In one block of affluent, educated Lincoln Sq, I encountered a father crossing a dangerous part of Western, telling a boy on a Skoot pushbike, "You gotta pedal, pedal, pedal!"
And then a mother with a toddler in a rear bike seat, which was rocking dangerously rearward with every pedal crank. I stopped her and showed her what was happening, and helped her fix it. She blamed it on the seat. The attachment wasn't complicated, she just hadn't bothered to check that the seat carrying her most precious cargo was actually attached.
Observation: Just 'cause your equipment down below works well enough to make 'em, doesn't necessarily mean the equipment up above works well enough to keep 'em alive....
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Observation: Just 'cause your equipment down below works well enough to make 'em, doesn't necessarily mean the equipment up above works well enough to keep 'em alive....
Well put.
Affluence is also no indication of smarts.
Money can buy a lot but not problem solving, attention to detail, lateral thinking etc...
Those are certainly worrisome examples. It's great that you were able to help the woman with the bike seat problem. Your example of the family crossing Western feels familiar to me. When crossing busy streets with Miguel either on foot or bike I feel a great sense of urgency to make it across in time. But, sometimes you just need to cross a busy road to get to the proverbial other side. What was wrong about where they were crossing? I don't understand the pedal, pedal, pedal comment--there were no pedals, right? Hmmm. Hence your comment? :)
Of course, dubious decision making happens across all sectors and modes. People when driving also make mistakes with child restraint systems, but those mistakes are not usually as visible to bystanders. Indeed, motor vehicle injuries are the leading cause of death among children in the U.S. http://www.cdc.gov/ncipc/factsheets/childpas.htm
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