[identity profile] the-paulr.livejournal.com 2007-05-22 10:32 pm (UTC)(link)
Favorite quote from the article: "Your car is to a train what a soda can is to your car." Oh yeah.
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[identity profile] kyburg.livejournal.com 2007-05-23 10:45 pm (UTC)(link)
The best part is I think I know her from my years of taking Metrolink - *laughs*
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[personal profile] callibr8 2007-05-22 10:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Even if the dumbass is the only one who died, he managed to do so in such a way as to seriously inconvenience a lot of other people (train engineer and passengers, firefighters), *and* endanger the life of his girlfriend. Seems like there's more karma he oughta owe, than what he's paid.
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[identity profile] kyburg.livejournal.com 2007-05-23 10:46 pm (UTC)(link)
The last guy to do this took 11 people with him. In the truest sense of karma, by the book, this guy is going to come back and go through it all again.

I hope he goes through it as a feral cat in Downtown Los Angeles.

[identity profile] feyandstrange.livejournal.com 2007-05-22 10:52 pm (UTC)(link)
My maternal uncle is a many-years-veteran of driving trains, and I think your estimate may be on the low side. Possibly for vehicle accidents alone; it certainly doesn't cover pedestrians and suicides. "Suicide by train" is like "suicide by cop" in some areas, and people don't always realize it's "suicide by train driver" as well.

I think those numbers are about right for eighteen-wheeler drivers, though, who face similar problems as the driver of something to which your car is a tin can.

My uncle's current job is to travel all around the Midwest dealing with crossing safety issues for his company, and trying to get more crossings upgraded or better yet, closed. People don't want their crossings regulated with lights and signs, much less totally closed, even when people get killed - but the days when a freight train stopped (or could stop) for every level crossing dirt track are long gone.

Glad she survived so far; hope she makes it out the other side okay.

[identity profile] readwrite.livejournal.com 2007-05-22 11:09 pm (UTC)(link)
A friend who used to work for the AAA gave me a great 15-min. traffic-safety video, "Dangerous Crossings," with a good bit of footage of people trying to beat trains, and losing. One of them is a semi, and it, like all the other vehicles, gets totally creamed. As I learned in the video, a train takes a long time to stop. Even if the engineer puts the brakes on full and throws the throttle into full reverse, he can't come close to stopping if a car suddenly appears in front off the train. People think it's like another car, which might actually be able to stop or at least slow down if you suddenly pull in front of it, but it's not.

[identity profile] neintales.livejournal.com 2007-05-23 12:48 am (UTC)(link)
The problem, of course, is that like with all other gruesome safety videos watched during Driver's Ed., a large percentage of people decide things were either faked or, even moire commonly "That'd never happen to ME".

Or so I go by my driver's education class, where we were shown videos like that and nine out of ten other kids in the class laughed it all off.

[identity profile] djdig.livejournal.com 2007-05-23 03:14 pm (UTC)(link)
My drivers ed class was the same way.

I paid attention but tried not be be scared to the point that it would make me drive slow to the point of dangerous.

Well, the one thing that didn't scare me was the video on Mac trucks. I figured as long as I stayed where they could see me, I'd be fine.

I start freaking out to this day when I'm near a Mac truck on the road because my 1st accident ever was with one. The driver was from another state, got lost, and wound up on a road with such a sharp turn that even regular trucks have trouble making it. My car was on the other side of the curve and the trailer totaled it. Luckily, at 17, I had the sense to jump out through the car and out the passenger side or I would be dead. An ambulance saw the accident and sped over. They were shocked I survived and wasn't that hurt.

[identity profile] fallofrain.livejournal.com 2007-05-23 12:10 am (UTC)(link)
My VERY ex husband pulled a stunt like that, only he did it to me in rush hour traffic with oncoming cars rather than a train. Thankfully he pulled out at the very last moment instead of getting me/us killed.

And he wonders why I left him. I feel for the girlfriend, and I'm glad she survived.

[identity profile] mactavish.livejournal.com 2007-05-23 12:56 am (UTC)(link)
I was riding a city bus at twilight, once, one of few passengers, and in the front seat next to the door, when a teenager (I assume) wearing black pants and a black hoodie and riding a little bike leapt his bike off the curb and into the street in front of the bus, rode fast across the two lanes, then bounced over the planted median, crossed the other side, and vanished. He probably landed his bike maybe 13-15 feet in front of the bus, which was going at about 25 mph. The driver hit his brakes but it was irrelevant, the kid was just flying.

The driver just said, "Thing is, if I'd have hit him, it would have been my fault, and if I'd killed him, I would go my whole life knowing I'd killed him, but there wasn't a thing I could have done to stop it, if he'd fallen off his bike right there."