adrock1976
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Oct 13, 2005
- Messages
- 299
Out of curiousity, do you have children yourself?salmoneous said:I hope this post continues the discussion of safety, and not parenting...
Out of curiousity, do you have children yourself?salmoneous said:I hope this post continues the discussion of safety, and not parenting...
Wondering this myself.adrock1976 said:Out of curiousity, do you have children yourself?
salmoneous said:I hope this post continues the discussion of safety, and not parenting...
The point we are trying to make is that flying a kid as a lap baby is no different from the choices every parent makes, every day. People have a hard time comprehending how small a risk we are talking about. There is a belief among some posters that it is somehow qualitatively different from such ordinary acts as driving a kid to the grocery store. It isn't.
kathi29 said:It is different. We don't travel with our children unrestrained in our cars, but it's okay on an airplane? We have to secure our carry on bags, computers, purses, and tray tables, but not our infants? It doesn't make sense.
I realize that the risks are higher in an automobile than in a plane, but why is 2 years old a magic age that babies need to be kept safe for air travel? Flight attendants and safety organizations have been begging for years for legislation to keep infants safe.
Call it overlegislation if you want, but the fact is that people in general will do only what the law requires them to do. If we did not have car seat laws, we would have parents letting their kids bounce around unrestrained. (We still have that; I see it frequently and it makes me cringe every time.) Florida's law is woefully inadequate - take a look around and the more stringent laws other states are effecting, and then look at Florida. Here you can place yur 4 year old in a seatbelt designed for a 250 pound adult. But that is what the law says, so its okay to ignore the laws of physics and that fact that said child is just to small for the seatbelt to fit properly?
So back to air travel... infants are not afforded the same safety concern as baggage, much less an older child or adult. We don't want carry-ons, computers and purses to become projectiles, so we stow them for take off and landing, and when there is turbulence. We put our tray tables up during those same times, I'm guessing to avoid abdominal or head injuries if conditions cause our upper torso to be lurched forward. We stay buckled in our seats, even when the seat belt light is off. But we hold our infants in our laps?
jodifla said:The infant is secure....in your arms. Simple as that.
Also, purses, bags, etc. often are not "secure." They are simply sitting on the floor under a seat. More overdramatization.
DaisyD said:You can't believe that infant is secure in ones arms? You are kidding yourself just to save a little bit of money. If an infant was safe on ones arms then there wouldn't be car seat laws. Simple as that.
jodifla said:The infant is secure....in your arms. Simple as that.
Also, purses, bags, etc. often are not "secure." They are simply sitting on the floor under a seat. More overdramatization.
kathi29 said:Funny, the FAA disagrees with you
http://www.faa.gov/passengers/media/childsafety.pdf
Purses, bags, etc. are more secure under the seat than they are sitting on your lap. In the event of turbulence, those items are less likely to become projectiles if they are stowed under the seat or in an overhead bin.
jodifla said:It wasn't a little bit of money...it was thousands of dollars.
And, cars are not airplanes. They are mass transit. There are no car seats on buses, trains, subways, etc. Do parents who use this forms of transit "just kid themselves" too? Using these forms of transportation without a car seat is much more risky than an airplane.
jodifla said:I know that this is what they say, in an effort to get you to spend money and buy a seat, but the statistics don't back it up.
And you didn't address that kids ride around all over the country without seat belts in buses, trains, subways, schoolbuses, etc. So the person who was all wound up about a carseat on a plane gets on a bus with their 1 year old. Really, do you not see the irony here?
jodifla said:I know that this is what they say, in an effort to get you to spend money and buy a seat, but the statistics don't back it up.
And you didn't address that kids ride around all over the country without seat belts in buses, trains, subways, schoolbuses, etc. So the person who was all wound up about a carseat on a plane gets on a bus with their 1 year old. Really, do you not see the irony here?
jodifla said:We've had this round and round argument before, so there's no point in continuing.
For what it's worth, I do listen to your arguments, I just don't agree with them. For me, some risk in life is acceptable. And a one in 8 million chance won't cause me to alter my behavior.
Besides, schoolbuses are a statistically safe mode of transportation.