Starbuck wrote on Jun 3
rd, 2009 at 2:53pm:
Riffhard wrote on Jun 3
rd, 2009 at 2:05pm:
Hey Bucky I know you're a fan of history, as am I, so why not let's compare Iraq with,.....say....D-Day? On June 6th, 1944 we lost more troops in 24 hours then we have in the years since we entered Iraq.
not to be nitpicky, but this is not true. the allies suffered 2500 KIA on DDay (about 1200 of which were on omaha). we've lost what - 4200 KIA in iraq so far? somewhere around there.
Quote:The CAFE standards for automobiles that idiot enviro-Dems insist upon kill more Americans every single year than the war Iraq has caused since day one. Why is there no liberal outrage about that?!
huh?!?!? how do envirostandards kill people?
Well if we're going to start talking about the death toll on Oma Beach specifically I'll concede your point. However, let's, for the sake of argument, say that the Iraq War has been nothing like the carnage the US suffered at Iwo Jima.
As per the CAFE Standards, and how they are responsible for more deaths annually than the annual death toll in Iraq.
Here--->A number of studies have documented the lethal consequences of requiring carmakers to improve fuel standards.
* According to a 2003 NHTSA study, when a vehicle is reduced by 100 pounds the estimated fatality rate increases as much as 5.63 percent for light cars weighing less than 2,950 pounds, 4.70 percent for heavier cars weighing over 2,950 pounds and 3.06 percent for light trucks. Between model years 1996 and 1999, these rates translated into additional traffic fatalities of 13,608 for light cars, 10,884 for heavier cars and 14,705 for light trucks.12
* A 2001 National Academy of Sciences panel found that constraining automobile manufacturers to produce smaller, lighter vehicles in the 1970s and early 1980s "probably resulted in an additional 1,300 to 2,600 traffic fatalities in 1993."13
* An extensive 1999 USA Today analysis of crash data found that since CAFE went into effect in 1978, 46,000 people died in crashes they otherwise would have survived, had they been in bigger, heavier vehicles. This, according to a 1999 USA Today analysis of crash data since 1975, roughly figures to be 7,700 deaths for every mile per gallon gained in fuel economy standards.14
* The USA Today report also said smaller cars - such as the Chevrolet Cavalier or Dodge Neon - accounted for 12,144 fatalities or 37 percent of vehicle deaths in 1997, though such cars comprised only 18 percent of all vehicles.15
* A 1989 Harvard-Brookings study estimated CAFE "to be responsible for 2,200-3,900 excess occupant fatalities over ten years of a given [car] model years' use." Moreover, the researchers estimated between 11,000 and 19,500 occupants would suffer serious but nonfatal crash injuries as a result of CAFE.16
* The same Harvard-Brookings study found CAFE had resulted in a 500-pound weight reduction of the average car. As a result, occupants were put at a 14 to 27 percent greater risk of traffic death.17
* Passengers in small cars die at a much higher rate when involved in traffic accidents with large cars. Traffic safety expert Dr. Leonard Evans estimates that drivers in lighter cars may be 12 times as likely to be killed in a crash when the other vehicle is twice as heavy as the lighter car.18
http://www.nationalcenter.org/NPA546CAFEStandards.htmlRiffy