to bet that even those that swear by helmets and high vis would feel comfortable discarding their body armour in such an environment. And that’s the point; in Utrecht they have addressed the real dangers to cyclists.”

While he admitted that the situation in the UK is vastly different, he said helmet compulsion was not the answer, citing drops of between 30 and 50 per cent in countries such as Australia and New Zealand that had introduced such legislation.

“If cycling looks and feels normal, more people will cycle,” he said. The more people cycle, the safer they are - the safety in numbers effect. The more people cycle, the more lives will be saved from amongst the 37,000 that die each year from obesity-related illnesses. Never mind the more than 27,000 that die annually from pollution-related illnesses.”

Boardman said he understands “exactly why people feel so passionately about helmets or high vis,” and “why people wish to use them,” but said he would not promote helmets or hi-vis nor be drawn into a debate on a topic that he considers “isn’t even in the top 10 things that will really keep people who want to cycle safe.”

He added: “I want cycling in the UK to be like it is in Utrecht or Copenhagen and more recently New York City – an everyday thing that people can do in everyday clothes whether you are eight or 80 years old. I want cycling to be a normal thing that normal people do in normal clothes. Is that wrong?”

In the BBC Breakfast report itself, Boardman outlined his top tips for cycling safely including planning your route, how to negotiate junctions and roundabouts safely, road position, stopping at red lights and giving large vehicles plenty of space and not going up the left-hand side of them.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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287 comments

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bendertherobot | 9 years ago
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My favourite comment, recently, was when I overheard.....

"I saw this cyclist this morning, and he didn't have any high vis on."

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Rupert | 9 years ago
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Not only a great bike rider a clever manipulator of the media ....... That Chris Boardman knows how to achieve his goals. We should all support him even if he does from time to time move in mysterious ways........Chris Boardman I mean not god.

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MKultra | 9 years ago
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Will someone please think of the children!

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LinusLarrabee | 9 years ago
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Sadly, these comments provide yet more examples of how stupid and irrational people can be.

Boardman goes on national TV to make his case about cycling safety and completely drops the ball. All anybody is talking about is his lack of helmet. Way to go you idiot! Any fool could have predicted this is how it would turn out. What a complete lack of judgement. He has appeared on TV plenty of times and worn a helmet whilst doing so. It would not have hurt him to do so this time so that his message about cycling safety wasn't lost in all the uproar about his lack of helmet. It's no wonder he isn't taken seriously.

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SB76 | 9 years ago
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I wear an helmet, do have hi viz stuff but dont tend to care so much about that as it in my view doesnt aid drivers seeing you.

We do need to be careful, a minority easily start to dictate how we should all live.

Why should school kids be banned from cycling to school and forced to wear hi-viz kacket in a walking train when the path/road to school is a lighly lite, wide and speed restricted road? Why because the driving standards are so poor aroudn the school! The logic is flawed. Find a sticking plaster over fixing the problem. Same applies here.

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wildnorthlands | 9 years ago
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Helmet debates always end in tears. Perhaps more to the point, did he have to wear completely black clothing? Was he in stealth mode?

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oozaveared | 9 years ago
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Chris Boardman is a very good spokesman and he is right to to stand his ground on helmet use.

Like he says it's not even in the top 10 of things to make cycling safer.

On a previous programme he has likened the attitude to helmets as similar to the attitude that if children were being shot on their way to school then the answer would be compulsory body armour. Obviously the thing to stop is people being shot and in this case run over.

Apart from the fact that body armour does actually work and helmets don't help one iota if you are struck by a car, it's a good argument.

I have been riding on the road in a club since 1973 and only worn a helmet for racing and back in the day they were even more useless. I recently showed my son a picture of a cyclo cross race in the New Forest in 1975 I think. No one wearing a helmet. he asked if there were a lot of head injuries back then and I have to say that in 41 years of active cycling I have never seen any cyclist suffer an injury that a helmet would have prevented. I accept that theoretically there would have to be some somewhere but mostly it's hands wrist arms hips knees and ankles.

Wear one if you like. A friend of mine likes to mount lights and a head cam on his and says that's the only reason he wears one. But it's pretty much like installing a 5 point seat belt in your family saloon for the drive to work. Pretty unnecessary but hey if you're a nervous rider or need a platform for your joystick or head cam then feel free. (only that 5 point belts actually work).

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Initialised | 9 years ago
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That there is a debate may indicate that public perception of road safety isn't quite where it should be in a developed country in the 21st century. On the other hand it could be the result of rightwing propaganda like the debate on immigration, a nice way of diverting the media away from the elephant in the room or in this case the lorries on the road.

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Paul_C | 9 years ago
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this website seems to still be on British Summer Time judging by the timestamps of the most recent posts

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700c | 9 years ago
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To those comparing walking with cycling as similarly low risk activities, which merit the same choice of PPE, my points have clearly fallen on deaf ears - If I fall or hit an object when i walk, I'm likely to avoid head injury. If I fall over or hit something when cycling I'm likely to avoid head injury. HOWEVER I cannot walk at up to 35mph, but I do cycle at this speed on my commute to work. The impact on my head onto tarmac or other stationary object is going to be worse at higher speed.

I appreciate statistically the risk of head injury when cycling is small. I also appreciate there's a small window of 'usefulness' where a helmet is efficacious (limited object mass, low speeds, etc). I still choose to wear one when cycling but not when walking, following my evaluation of the risk including potential severity. See above. i also choose to wear reflective clothing in winter months. Anyone who comes to a different conclusion is fine by me.

I applaud CB's efforts to normalise cycling by wearing regular clothing. That he respects and understands my choice to wear other clothing/ equipment is also good to hear.

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700c | 9 years ago
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@Oozaveared, it's interesting how different things appear depending on where you sit.

Many will have flat commutes get to work, many won't. Regardless, the bike is still useful mode of transport. I will encounter gradients over 10%, I could pretty much top 30 without pedalling. I also crawl up hills at 10. But the point is, an 'off' will be at higher speed when cycling than when I walk.

and Warwickshire's not even that hilly compared to some places

Hence my discrimination about PPE for these two activities.

I think if you had a flat commute and cycled at a constant10mph, it would still be a useful mode of transport, as you say. cycling according to those conditions, I daresay I wouldn't wear a helmet either.

In the context of what CB was doing, I understand his attire completely.

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darren13366 | 9 years ago
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Here's a novel idea: Do you enjoy riding your bike? Yes? Good. Do you want to wear a helmet? No? Ok, enjoy your ride. Yes? Ok, enjoy your ride.

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andyp | 9 years ago
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I wear a seatbelt in a car because a) it's a legal requirement, and b) there is evidence to suggest that they actually have some impact on safety. Neither of which could be argued about cycle helmets.

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Storck Rider | 9 years ago
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@Farrell, give it a break buster! I was just replying to a post earlier relating to the possibility of wearing a hemet whilst driving or walking...... UTTER BOLLOCKS!

My point is was that all CB has done here is re-ignited the helmet debate rather than saying, Look we as cyclists or even just people riding a bike doing all we can to reduce our chance of injury. Now, government, do your part.

Surely there is some level of shared responsibility to improve safety?

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Tony | 9 years ago
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Its a bit like going back to the Middle Ages. "You're not carrying a posy. Are you mad, you'll die of the bubonic plague?" or "I have friends who carried a pocket full of posies and the doctors say it saved their lives" or "He got a fever but they bleed him and covered him in leeches and poultices and it saved his life"

So many members of the public pitching in with zero knowledge but their own favourite folk remedy for saving cyclists' lives. No need for evidence. Off to the stake with Chris for heretically suggesting its a load of codswallop and posies and bleeding, poultices and leeches actually give no benefit at all. Can't deny the baying mob though can you?

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Mad cuclist | 9 years ago
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YAWN!
We live in a free society, I wear a helmet to train in but if I am riding to the shop I don't, I would rather my daughter rides a bike with no helmet than sits in her room on a computer.
I agree with Chris lets look at the real issues around rider safety, a helmets worth Jack S**t when you get hit up the arse by a car at 60mph.
Would a helmet have saved Pete Longbottom, NO.

For the newbies out there Pete was a top rider in the 90's and an old Team mate of Chris's. Got chucked into the path of an oncoming car by another car which 'didn't see him'

Nick Gritton.

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kevinmorice | 9 years ago
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And on the same day as he posted that load of utter cr4p he also posted that he wouldn't let his 10 year old ride not only on roads but also on an approved cycle path! Hypocritical tw4t!!

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truffy | 9 years ago
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How about not having compulsory wearing of helmets with the proviso that a cyclist with head injuries who does not wear a helmet is kept alive only long enough to harvest the organs?

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Mad cuclist | 9 years ago
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I have been thinking about this....
I have been riding a bike since 1977, I have been racing since 1978 and had full seasons till 1992, and have raced at least once every year since then, I have been involved in the cycle trade for 38 years.
My point? I can't name a person who was killed by a head injury.
I wear one as I said before when training, because if it saves me from concussion that's a result, but if it stops one person riding a bike as they feel intimidated that they should wear one its a bad day.
Ps been a long time but there is nothing better than 60 mph down an alpine pass with no lid on!

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RTB | 9 years ago
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Surely the baseline questions that should be asked are:

1. Can head injuries be caused through the pursuit of cycling?

2. If yes, can the impact of any of those head injuries be mitigated through the use of a helmet?

These days it seems that Boardman is more interested in grandstanding in his attempts to show himself not using a helmet whenever he can deliberately causing confrontation and provocation.

Rather interestingly and inconsistently on his part he always wears a helmet when he does his TdF or this year's Tour of Britain pieces for TV. I would also wager that none of his kids go out on their bikes helmetless.

All rather small minded by a decorated cyclist and if the best contributions to cycling safety he can offer are piffling suggestions like "work out where you want to go" or "give space to lorries" really it's time to return to the day job/backroom designing aero frames.

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don simon fbpe | 9 years ago
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When cycling as a sport, I wear a helmet.
When pootling around town, I don't.
I guess that I agree with Chris Boardman on the normal clothes and ease of cycling thing.

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don simon fbpe | 9 years ago
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Quote:

We should enforce stabilisers too. Most incidents occur when people fall off their bikes. Stabilisers make it harder to fall off bicycles, and so reduce risk of injury. I don't see why people don't use them. If enforcing them saves one life, it's worth it.

I once had to turn a corner on my bike. When I turned it, I felt the stabilisers come to my rescue and stop me tipping dangerously far over. I'm sure I would have fallen off, and died, if the stabilisers hadn't caught me. Stabilisers saved my life, and they might save yours too.

I see many adults not riding with stabilisers every day, and sometimes even children!!! It's really riles me up! Irresponsible!!! We cyclists should do everything we can for our own safety, and that includes using proper safety equipment while riding so we can stay stable. You never know when you might have to turn a corner, just like I did. Just remember folks, 'Stay Safe - Stay Stable'. Simple enough, right!?

Unfortunately I have a different story involving stabilisers. While driving through town I got caught behind a young cyclist with stabilisers. In my need to get to the tail of the queue that was up ahead, I just had to get past this cyclist. I made the judgment call that I could get past safely even if it was a bit of a squeeze. I caught the stabiliser and broke it with my front wheel, the modern 4x4 is indeed a heavy old beast, this in turn threw the youngster under my rear wheels and caused an explosion in which we all died.
How safe are your stabilisers now?
The youngster wasn't wearing a helmet either.

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Gus T replied to Tinternet_tim | 9 years ago
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Tinternet_tim wrote
"If on the other hand this discussion was about cyclist who cycle in the dark on the public highway with no lights, then that would be a different matter. This really annoys me as you are not only putting your own safety at risk but also the safety of others you might run into (pedestrians) and also risk ruining someones else's life if they knock you off and kill you. I mention this as the 'no-light' brigade are out in force again due to the clocks changing."

Now that is something I agree with, we bang on about how great Copenhagen, Holland etc are but forget these places legislate that bikes must have lights fitted at point of sale, it's only road bikes & MTB's that don't have them fitted as standard by manufacturers, both of Mrs G's town bikes have lights fitted as standard but there again one is a Dutch steel town bike and the other is a Belgian town bike that she bought especially in Belgium because you can't get it in the UK. Maybe the Government can actually do some positive legislating for once & require bike manufacturers to fit lights as standard, it's not a massive cost and might actually keep someone alive plus think of the fun you could have speccing your lights as part of your bike choice.  16

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farrell replied to Storck Rider | 9 years ago
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Storck Rider wrote:

Boardman, the helmet debate has been raised yet again as a direct result of the fact that you refuse to wear one. You harp on about getting to the real issues but surely by virtue of the fact we are sat here discussing it now and of all of the criticism you have had this makes it a real issue.

Chris Boardman, JUST WEAR A HELMET AND STOP BANGING YOUR OWN LITTLE DRUM! and then you could actually move on to discuss those 'real' issues.

You'd make a s**t politician!
 102

He probably would make a shit politician, as he'd be too busy doing what is right rather than pandering to the spoon fed, milksops like yourself who are seemingly incapable of generating their own thoughts that seem to make up a large hysterically screaming proportion of people nowadays.

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Storck Rider replied to Simon E | 9 years ago
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You guys are special!

I can see very well what his end game is and why he makes his points BUT, AGAIN, the fact we are here debating this takes away from what he is trying to achieve.

I'll stop wearing a helmet when somebody can prove to me they haven't saved a single life!

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felixcat replied to LinusLarrabee | 9 years ago
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LinusLarrabee wrote:

Sadly, these comments provide yet more examples of how stupid and irrational people can be.

It's best not to insult those who disagree with you. It does not make your case more convincing.

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kie7077 replied to wildnorthlands | 9 years ago
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wildnorthlands wrote:

Helmet debates always end in tears. Perhaps more to the point, did he have to wear completely black clothing? Was he in stealth mode?

Was he cycling at night? Silly to wear black whilst cycling on roads at night, but it could well make you more visible during daytime.

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felixcat replied to 700c | 9 years ago
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700c wrote:

To those comparing walking with cycling as similarly low risI appreciate statistically the risk of head injury when cycling is small. I also appreciate there's a sk activities, which merit the same choice of PPE, my points have clearly fallen on deaf ears - If I fall or hit an object when i walk, I'm likely to avoid head injury. If I fall over or hit something when cycling I'm likely to avoid head injury. HOWEVER I cannot walk at up to 35mph, but I do cycle at this speed on my commute to work. The impact on my head onto tarmac or other stationary object is going to be worse at higher speed.

Your points have NOT fallen on deaf ears. You, with reason, say that the extra speed of cycling is likely to cause injury in the event of something going wrong. I counter that nevertheless the figures show that the RATE of head injury to cyclists and pedestrians is pretty similar. The risk is more or less the same.
I guess that this is because the four wheeled elephant in the room does not discriminate. It even runs down pedestrians on the pavement, never mind crossing the road.
Long may it remain your choice, but I see little reason to wear a helmet cycling, walking or driving.

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farrell replied to oozaveared | 9 years ago
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oozaveared wrote:

A friend of mine likes to mount lights and a head cam on his and says that's the only reason he wears one.

I wear one in the winter commuting for this very reason. I have a front and rear light attached and find it very useful for sitting up and looking across lines of traffic & junctions and letting drivers know you are there before they commit an unadulterated dick move.

Attaching lights to a casquette is hassle I can't be hooped with.

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mrmo replied to Storck Rider | 9 years ago
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Storck Rider wrote:

My point is was that all CB has done here is re-ignited the helmet debate rather than saying, Look we as cyclists or even just people riding a bike doing all we can to reduce our chance of injury. Now, government, do your part.

Surely there is some level of shared responsibility to improve safety?

So you agree that all women who wear short skirts are "asking for it" ??

The duty of cyclists is simply to stick to the rules, exactly the same for drivers.

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