That the person who died was photogenic or whatever else is irrelevant. Parents are responsible for their children's actions. Like a pendulum this bike is with one glance inherently rear heavy and adding a second rider makes it even more so.
Anyone who knows about the basics of physics as all adults do would not put this bike down a 14% grade, because the back end would tend to swing forward on such a bike. Who assembled the bike? Who was maintaining the bike? Who was supervising? Who trained the operator? Who decided that it would be a good idea to buy a bike with inexpensive components that is assembled at home? Everyone knows the even the most expert ridders sometimes crash.
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Agree with every word but the part in bold. Adults are largely ignorant of the basic laws of physics — either that, or they don't take them seriously.
In fact, many in the US wear their ignorance of or outright disdain for science in general as some kind of badge of coolness or virtue or piety. Ditto for math — and indeed, any kind of expertise. Totally maladaptive in our complex, tricky, dangerous, tech-based 21st century world.
Would a wider knowledge of basic physics make daily life safer? I'm sure of it, and I have evidence. In 2002, went back to grad school at the Colorado School of Mines — despite the name, a pretty rigorous general engineering/science place. Not MIT or Cal Tech, but of that ilk.
The only 2 undergrad cut classes at Mines were Physics 101 and 102. To stay, you had to take them freshman year and get at least a C in both.
In 2004, had to drive to nearby CU Boulder to get some classes Mines didn't offer. It's a serious university despite the party-school rep. But like most schools, no physics requirement.
And boy, did it show! After driving on the CU Boulder campus for a week, I started parking off campus. Why? Out of self-defense.
Many of the CU Boulder students had no concept of momentum, adhesion, or reaction time. They'd burst out of the bushes and walkways and onto the road at speed — some just running, but most on bikes, skates, skateboards, scooters, etc. Two close calls in 1 week.
None of that happened on the Mines campus, smaller but just as busy.