Hans G. Schantz is the Principal Scientist of
Geeks and Nerds Corporation (GaN). He was co-founder and CTO of
Q-Track Corporation until GaN's acquisition of Q-Track in 2019. Co-inventor of NFER indoor location technology, he has more than 40 U.S. patents to his credit. He is the author of
The Art and Science of Ultrawideband Antennas,
The Biographies of John Charles Fremont, and the science fiction thriller,
The Hidden Truth, available free through Kindle Unlimited. The sequel, A Rambling Wreck, was a finalist for the Conservative Libertarian Fiction Alliance 2018 Book of the Year, and third in the series is The Brave and the Bold. His latest work is
The Wise of Heart, an illustrated courtroom drama of biological science versus transgenderism that updates the Scopes Monkey Trial for the twenty-first century. Dr. Schantz earned his Ph.D. in theoretical physics from the University of Texas at Austin, and explains his unique solution to wave particle duality at the
Fields & Energy Substack.
2 thoughts on “5 Popular Safety Measures That Don’t Make You Any Safer | Cracked.com”
Some older drivers are so used to pumping their breaks that they do it in cars with anti-lock breaks whether or not they know they shouldn’t.
Interesting article, but I take issue with logic of the author on some points. For example, to refute the dozens or hundreds of studies done regarding bike helmets, he cherry picks one study done in Australia and one done in Bath. And for ABS, he cites one study that looks only at one modality (deaths in single-car accidents) and then proceeds to tell us that ABS doesn’t help safety.
This then begs the question of how much time and money have been saved by automotive safety equipment. If we were all still driving Daimler’s three wheel wagon with original safety equipment and contemporary engines, we’d best be going only 15MPH…
Interesting opinion, but on those two examples, I don’t buy it.
OTOH, I do agree with Bruce Schneier’s assessment regarding the absurd waste incurred by the airport circus sideshow called “security”, as I’m familiar with his work, which is quite far-ranging.