• answersplease77@lemmy.world
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    9 days ago

    no… read it above even quarter of my assumed numbers would still result in 100 times more likely to die. I do delivery work that’s why I drive 70k+ miles / year or 50 miles a day on average and experieced so many accidents… etc.

    you try it yourself and use that data and calculate % chance of death in an airplane ride vs a car ride. use your own numbers and you will still get to the same conclusion

    • Atomic@sh.itjust.works
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      8 days ago

      Your methodology is incorrect to begin with, it doesn’t matter what numbers you use if the method is wrong. You’ve been basing everything on that hundreds of people are all condensed into 1 plane trip, rather than viewing it as hundreds of people making 1 plane trip, per person. yet, when counting the deaths, you don’t count it per plane trip, you count it per person.

      Your methodology is skewing your results by the hundreds. And that is independent of whatever numbers you’re coming up with.

      The scientific community in collaboration with statisticians have over the past 20 years, all come to the same conclusion, that you are significantly less probable of dying while traveling in an airplane or train, than you are in a car, and especially a motorcycle.

      If you genuinely believe, that you’ve made a breakthrough that goes against the result of every single published and peer reviewed report on the topic, I implore you to publish your results and have it peer reviewed by the various institutions that also collect data on the topic.

      But I’m not going to argue with you about this. You are free to believe whatever you want. Personally, I’m going to believe that the data and methodology from a professor, with 39 years of experience and several published papers on the economics, and safety in the transit sector, is correct.

      • answersplease77@lemmy.world
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        8 days ago

        bro. no… 1- I did it per trip not per person. 2- the data counted it per passenger miles: so busses and airplanes passenger miles were = number of passengers x number of miles travelled.

        Open it yourself and check.

        And you dont have to believe anything or anyone. There’ve been close to 4 trillions rides in cars in that caused these numbers of deaths between 2000-2009 compared to something like 4 billion airplane rides in the same period. Another factor that skewed this data is like I said number of passengers: in cars the average is 1-2 people -vs- in airplanes the average is probably 100 people. You cannot ignore those two factors I mentioned which gave you this junk statistics. That’s why the per trip calculations favor cars heavily no matter what numbers you assume and plug in. People fucking clap when their plane lands… no one claps when a taxi gets them their destination alive… lol. you dont see cap drivers giving you emergency landing proceedures before every ride for this reason I calculated.

        Again for the 10th time Im repeating this is per TRIP, not person, not miles, not passenger miles, not even hours… You do the math yourself after you understand what you’re trying to calculate.

        • Atomic@sh.itjust.works
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          8 days ago

          bro. no… 1- I did it per trip not per person.

          Again for the 10th time Im repeating this is per TRIP, not person, not miles, not passenger miles, not even hours… You do the math yourself after you understand what you’re trying to calculate.

          Yes. I know. And I’ve been trying to tell you repeatedly now. That’s the problem. That’s the fault in your methodology. You can’t count it per trip, and then count the deaths per person.