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News stories about drivers who hit cyclists often implicitly absolve the driver and blame the victim.
News stories about drivers who hit cyclists often implicitly absolve the driver and blame the victim. (Photo: cream_ph/iStock)
Bike Snob

Guilty Until Proven Helmeted

When a driver hits a cyclist鈥攅ven a child on a bike鈥攖he victim is almost always the one who gets blamed, unless they're wearing a helmet

Published: 
News stories about drivers who hit cyclists often implicitly absolve the driver and blame the victim.
(Photo: cream_ph/iStock)

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When it comes to automotive violence and mayhem, we鈥檝e become more desensitized than a perineum after a Gran Fondo on a maladjusted saddle, as is apparent from the way we report on incidents in which someone in a car drives into someone on a bike.

News stories about drivers who hit cyclists often implicitly absolve the driver and blame the victim. First, there鈥檚 almost always a lack of agency coupled with the passive voice: it鈥檚 never 鈥渁 driver hit a cyclist.鈥 Instead, it鈥檚 usually something like 鈥渁 cyclist was hit by a car.鈥 (Yet you never read about how a shooting victim 鈥渃ollided with a bullet.鈥 Go figure.) Then there鈥檚 generally some insinuation that it must have been the victim鈥檚 fault, often along the lines of 鈥淚t鈥檚 unclear whether the victim was wearing a helmet.鈥 And despite , it鈥檚 also fairly typical to refer to the collision as an 鈥渁ccident,鈥 even before anybody knows what really happened; in journalism, the oxymoronic 鈥減olice are still investigating the accident鈥 is reserved almost exclusively to incidents involving cars.

It鈥檚 not just reporters who write this way, either. When it comes to drivers hurting or killing people on bikes, this kind of unconscious victim-blaming permeates every aspect of our discourse. Consider from the Santa Barbara City Fire Department, which was accompanied by chilling photos of a child鈥檚 bike underneath a Toyota Tacoma, and which also under the headline 鈥淭ruck Hits Father and Child on聽Bicycle.鈥 Highlights include:

A little girl and her father were crossing the street at an intersection with no crosswalk. The girl was on her bicycle when they both were struck by the pickup truck.

    Luckily the injuries were minor to the little girl despite her not wearing a bicycle helmet.

      The California vehicle code requires bicycle riders under the age of 18 years to wear a bicycle helmet while riding on a public road…Properly-fitted helmets provide protection from a potentially life-threatening head injury.

        The Santa Barbara City Fire Department would like to remind everyone to promote bicycle safety for your children and have them wear a properly fitted helmet when riding.

          If you鈥檙e one of the millions of Americans suffering from Victim-Blaming Syndrome (VBS) you probably see nothing wrong with any of this. In fact, you may even be a little miffed at the father for not making sure his precious child was wearing a helmet. If, however, you鈥檝e donned the and see all this brainwashing for what it is, you鈥檙e probably not even reading this because you鈥檙e too busy trying to get your fist back out of the wall after punching a hole through it. 聽

          It鈥檚 almost like, in our bizarre logistical and ethical framework, dying while wearing a helmet is preferable to surviving without one.

          Either way, the聽story quoted above is under 200 words long. There鈥檚 not a single mention of the motorist; instead, the victims 聽were 鈥渟truck by a pickup truck,鈥 as though it were somehow self-driving. The account also contains no fewer than five mentions of the word 鈥渉elmet,鈥 yet it doesn鈥檛 remind people to drive more carefully or cite relevant motor vehicle code, not even once. The helmet exhortation is especially vexing since the little girl only sustained minor injuries. So, what, are we supposed to believe that if she鈥檇 been wearing a helmet the driver wouldn鈥檛 have hit her in the first place? Or are we supposed to think a child鈥檚 bicycle helmet offers meaningful protection against a Tacoma and that the real mitigating factor isn鈥檛 the luck that just happened to be on her side?

          It鈥檚 almost like, in our bizarre logistical and ethical framework, dying while wearing a helmet is preferable to surviving without one.

          But focussing on the child鈥檚 helmetlessness isn鈥檛 the only insinuation of guilt here. There鈥檚 also the mention of how the girl and her father were 鈥渃rossing the street at an intersection with no crosswalk.鈥 To read this, you鈥檇 be forgiven for thinking the girl鈥檚 father was duping her into playing a real-life game of Crossy Road. However, as many people pointed out in a , according to all intersections have crosswalks and therefore drivers are required to yield whether they鈥檙e marked or not:

          The driver of a vehicle shall yield the right-of-way to a pedestrian crossing the roadway within any marked crosswalk or within any unmarked crosswalk at an intersection鈥 聽

          The driver of a vehicle approaching a pedestrian within any marked or unmarked crosswalk shall exercise all due care and shall reduce the speed of the vehicle or take any other action relating to the operation of the vehicle as necessary to safeguard the safety of the pedestrian.

          So, unless father and daughter leaped off of the sidewalk into oncoming traffic and shouted 鈥淪urprise!鈥,聽this collision is entirely the driver鈥檚 fault.

          To their credit, after being called out on all of the above, the Santa Barbara City Fire Department were contrite. Chief Eric Nickel :

          It was refreshing to see him acknowledge this. It鈥檚 important not to lose sight of the fact that these are people who dedicate their lives to saving the lives of others. Therefore, any safety advice they offer is no doubt well-intentioned, as misdirected as it may be.

          Yet it鈥檚 essential to hack away at the gigantic blind spot that allows us to see the actual problem, which is people driving into other people with their cars. We鈥檝e got a long way to go in that regard. But we鈥檒l know we鈥檙e making progress when we stop blaming children and their parents for winding up underneath pickup trucks.

          Lead Photo: cream_ph/iStock

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