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with the frizz? NO WAY!!
I knew that much. It was the part about the bus that surprised me.
@Background Pony #FF4A
I heard that shoulder belts that lack lap belts are actually pretty unsafe
They’re enormously unsafe, since all that means is you’ll get wadded up like a wet paper towel under the dashboard in a frontal collision and have everything below your ribcage bent in several incorrect directions if hit from any other angle. The automatic shoulder belts common in American cars from the early ’90s only ever existed because the rising ubiquity of airbags in that decade prompted many states to adopt “passive restraint system” laws to protect drivers who were too gaspingly stupid to use seatbelts, and shitty automatic seatbelts were used by many manufacturers to meet the technical requirements of such laws in the cheapest and easiest-to-retrofit way possible.
It’s been an insult for as long as people in special education classes have been driven to school in a special bus. And most of the intelligence-related insults we have today were just older terms for the same thing before it was called “special ed.” Retard, cretin, moron, imbecile, idiot, and probably others, were once clinical terms for a substantially subnormal IQ; “cretinism” was also a clinical term for a subnormal IQ and deformities caused by underactive thyroid, separate from being a “cretin.” The clinical terms get replaced every so often because they rapidly become insults. But it’s pointless. As soon as the new clinical term is discovered by the general public, it will immediately become an insult too. (Cretin, in particular, was a word created for the expressed purpose of reminding people that the cretin was a human being too, beloved by God as it derives from “Christian,” and deserved to be treated as such. That positive connotation lasted about as long as a mayfly.) Decent people won’t call an actual retard that to his/her face. But thinking that any word which connotes low intelligence isn’t automatically going to be used as an insult is, if not retarded per se, then idiotic, moronic, imbecilic, and cretinous. Because implying someone’s opinions or actions you object to result from low intelligence is about as obvious a go-to insult as it is possible to imagine.
Really? Well, those people should have their legs broken.
Scumbags.
“Short buses” are for the special education students & people have made needing special education an insult for some reason.
Edited
Does it? News to me. Then again it’s been nearly 30 years since I set foot in a classroom, so I’m a bit out of the loop.
It’s a shuttle. “Short bus” has… connotations.
However, because they aren’t nearly as big the people riding said bus are more prone to whiplash among other things, so seat belts are required. 20-something years ago (around the time the artists and writers of this show were actually in school) they were only lap-belts, but modern shortbuses require lap AND shoulder belts.
Looks like you’re right. Either one by itself is a bad idea. More restraints = better. The safest configuration is a five-point harness, like they use in NASCAR and baby seats.
I heard that shoulder belts that lack lap belts are actually pretty unsafe.
Even if every school but had seatbelts, most people probably wouldn’t use them. Think about it, when you give a single adult the job of getting several little children from several stops throughout a city to a school in about 30 minutes, they won’t have the time or mental capacity to ensure every child puts on their seatbelt and then keeps that seatbelt on while they are driving. There’s also the consideration of age differences. A school bus owned by a K-12 district may be used for kindergarteners on one route and then used for high school seniors on another. The seatbelts might not fit properly on some students which could cause more harm than good in a strong impact. Also, many routes may require three students to a seat while most buses only offer two seatbelts a seat.
However, current law states that in buses under 10,000 pounds (like the one in this short may certainly be), lap and shoulder belts are required because of their smaller size. Only certain municipalities require seat belts on all buses. If this seems very long and detailed for a comment on a photo of a fictional school bus in a fictional world, I know.
Same. The buses at my school never had seat belts.
I guess that must be valid for intermunicipal-interstate buses; i think i remember these having it, but city buses in my town don’t have any aside of the driver’s and the wheelchairbound seats.
Edited
STOP THE BUS!