• frog 🐸
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    1 year ago

    Visual perception and processing develops over time, and people don’t reach adult development until… adulthood. The brain doesn’t stop developing until 25. A lot of the teens on e-bikes are 13 and 14, children that are only a couple of years outside of primary school, and certainly nowhere near physically adult enough to have adult visual processing or adult perception of danger or adult impulse control. All very good reasons why they shouldn’t be whizzing about on e-bikes at 30mph.

    I’m not against e-bikes in general. I think those who can ride should do so more, with infrastructure built around it. I just don’t think children should be on fast ones.

    • Quatity_Control
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      11 year ago

      Your welcome to your opinions. I’m just pointing out a study of primary school children is irrelevant to this particular thread. If you have studies on teens, I’d love to read them.

      • frog 🐸
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        11 year ago

        Primary school age runs to age 11/12 (depending on exact birthdate - someone born on 1st September will be 12 when they enter secondary school). A 13 year old is not significantly more developmentally mature than a 12 year old, particularly in the context of how development of the brain continues until 25. Teens are more prone to risky behaviour, due to poor impulse control and poor perception of how dangerous a given activity may be, which is as much of a problem on an e-bike at 30mph as it is with drugs, alcohol, sex, and a wide range of other risky behaviours teens indulge in because they can’t objectively judge what the risks actually are. The younger the teen, the higher the risk because of the lower neurological development.

        • Quatity_Control
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          11 year ago

          #1 killer of teens is dangerous driving most often influenced by peer pressure. Removing the peers by putting them ona bike would reduce the teen mortality rate by far more than the mortality rate of teens on bikes going over 30mph. See, stats can be used in many ways. Not always supportive of your opinion. Which is why it is important to choose a source that specifically relates to the topic. If you don’t want it pointed out that your source is irrelevant to the discussion.

          • frog 🐸
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            11 year ago

            13 and 14 year olds shouldn’t be driving cars in the first place, and they’re also the ones most likely to make bad decisions about riding e-bikes without speed limiters.

            • Quatity_Control
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              11 year ago

              But teens are not primary school and are far more than 13 and 14. Why would you ignore 15-19? It seems like your point only covers a minority of cases in which case any recommendation will have a minimal impact. Why are you so concerned about a minority of cases?

              • frog 🐸
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                11 year ago

                Because I’m in favour of kids not dying unnecessarily?

                Additionally, depending on the country 16-19 is considered old enough to ride a motorbike, in which case they’re also old enough to ride an e-bike at similar speeds. The fact is that teens are a broad range, and there’s plenty of things that 16-19 year olds are considered mature enough to do that 13-15 year olds aren’t. Just because a 16 year old can ride a motorbike and 18 year olds can smoke cigarettes and drink alcohol doesn’t magically make 13 year olds mature enough to do so. The same should apply to e-bikes: an e-bike that can go faster than 20mph is basically an electric motorbike, and should be similarly age-restricted.

                  • frog 🐸
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                    11 year ago

                    More than they should, especially when they’re on electric bikes going at speeds up to 45mph. There is plenty of evidence that directly demonstrates that the chance of death increases exponentially with increased speed. The more children there are on e-bikes with their speed limiters cut, the more children die unnecessarily as a result. And those aged 13-14 are children, not adults. You’re not going to change my mind on this, and I’m not going to change yours, so there seems to be no point in debating this further.