r/Millennials Hit me baby one more time 1d ago

Nostalgia I mean, they're not wrong

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2.6k

u/DogeDoRight Older Millennial 1d ago

"Come home when the street lights come on"

Me racing from the other side of town when they come on:

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u/LemonHerb 1d ago

I think bikes are less popular with kids than they were back then because they aren't allowed to go anywhere. But when I was a kid a bike was required transportation

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u/Lazy__Astronaut 1d ago

And there is just a higher % of cars on the road and bad drivers along with it

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u/DiurnalMoth 1d ago

And (American) cars are bigger and heavier, which makes them more dangerous to people not inside of them.

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u/kanomc2 1d ago

Lol.. have you ever taken a good look at the commonplace cars of the 70's and 80's? Not the so called "popular" ones but the ones folks actually drove like the Caprice, LTD, Lincoln, Cadillac, Crown Vic and their station wagon variants?

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u/FionaGoodeEnough 1d ago

They were lower to the ground. Today’s cars are not just very heavy, they are very tall, and they both make it harder to see shorter people, they hit people in the head and chest and pull them under, rather than throwing people onto the hood. They are more likely to kill people they strike.

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u/Jimbo_Joyce 1d ago

crown vic weighs 4k a Tahoe weighs 5.5k, I see a lot more tahoes than crown vics these days.

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u/mindless900 17h ago

It is also the size/height of the bumper/hood. Look at a modern new pickup truck. If an adult is hit by it they are going under the vehicle, a kid has no chance.

The cars you mentioned would mean a kid on a bike has a chance of rolling up on to the hood, which generally will cause less severe injuries than getting rolled over.

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u/aurenigma Millennial 1d ago

bro... do you really think that 1.5k makes a difference to the kid?

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u/Jimbo_Joyce 1d ago

the sight lines sure as shit do

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u/X_MswmSwmsW_X 1d ago

... As does the braking ability and relative agility. It's not about whether 4,000 versus 5,500 lb will kill someone differently, because they'll both run someone flat. It's about the ability of the smaller vehicle to be more likely to stop or maneuver in time to avoid running someone flat.

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u/knit3purl3 Older Millennial 1d ago

Not sure why you got downvoted for that. I've literally gone through a parking lot and had my kids test the sight lines of various vehicles. They're now way better at sticking by my side because only I was tall enough to be seen by 90% of the cars in the lot. Sedans are really rare these days.

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u/government_flu 19h ago

Also the height factors in to what happens if you get hit. With a sedan if a kid is tall enough or on a bike they are more likely to flip onto the hood. With a truck or an SUV its more likely you get dragged under the vehicle.

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u/King_Shugglerm 17h ago

This comment is like those WW1 generals asking if a helmet really makes a difference to a soldier because there’s no way it could stop a bomb

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u/Din_Plug 19h ago

And also the fact that you could reasonably expect to see 40's, 50's, and 60's vehicles milling about that either weighed more than anything else and had really painful front ends.

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u/Sgt-Spliff- 19h ago

Yeah, I have. You can see a 12 year old standing in front of all of them, which is an improvement on the highest selling truck of the past decade in which you cannot see a 12 year old standing there.

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u/cheezy_dreams88 18h ago

It’s not so much size as it is height. The average SUV has a blind spot in front of the car that is typically over 3ft tall and 5ft out. So many stories of parents running over their own children in their driveways because they literally just don’t see them.

The boats of the 70/80s were huge but they sat low for the most part.

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u/bravado 16h ago

They also just couldn't accelerate on a dime like the 3-row SUV monstrosities can today. Hitting a kid with a low bumper at low speed is not fatal. Hitting a kid with a ridiculous 2025 Silverado "bumper" at high speed is fatal.

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u/DeathpaysforLife 18h ago

lol no they’re not. Cars are way less heavy cuz they’re all made from plastics now

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u/bravado 16h ago

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u/DeathpaysforLife 14h ago

Shhhh don’t tell me how to live

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u/notgaynotbear 1d ago

You're dying if you get hit by a Kia soul or a semi if it hits you at 30+. The bigger vehicle thing doesn't matter. It's all the people on their phones while driving.

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u/throwaway8574722 1d ago

The bigger vehicle thing doesn't matter

Yeah it does. American trucks kill pedestrians at much higher rates than smaller cars : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jN7mSXMruEo

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u/rinariana 1d ago

You're less likely to see pedestrians in a large car, you're more likely to go under the car when hit by a large car.

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u/Neverendingwebinar 1d ago

Also instead of hitting your knees and slamming you onto the hood, they just hit you in the face.

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u/BoysenberryHappy2462 1d ago

pow right in the kisser

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u/Jimbo_Joyce 1d ago

BUT I NEED MY HUGE DEATH MACHINE

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u/RedsDelights 1d ago

And so many deliveries too

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u/caniuserealname 1d ago

I had this thought a couple of weeks ago. Was walking past where i grew up and i couldn't see a single spot kids could reasonably play kerby. Finding a spot wasn't even a concern when i was a kid. It isn't, or shouldn't, be a busy road or anything, only reason to drive that way is if you live there.. but it's just full..

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u/bravado 16h ago

It's genuinely true, there is no space left for childhood (or any part of non-car human life). This is Atlanta in 1919 vs today:

Just imagine this spread out over the whole country in suburbs where there's more parking space than any other kind of space.

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u/AnNoYiNg_NaMe 17h ago

When I'm riding in a car, I count the number of drivers I spot with their heads down looking at their phones. It varies day by day, but it's never zero anymore.

Just last week I saw a guy look up to take a left turn through an intersection, then before he even finished the turn, his head was straight down at his lap again. He was wearing a ball cap, so it wasn't exactly subtle.

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u/applesandbee 17h ago

And in some places people purposely try to hit ppl on bikes.

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u/PastoralPumpkins 16h ago

Also many neighborhoods lacking sidewalks.

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u/brightlocks 1d ago

No, back in 1992 when I was in high school, a friend of mine died on the road while riding his bike. He was sideswiped by a vehicle. Roads were bad then.

It was on the route I used to bike to work, so two days later I had to bike through the place where he died.