Watch out speed racer
Thursday, May 15th, 2008 by AaronThe movie Speed Racer is full of high speeds and high speed crashes. Race cars twisting and turning around the fanciful tracks of the half-animated world that is Speed’s often collide, disintegrate or fall off cliffs. Each time, however, a glowing ball bounces from the wreck, carrying the driver to safety.
Unfortunately, real cars, the ones that drive Interstate 15 and Interstate 40, do not have these bouncy balls of safety. And even though the drivers are not pushing Speed Racer speeds — one car in the movie claimed to go 800 km per hour, nearly 500 miles per hour — or perfecting Speed Racer maneuvers — like weaving between sharp metal spikes YIKES! — the climb up Mountain Pass or an early morning blitz between Ludlow and Newberry Springs can be treacherous.
And unfortunately this week, we have all read how treacherous. Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, four traffic fatalities in four days on three different roads. Each one is different and there is no way to establish a trend or rhyme or reason to the deaths.
Seatbelts might have made a difference in two of the deaths. Like the death of Brenda Wood early on Monday morning. Her niece left this comment on www.desertdispatch.com:
I have waited days to hear the details about my aunt Brenda wood’s death. I wish I couldve known in advance that she was going to be involved in this accident, maybe to try and stop it for ever happening again. It wasnt like her to forget her seatbelt, but she was really excited about her vegas trip for mothers day. She was like a mother to me. And I have not yet excepted that she is never comming back. Im never going anywhere without my seatbelt again. May you RIP Brenda Wood.
Of course, in the two fatal crashes on Tuesday and Wednesday, seatbelts did not seem to cure all. The recent deaths on roads surrounding Barstow, and all the ones still to come, underscore only one point: Those are dangerous roads out there.
So until Ford, Chevy, Toyota, Volvo or Honda comes out with Speed Racer-type safety technology and we can all bounce away from wrecks unscathed, drive safe.
Aaron Aupperlee | city editor








